Company Collective Health Insurance Spain
↓ Jump to Frequently Asked QuestionsOffering private health insurance to your staff is one of the most cost-effective benefits in the Spanish market — partially tax-deductible for the company, tax-free up to €500 per employee per year, and one of the strongest signals to a Spanish workforce that an employer takes its responsibilities seriously.
Spanish Insurance Law: Collective / Group Health. Key Facts, Limits & Exclusions
The legal framework, specific waiting periods, exclusions and citations every prospective policyholder should know. Sources are linked inline to the BOE (Boletín Oficial del Estado) and Spanish regulators.
Legal framework
Group/collective health insurance falls under Ley 50/1980 general provisions plus the specific employer-benefit treatment in Ley 35/2006 IRPF. Spanish law does not require employers to provide private health cover — the public Sistema Nacional de Salud is the universal entitlement — but employer-provided private health is a highly tax-efficient employee benefit and increasingly common for skilled-talent retention.
Tax efficiency: the €500 rule
Under Ley 35/2006 IRPF Article 42.2.f, employers can provide private health insurance up to €500 per employee per year (€1,500 if disabled) as a non-cash benefit that does not count as IRPF income for the employee. Cover for the employee's spouse and children under 25 is also exempt within the same limit applied per insured person. The premium is fully deductible as a business expense for the employer (Impuesto sobre Sociedades).
Group structure and minimum size
Spanish collective health policies typically require 10 insured employees minimum. The group can be the employer's direct staff, a professional college (colegio profesional) membership, or an association. Group rates achieve 20–30% discount versus individual policies because the insurer pools risk across age-mixed populations and benefits from streamlined administration. Some plans include guaranteed acceptance (no medical questions) when group size exceeds 50.
Family member add-ons
Most collective plans allow family member additions (spouse, children, sometimes parents) at preferential rates — typically 10–20% below individual rates. Family additions are usually employee-paid by salary deduction. These contributions also fall within the €500/year IRPF exemption per insured person.
Standard exclusions
Same as individual health policies — pre-existing conditions on individual application (often waived for guaranteed-acceptance group policies), cosmetic surgery, experimental treatments, professional sport injuries, treatment outside the cuadro médico. The advantage of group policies: pre-existing conditions are typically less restricted because the insurer is averaging risk across the group rather than individually underwriting.
What Is Collective Health Insurance?
Here is what you need to know.
Collective health insurance (seguro de salud colectivo) is a group health policy provided by an employer to its employees, with significant administrative, tax and underwriting advantages over individual policies bought by each employee separately. In Spain, group health is the second-most-common employee benefit after meal vouchers (cheques restaurante), and one of the most powerful tools for retention in competitive sectors like technology, professional services, and healthcare.
The Spanish tax position is genuinely advantageous. Premiums paid by the employer are fully deductible from corporate tax. Employees receive the benefit-in-kind of up to €500 per year per family member tax-free under Article 42 of the Personal Income Tax Law (Ley 35/2006), with the employee, spouse and any descendants under age 25 each carrying their own €500 allowance.
For a family of four, that is €2,000 of fully tax-free health benefit — substantially more valuable than the same amount as taxable salary.
Generali Salud Empresas is the corporate variant of the Generali health insurance range. It covers the same hospital networks and clinical content as the individual EXPAT Medcare and Salud Opción Premium products, but with a different administrative and pricing structure designed for groups of 5 or more employees.
Who Benefits Most From Collective Health
Highly competitive talent market. Group health is now near-universal in tech firms over 10 employees, especially those competing with international employers.
Law firms, accountancies, consultancies and advisory businesses. Strong retention tool for senior professionals; signals quality of working environment.
Often offered to white-collar staff first; increasingly extended to skilled blue-collar workers as differentiator vs competitors.
Corporate parent often expects group health as standard; Generali offers the same product structure as international parent's home-market arrangement.
Particularly valuable as employees expect higher-quality cover. Often combined with professional indemnity for the practice.
Hotels, restaurants and accommodation businesses with permanent (vs seasonal) staff. Valuable in hard-to-recruit sectors.
How Group Health Differs From Individual Health
The clinical content of Generali Salud Empresas is essentially identical to the individual product range — same hospital networks, same specialist access, same telemedicine app, same waiting periods. The differences are in three structural areas:
- Simplified underwriting — for groups of 10+ employees, Generali typically waives the individual health questionnaire (which would otherwise apply to each employee). Instead, the group is rated on aggregate demographics: average age, geographic distribution, sector, gender split. For groups of 5–9 employees, simplified questionnaires apply (typically 4 questions instead of the standard 12).
- Pre-existing conditions accepted — within reason. Group policies typically accept all pre-existing conditions on the standard waiting periods, without exclusions or loadings on individual employees. This is the single biggest practical difference: an employee with a chronic condition who would be loaded or excluded on an individual policy is accepted on standard terms in a group.
- Group pricing — premiums are typically 10–25% lower per person than equivalent individual cover, reflecting the reduced anti-selection risk and the administrative simplicity of group billing.
- Family extension — employees can almost always extend cover to their spouse and children at the same group-rated premium, often funded jointly between employer and employee.
- Single billing relationship — one monthly invoice to the company covering all employees, instead of individual direct debits. Simplifies HR administration substantially.
What Generali Salud Empresas Covers
The covered benefits mirror the corresponding individual product range:
- Full Spain hospital network — 51,000+ medical professionals across 240+ private hospitals, plus dental network access.
- All medical specialties — GP, cardiology, dermatology, gynaecology, urology, oncology, neurology, paediatrics, orthopaedics, psychiatry, etc. No GP referral required for specialist consultation.
- Hospitalisation and surgery — full inpatient cover with private room as standard, scheduled and emergency surgery, day-case procedures.
- Diagnostic tests — X-ray, ultrasound, MRI, CT, PET, blood, biopsy, endoscopy.
- Mental health — psychology and psychiatric consultations, with annual session caps depending on plan tier.
- 24/7 telemedicine — unlimited video consultations through the Mi Generali app.
- Maternity — antenatal, childbirth and post-natal cover after 8-month waiting period (waived for switchers from another insurer).
- Dental optional add-on. Generali Dental Premium with annual cleanings, X-rays, fillings at preferential rates and discounts on implants and orthodontics.
- Travel medical assistance — included on most tiers, up to €35,000 for trips of up to 90 days.
- English-language administration. Mi Generali app, claims correspondence and customer service available in English on the EXPAT-tier group products.
Plan Structure Options
Group health programmes are typically structured in one of three ways. The right structure depends on the size of the workforce, the diversity of seniority levels, and the company's compensation philosophy:
Single-tier flat plan — every employee receives the same plan (typically EXPAT Medcare Standard or Salud Opción Premium equivalent). Simple administration, equal treatment across the workforce. Most common in companies of 10–50 employees with a relatively flat hierarchy.
Two-tier plan — staff and management on different plans (e.g. Standard for staff, Prime for managers; or Salud Opción Premium for staff, EXPAT Medcare Top for senior leadership). Common in larger companies and professional services firms.
Flexible benefit (cafeteria) approach — the employer funds a fixed monetary allowance per employee, who chooses their own plan tier and family extensions within that allowance, paying any difference themselves through payroll. Increasingly popular in technology firms with diverse workforce demographics.
The structure can be changed at policy renewal each year as the workforce grows or compensation strategy evolves.
Indicative Annual Premiums Per Employee
| Profile | Indicative price | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Standard plan, average age 30 workforce | €35 – €55 / month | Salud Opción Premium-equivalent group rate |
| Standard plan, average age 45 workforce | €55 – €80 / month | Standard tier with copayment-free network |
| Premium plan (Prime-equivalent) | €65 – €100 / month | Includes 80% out-of-network reimbursement |
| Top-tier executive plan (Top-equivalent) | €100 – €165 / month | Worldwide cover, used selectively |
| Spouse extension | +€30 – €60 / month | Same group rate as principal |
| Children under 18 | +€20 – €35 / month / child | Family-rated |
| Optional dental add-on | +€8 – €14 / month | Group dental plan |
| Group of 50+ employees | −10% additional discount | Mid-market group rating |
Disclaimer: All figures are indicative for 2026 and subject to underwriting at the time of application. Final premium depends on age, occupation, postcode, sums insured and individual risk profile. Contact us for a written quote.
Tax Treatment for Employer and Employee
The tax position of group health in Spain is one of the most attractive in Europe and a key reason this benefit is so widely adopted:
For the employer — premiums are fully deductible from corporate tax (Impuesto sobre Sociedades) as a normal business expense. There are no further employer payroll taxes on the benefit.
For the employee — the benefit-in-kind of group health insurance is exempt from personal income tax (IRPF) up to €500 per year per insured person, under Article 42.2.f of Ley 35/2006 (Spanish Personal Income Tax Law).
Crucially, the €500 allowance applies separately to the employee and to each family member covered by the policy:
- Spouse
- Descendants under 25
- (in some interpretations) ascendants over 65. For a family of four (employee
- Spouse
- Two children)
- The combined tax-free allowance is €2
- 000 per year. Where the employer contribution exceeds this combined allowance
- The excess is treated as taxable benefit-in-kind
For employees suffering from disabilities (33% or more recognised disability under Spanish disability law), the per-person allowance increases to €1,500 per year, reflecting the higher value of medical access for this group.
We provide each client with the standard payroll integration documentation needed for the gestor or HR system to apply the exemption correctly through the employee's monthly nómina.
Approximate Collective Health Insurance Pricing
Per-employee monthly premiums for group health policies. Significant savings vs individual rates:
- 15-25% discount vs individual
- No medical questions (group basis)
- Full health cover
- Family extension optional
- Single renewal date
- 25-35% group discount
- Account manager assigned
- Family rates included
- Tax-efficient benefit-in-kind
- Annual claims review
- 35-45% saving vs individual
- Bespoke cover terms
- Multi-tier (executive vs standard)
- Wellness add-ons
- Full HR portal integration
Prices shown are typical Spanish market starting points and depend on age, area, cover level and your individual circumstances. Contact us for a free personalised quote. Group rates require minimum 10 employees and uniform cover terms across the group.
Frequently Asked Questions. Collective (Group) Health Insurance
These are the most common questions we receive.
Collective health insurance allows a Spanish business to provide private healthcare to employees as a benefit, with significant cost and tax advantages versus individual policies. Here are the most common questions from Costa Blanca employers.
More questions? Visit our complete FAQ centre with 90+ detailed guides, or contact us for free English-speaking advice.
How This Compares to the Competition
Honest comparisons help you make an informed choice. These figures are typical Spanish-market starting points and depend on age, area, cover level and individual circumstances.
Generali Salud Empresas vs Sanitas Empresas and Adeslas Empresas
How Generali's group health insurance for businesses compares to the dominant Spanish competitors.
| Feature | Generali Salud Empresas | Sanitas Empresas | Adeslas Empresas |
|---|---|---|---|
| Minimum employees | 10 | 10 | 10 |
| Group discount vs individual | 20–30% | 15–25% | 20–25% |
| Tax efficiency (€500/employee) | Yes — IRPF deductible | Yes — IRPF deductible | Yes — IRPF deductible |
| Family member add-on | Yes — preferential rates | Yes — preferential rates | Yes — preferential rates |
| English-speaking employees catered for | Yes — EXPAT Medcare integration | Limited | Limited |
| Onboarding admin handled | Yes — by Turner Insurance | Direct insurer | Direct insurer |
Comparisons are based on publicly available product literature and our experience placing policies across the Spanish market. Premium estimates assume a healthy applicant on the Costa Blanca with no significant claims history. Contact us for a personalised, like-for-like quote.
Sources & References
This page references the following official Spanish regulatory and legal sources. These are the authoritative bodies and laws governing insurance products in Spain:
- Dirección General de Seguros y Fondos de Pensiones (DGS). Spanish insurance regulator. Confirms registration of insurance brokers (Andrew Turner: Registry C0467B54657010) and authorises all insurance products distributed in Spain.
- Ley 50/1980. Ley de Contrato de Seguro (BOE). Spanish Insurance Contract Law. The primary legal framework governing all insurance contracts in Spain — defines duties, claims, cancellation rights and disclosure obligations.
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