Colombia's health-insurance system is one of the better ones in Latin America by design, but the system is in active crisis as of 2026: Sanitas and Nueva EPS are under government intervention, Coomeva EPS has been liquidated, Sura and Compensar have filed voluntary withdrawal requests. Any guide that doesn't tell you that is outdated. This is the honest picture for expats moving to Barranquilla in 2026: what EPS still works, which prepagada providers are stable, the international-insurance options, the visa-insurance gotcha that catches almost everyone, and the stack most long-term foreigners actually settle on.
How Colombia's healthcare system is structured
Three layers stack on top of each other:
- EPS (Entidad Promotora de Salud) · the mandatory public-private health insurance layer, with benefits guaranteed under a national plan called the PBS (formerly POS). Every legal resident must be enrolled. Contributions are 12.5 percent of declared monthly income for self-employed (split 8.5%/4% employer/employee for salaried workers). Covers primary care, specialists, hospitalization, surgery, mental health, maternity, most medications, and emergencies.
- Prepagada (medicina prepagada) · private supplementary insurance sold by Colsanitas, Colmédica, MedPlus, Coomeva Medicina Prepagada, Sura, and others. Add-on to EPS, not a replacement. Buys you direct specialist access, shorter waits, choice of doctor, and access to top private hospitals.
- International insurance · foreign-issued policies (Cigna Global, GeoBlue, IMG, Allianz Care, SafetyWing) that cover you in Colombia and elsewhere. Used by short-term visitors, digital nomads under 90 days, and high-income expats who want medevac coverage built in.
The big insight: EPS is mandatory once you have a cédula de extranjería. Most long-term expats pair it with prepagada to remove the friction. Short-term visitors and digital nomads usually skip EPS and use international insurance.
The 2025-2026 EPS crisis · what's actually happening
Between 2024 and 2026, the Colombian government's Supersalud took several major EPS into intervention (a forced takeover where the state appoints management while the entity's finances are restructured). Other EPS have requested voluntary withdrawal. One major EPS has been liquidated outright. Honest framing as of May 2026:
- Sanitas EPS · under forced intervention since 2024, extended into 2026. Owned by Keralty. Still operating and accepting affiliates, but the future is uncertain.
- Nueva EPS · under intervention through April 2027. The largest EPS by affiliate count (~10.8 million). Operational and financial indicators deteriorating per Supersalud reports.
- Sura EPS · filed voluntary withdrawal in 2024. Supersalud rejected the initial request in December 2024. Still the most respected EPS in Antioquia (Medellín) for service quality; future is uncertain.
- Compensar · filed voluntary withdrawal. Strong in Bogotá. Uncertain.
- Coomeva EPS · LIQUIDATED. ~1.2-1.3 million affiliates were reassigned. Don't enroll. (Note: Coomeva Medicina Prepagada is a separate legal entity and is still operating.)
- Salud Total · ~4.7 million affiliates. NOT intervened. Among the most financially stable large contributory EPS in 2026.
EPS · what it costs, what it covers, how to enroll
EPS enrollment is mandatory for anyone with a cédula de extranjería. You enroll at any EPS office or online once your cédula is processed.
Cost
For self-employed foreigners on a visa, the contribution is 12.5 percent of declared monthly income, with a floor at 1 SMMLV. In 2026 the SMMLV is COP 1,750,905, so the minimum contribution is roughly COP 218,863 per month (~USD 55). The ceiling is 25 SMMLV of declared income.
Rentista and Digital Nomad visa holders typically declare at the 3x SMMLV floor matching their visa-income requirement, putting their EPS contribution at about COP 657,000 per month (~USD 164).
Salaried workers have 4 percent deducted from payroll; employers pay 8.5 percent. Pensionados pay 4 percent of pension income.
What's covered
The PBS (Plan de Beneficios en Salud) is broad: primary care, specialist consultations, hospitalization, surgery, mental health, maternity, pediatrics, most medications, physical therapy, basic dental, emergency care, cancer treatment, cardiac surgery, organ transplants (in covered indications). Not covered: most cosmetic procedures, experimental treatments, advanced dental beyond basic, vision correction, some sub-specialty work. No out-of-pocket maximum cap because there's no out-of-pocket structure; covered care costs nothing or a small copay (COP 500-5,000).
How enrollment actually works (Barranquilla-specific)
- Pick an EPS that accepts foreign cédulas. Salud Total, Sura, or one of the larger options.
- Go to a branch office with your cédula de extranjería, recent utility bill or lease showing your address, and your visa.
- Fill the Formulario de Afiliación.
- Declare your base income (IBC). Minimum 1 SMMLV; Rentista/DNV holders typically declare 3x SMMLV.
- Pay first month's contribution on the spot or via PSE.
- Pick your primary IPS. In Barranquilla: Salud Total has IPS in Buena Vista and El Prado; Sura's IPS network in BAQ is smaller than in Medellín but present in Villa Country and Buena Vista.
Coverage begins 1 to 3 business days after enrollment is confirmed.
Prepagada · the private supplementary layer
Prepagada is sold by some of the same companies as EPS but operates as a separate contract. Monthly premium buys you:
- Direct specialist access (no GP referral).
- Same-week or same-day appointments for most specialties.
- Private hospital rooms.
- Access to top private hospitals (Clínica Portoazul, Clínica La Misericordia, Clínica Iberoamérica, Clínica Bonnadona Prevenir).
- English-speaking doctors on most panels.
The main prepagada providers in 2026
- Colsanitas (Keralty group) · 5 plan tiers, 40+ years of operation, largest private clinic network. colsanitas.com
- Colmédica · 15 plan options. NOTE: Colmédica is NOT the same as Sura's plan complementario; separate companies, separate products. colmedica.com
- MedPlus · Supersalud-authorized provider.
- Coomeva Medicina Prepagada · still operating in 2026 (separate legal entity from the liquidated Coomeva EPS).
- Sura Plan Complementario · Sura sells its own separate complementary plan as an EPS add-on.
Indicative monthly prices (2026 COP, approximate ranges)
Prices vary by provider, plan tier, age, and pre-existing conditions. Get a written cotización from each provider before signing.
| Age | Entry-level | Mid-tier | Top-tier |
|---|---|---|---|
| 30-35 | COP 130,000-220,000 | COP 220,000-400,000 | COP 400,000-700,000 |
| 50 | COP 220,000-400,000 | COP 400,000-700,000 | COP 700,000-1,200,000 |
| 65+ | COP 400,000-700,000 | COP 700,000-1,200,000 | COP 1,200,000+ |
USD equivalents at TRM ~4,000: entry-level age 35 runs about USD 35-55/month; mid-tier age 50 runs about USD 100-175/month.
Pre-existing conditions and waiting periods
Prepagada providers screen for pre-existing conditions and apply waiting periods (typically 6-24 months for major procedures, longer for some chronic conditions). EPS does NOT screen and has no waiting periods, which is one reason most expats enroll in both.
International insurance · for short-term visitors and digital nomads
If you're in Colombia under 90 days, on a digital-nomad visa, on corporate assignment, or just want medevac coverage built in, international insurance is usually right. The major options:
Long-term expat plans
- Cigna Global · tier-based plans, USD 200-300/mo healthy 30-40yo core inpatient; USD 350-500 with full outpatient/dental. cignaglobal.com
- GeoBlue (Xplorer) · US-passport-focused. Generally priced between Cigna Gold and Platinum.
- IMG Global · long-term reimbursement model.
- Allianz Care · long-term expat product, strong global network.
Digital nomad and short-term plans
- SafetyWing (Nomad Insurance) · ~USD 50/mo subscription. Cheap but real coverage caps; read the policy.
- World Nomads · trip-based, adventure-activity coverage. Best under 45 days.
- Allianz Travel · short-term traveler product, separate from Allianz Care.
The visa-insurance gotcha that catches everyone
The single most important fact in this guide:
The realistic workflow:
- Apply for your first M (Migrant) or R (Resident) visa with an international travel-medical policy covering the period of stay. AXA Assistance Colombia, Assist Card, SafetyWing, IATI Seguros, and similar are commonly accepted.
- Receive the visa.
- Apply for your cédula de extranjería.
- Enroll in an EPS (now mandatory for residents).
- On visa renewal or upgrade, present the EPS certificate of affiliation.
The Cancillería does NOT publish a fixed USD minimum; Resolution 5477 requires "sufficient coverage" for the stay. Practical floor: medical coverage of USD 100,000+, evacuation/repatriation included, valid for full duration, in a policy that explicitly names: hospitalization, emergency medical care, disability, maternity (for adult women in pregnancy age), death, and repatriation.
Travel-medical for short stays under 90 days
Commonly accepted in practice for V/PIP/M-first-time applications:
- AXA Assistance Colombia · up to USD $200,000 medical coverage, baggage, 24/7 assistance. Locally underwritten. axa.asistenciaviaje.com.co
- Assist Card · widely used across LATAM.
- SafetyWing Nomad Insurance · USD ~$50/month, includes emergency evacuation.
- IATI Seguros / Mondo / Heymondo · European-headquartered, popular and frequently cited.
The certificate must explicitly list hospitalization, emergency medical, disability, maternity, death, and repatriation, with start and end dates covering your requested stay.
The stack most foreigners actually use
Stack 1: EPS + Prepagada (most common for long-term residents)
- EPS for legally required base + catastrophic protection.
- Prepagada for fast specialist access, choice of doctor, private rooms.
- Total: COP 657,000 EPS + COP 220,000-400,000 prepagada = ~USD 220-265/month at 35yo.
Stack 2: EPS + International (medevac-paranoid stack)
- EPS for mandatory base.
- International policy (Cigna Global, Allianz Care) for repatriation and stays outside Colombia.
- Total: COP 657,000 + USD 250-400 = ~USD 415-565/month at 35yo. Expensive but works for split-time residents.
Stack 3: International only (the digital nomad)
- SafetyWing or Cigna Global, no Colombian enrollment.
- Works only on 90-day tourist permits or some digital-nomad visa setups.
- Total: USD 50-300/month depending on plan.
Where you'll actually use this · top private hospitals by city
Both prepagada and international insurance route you to private hospitals. Most commonly reached:
- Barranquilla: Clínica Portoazul Auna (international-patient program, Newsweek-listed), Clínica La Misericordia (LMCI), Clínica Iberoamérica (Keralty/Colsanitas group), Clínica Bonnadona Prevenir, Clínica General del Norte.
- Cartagena: Hospital Serena del Mar (JCI), Nuevo Hospital de Bocagrande, Clínica Medihelp.
- Medellín: Hospital Pablo Tobón Uribe, Clínica Las Américas, Clínica El Rosario.
- Bogotá: Fundación Santa Fe de Bogotá (JCI), Clínica del Country, Clínica Reina Sofía.
Common mistakes
- Assuming EPS satisfies the visa-insurance requirement. It does not on first application.
- Enrolling in a recently-intervened EPS without knowing. Verify on supersalud.gov.co.
- Confusing Coomeva EPS (liquidated) with Coomeva Medicina Prepagada (still operating). Different legal entities.
- Confusing Colmédica with Sura's plan complementario. Different companies, different products.
- Skipping prepagada, then waiting 8 weeks for a specialist. If you can afford it, prepagada earns its keep on appointment time alone.
- Underbuying international insurance. SafetyWing at USD 50/month is great for the price but excludes a lot. Read the policy.
- Letting a Colombian policy lapse and assuming easy re-enrollment. Re-enrollment triggers new waiting periods on prepagada.
- Not declaring real income to EPS. Under-declaring is technically illegal; DIAN cross-checks.
FAQ
- Can I see English-speaking doctors with EPS in Barranquilla?
- Possible but luck-of-the-draw. Prepagada gives reliable access to English-speaking specialists, especially at Clínica Portoazul.
- Does my US/Canadian insurance cover me in Colombia?
- Almost never for routine care. Some PPOs cover emergency care abroad as out-of-network. Medicare and CA provincial plans do not. Get a written statement before assuming.
- Do I need a Colombian bank account to enroll?
- Helpful but not strictly required. PSE or in-person payment works. Long-term, the local account is easier.
- Can my non-cédula partner be on my EPS or prepagada?
- EPS: as a beneficiary of a Colombian-recognized union. Prepagada: yes, as a separately-priced add-on.
- What if I need a procedure not in the PBS?
- Three options: pay out of pocket; prepagada coverage; tutela (constitutional injunction) if medically necessary and EPS refuses. Tutelas work but take weeks.
- I'm 67 and retiring to BAQ. Will prepagada accept me?
- Yes, with full pre-existing-condition screening and higher premiums. Some plans cap new-enrollee age at 70 or 75. Get cotizaciones from multiple providers; spread is significant.
- Pregnancy and maternity?
- EPS covers maternity completely. Prepagada often adds private-room delivery and choice of OB. Most international policies require pregnancy as a rider with 12-month waiting period.
- Emergency room experience in Barranquilla?
- EPS-only: long waits in public ER or your EPS's IPS. Prepagada or international: directly to Clínica Portoazul or Clínica La Misericordia ER, usually seen within 30 minutes.
Want help picking the right stack?
Tell Catalina your age, visa status, budget, and BAQ neighborhood. She'll cross-check EPS intervention status, get prepagada quotes, recommend international options if short-term, and walk you through the visa-insurance rule so you don't get rejected at the consulate.
This guide reflects May 2026 information about a rapidly-changing market. Verify EPS status on supersalud.gov.co and get written cotizaciones before enrolling. Editorial information, not legal, medical, or financial advice.
Further reading
- Healthcare in Barranquilla (overview)
- Visas & residency in Colombia
- Tax residency in Colombia: the 183-day rule
- Cost of living in Barranquilla
- Canadian taxes for seniors in Colombia
Still have questions?
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