Health Insurance Nicaragua: Options for Expats

Expats living in Nicaragua often discover two things quickly: local care can be helpful for minor issues, and
for anything serious, having a plan (and often a Managua hospital in mind) matters. This guide walks through:

  • Local hospital access in San Juan del Sur
  • Why Health Insurance Nicaragua is worth considering
  • How the national social security and insurance system, INSS, works, and
  • Why many expats living here long-term explore hospital-specific insurance options in Managua, including the Military Hospital’s PAME program.

Start Locally: Public Healthcare Options in San Juan del Sur

Expats living in coastal towns like San Juan del Sur do have access to local public healthcare facilities.  For minor issues or initial assessment, these can be useful starting points.

That said, it’s important to set realistic expectations. Experiences can be mixed, and resources and staffing are often limited. This isn’t a reflection on the dedication of local healthcare workers. It’s simply a matter of system capacity. For anything complex, urgent, or specialist-led, many families find that a trip to Managua is warranted.

Health Insurance Nicaragua: Why Insurance Matters in Nicaragua

Healthcare costs in Nicaragua can be very manageable or unexpectedly high, depending on where you’re treated and whether you’re insured. In Managua, bills can escalate quickly in private settings, especially with imaging, specialist care, procedures, or an overnight stay.

In broad terms, expats tend to consider three insurance routes:

  1. International health insurance
  2. INSS (Nicaraguan Social Security)
  3. Hospital-specific private coverage in Managua

International Health Insurance: Check Coverage Carefully

Many expats arrive with international health insurance. This can be useful, but coverage varies widely by provider and plan. Some policies reimburse you after the fact rather than paying the hospital directly, and some have restrictions on where care can be received.

If you intend to rely on international insurance while living in Nicaragua, it’s worth confirming whether your policy typically supports treatment at major Nicaraguan hospitals such as Hospital Militar and Hospital Vivian Pellas. Policies differ, so check your policy carefully for:

  • Direct billing vs reimbursement
  • Emergency-only clauses vs elective care
  • Facility/network restrictions
  • Pre-authorization requirements for imaging or procedures

INSS: National Insurance (Often Better for Workers Than Expats)

INSS (Instituto Nicaragüense de Seguridad Social) costs around $70 per person per month. For a family, it can get expensive, but it provides coverage across public hospitals in Nicaragua.

INSS also covers areas beyond healthcare, such as support when illness prevents work, along with other worker-focused benefits. This makes INSS more tailored to Nicaraguan workers than to many expats.

The main downsides commonly reported with Nicaragua’s public health system include long waiting times and limited practical access. In many cases, care under INSS is most accessible during weekday business hours, and wait times can be significant.  Public hospitals in smaller cities may also be limited in specialist availability and diagnostic equipment compared to major Managuan hospitals.

You can learn more about INSS in our other NicaSeeker article here.

Why a Managua-Based Insurance Strategy Can Be More Sensible

If you’re planning to be in Nicaragua for any significant period, it’s worth exploring national Health Insurance Nicaragua options. However, many expats conclude that a policy tied to a major Managuan hospital can be the most practical approach. The reason is simple: local public hospitals may be free, but they can be limited, while private care in Managua can become expensive quickly without insurance.

Two of the most discussed hospitals in Managua for expats are Hospital Vivian Pellas and Hospital Militar (the Military Hospital).

Vivian Pellas vs Hospital Militar: A Diplomatic Comparison

Hospital Vivian Pellas

Vivian Pellas is a private hospital in Managua. Private hospitals can provide excellent care, but costs can mount very quickly. Compared to Hospital Militar, Vivian Pellas is also not known for having the same breadth of in-house specialists and equipment. This doesn’t mean care is poor, but it can influence what is available on-site and what is referred elsewhere.

Hospital Militar

Hospital Militar is often viewed as one of the most capable hospitals in Nicaragua in terms of specialist availability and diagnostic capacity. For expats, this matters because it can reduce the need to bounce between providers for specialist-led care, imaging, and follow-ups.

Military Hospital Insurance (PAME): Practical Overview

The Military Hospital offers an insurance program called PAME (Programa de Atención Médica Especializada).
It’s designed to provide private medical services with broad coverage across a large catalogue of services.

PAME Pricing (Plans)

  • Plan I: $90/month – consultations, specialist care, diagnostics, limited hospitalization and ICU access (subject to waiting periods and limits).
  • Plan II: $120/month – includes Plan I plus ambulance service within urban Managua.

Real-world reference: We were personally quoted $90 per month for a family of five, including an 11-year old, which makes the Military Hospital insurance one of the more affordable structured healthcare options for expat families living in Nicaragua.

Enrollment: In Person, Thorough, and Worth Doing Early

It’s important to know that you typically need to go in person to Hospital Militar to set up your insurance. Assessments form part of the enrollment process, and it’s wise to set aside a decent amount of time for this.  The process is thorough, but many people find it worth it because the sooner your insurance is active, the sooner you start building eligibility for time-based benefits (for example, surgical coverage that may require months of continuous membership).

It’s far better to enroll calmly ahead of time than to arrive in an emergency situation without coverage and risk racking up significant costs.

Military Hospital Contact Details

If you want to inquire about PAME or the enrollment process, these contacts are commonly used:

Final Thought

Local public healthcare plays an important role, and for minor issues it may be sufficient. However, for anything important, specialist-led, or time-sensitive, Managua is often where expats find the level of diagnostics and care they want available. Insurance can be the difference between having options and facing a stressful, expensive scramble.

Download the English Factsheets

If you’d like to dig a bit deeper, we’ve also put together three downloadable PDF guides that translate and summarise the Military Hospital’s original Spanish information sheets into clear, plain English. They’re designed to help you understand what’s actually included, what the limits are, and how the different PAME options work before you make a trip to Managua or start the enrollment process. For many of us, having this information ahead of time makes navigating healthcare in Nicaragua feel a lot less overwhelming.

Download PAME Military Hospital Nicargua Factsheet

Download PAME Waiting Periods & Exclusions

Download PAME Adolescent Plan (Ages 12-17)