Healthcare is consistently the topic that generates the most anxiety among over-50 professionals considering the Travel & Thrive lifestyle — and the most relief once they understand how it actually works. The system for managing healthcare abroad is well-established, affordable, and in many destinations, significantly better than what most Americans experience at home. What it requires is planning.
The Fundamental Reality: Medicare Doesn’t Travel
If you are Medicare-eligible (65+) or planning to become so during your time abroad, understand this clearly: Original Medicare (Parts A and B) does not cover medical care outside the United States in most circumstances. There are narrow exceptions for emergency care in certain border areas, but for all practical purposes, Medicare is a US-only benefit.
This means that for the duration of your time abroad, you need private international health insurance — full stop. This is not optional, and it is not prohibitively expensive. For most people in their 50s, comprehensive international health insurance costs $150–$400/month. That is the price of real medical coverage globally.
What International Health Insurance Covers
A quality international health insurance plan provides:
- Inpatient and outpatient medical care at private hospitals and clinics worldwide
- Emergency medical evacuation — transport to an appropriate medical facility if local care is inadequate
- Repatriation — return to your home country for medical care when medically necessary
- Prescription medications
- Preventive care (varies by plan)
- Mental health care (varies by plan)
- Dental and vision (usually as add-ons)
The quality of private medical care in most Travel & Thrive destinations is genuinely excellent. Portugal, Spain, and Greece have healthcare systems consistently ranked among the world’s best. Thailand’s private hospitals in Bangkok and Chiang Mai are internationally accredited and attract medical tourists from around the world. Mexico’s private hospitals in major cities offer care comparable to US standards at a fraction of the cost.
Leading International Health Insurance Providers
Cigna Global: One of the most widely used international health insurers. Comprehensive plans with good global networks, strong customer service, and flexible deductible options. A healthy 55-year-old can expect to pay $200–$350/month.
Allianz Care: Strong European network; particularly good for Portugal, Spain, and Greece. Competitive pricing for those spending significant time in Europe.
AXA International: Global coverage, strong in Asia and Latin America. Good option for those moving between regions.
GeoBlue (BCBS International): Excellent for US citizens; works within the Blue Cross network globally. Strong US-side coverage for visits home.
SafetyWing: Lower-cost option popular with younger nomads; more limited coverage but significantly cheaper at $50–$150/month. Less appropriate for over-50 professionals with meaningful healthcare needs — the coverage gaps matter more at this stage of life.
Pre-Existing Conditions
Pre-existing conditions are the most significant complication in international health insurance for over-50 professionals. Most comprehensive plans either exclude pre-existing conditions entirely or charge significant premium increases to cover them. Key strategies:
- Apply for coverage while healthy — if you have conditions that may develop, apply before they’re diagnosed
- Look for plans with moratorium underwriting (which excludes conditions for a defined period then covers them if symptom-free) versus full medical underwriting
- For serious chronic conditions, investigate whether local public healthcare in your target country covers you once you establish residency (Portugal’s SNS public healthcare, for example, becomes accessible after establishing tax residency)
- Work with an independent international health insurance broker who can compare multiple plans and advocate for you during underwriting
Prescription Medications
Most common medications are available internationally, often at significantly lower cost than in the US. However, some medications require a local prescription, and brand names may differ. Before departing:
- Get a 3-month supply of any regular medications
- Get written documentation from your US doctor of all prescriptions (generic names, dosages)
- Research availability of your specific medications in your target country
- Verify your insurance covers medications purchased abroad
Dental and Vision Care
A significant silver lining of international living for over-50 health costs: dental and vision care are dramatically less expensive in most destinations. Dental work in Mexico, Colombia, Portugal, and Thailand runs 50–80% less than comparable US costs. Many Travel & Thrive professionals deliberately schedule major dental work during their time abroad — turning the cost difference alone into meaningful savings.
Mental Health and Telehealth
US-licensed therapists can continue treating US citizens abroad via telehealth in most cases (jurisdiction rules vary by therapist license). International insurance plans increasingly include mental health coverage. Having access to consistent mental health support during the transition period — which can be emotionally complex — is worth arranging in advance.
Building a Local Healthcare Relationship
After arriving in your destination, identify a local general practitioner and know the location of the nearest private hospital. Asking your local expat community for recommendations consistently produces better results than online directories. Having a local doctor before you need one urgently is simple, cheap peace of mind.
Related Articles
- Tax Implications of Working Remotely from Another Country as a US Citizen
- Learning the Local Language: What Level You Actually Need Abroad
- The Complete Travel & Thrive Guide: How to Work Remotely Abroad After 50 Without Touching Your Savings
- Portugal vs. Mexico vs. Thailand: Cost of Living Comparison for Over-50 Remote Workers
