Dual Canadian and British citizen - healthcare coverage in the UK?









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I want to know if I am entitled to medical assistance in the UK while visiting for 3 weeks in June. I am travelling on my Canadian passport since my UK one is outdated.










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  • 1




    IMHO not off-topic but borderline since the question is not about moving for extended periods. Rather it's about health insurance whilst travelling.
    – JoErNanO
    May 18 '15 at 12:59














up vote
7
down vote

favorite












I want to know if I am entitled to medical assistance in the UK while visiting for 3 weeks in June. I am travelling on my Canadian passport since my UK one is outdated.










share|improve this question



















  • 1




    IMHO not off-topic but borderline since the question is not about moving for extended periods. Rather it's about health insurance whilst travelling.
    – JoErNanO
    May 18 '15 at 12:59












up vote
7
down vote

favorite









up vote
7
down vote

favorite











I want to know if I am entitled to medical assistance in the UK while visiting for 3 weeks in June. I am travelling on my Canadian passport since my UK one is outdated.










share|improve this question















I want to know if I am entitled to medical assistance in the UK while visiting for 3 weeks in June. I am travelling on my Canadian passport since my UK one is outdated.







uk health insurance dual-nationality






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edited Jul 26 '16 at 14:14









blackbird

13.6k739106




13.6k739106










asked Jun 4 '14 at 15:59









Carolyn Reinhart

74123




74123







  • 1




    IMHO not off-topic but borderline since the question is not about moving for extended periods. Rather it's about health insurance whilst travelling.
    – JoErNanO
    May 18 '15 at 12:59












  • 1




    IMHO not off-topic but borderline since the question is not about moving for extended periods. Rather it's about health insurance whilst travelling.
    – JoErNanO
    May 18 '15 at 12:59







1




1




IMHO not off-topic but borderline since the question is not about moving for extended periods. Rather it's about health insurance whilst travelling.
– JoErNanO
May 18 '15 at 12:59




IMHO not off-topic but borderline since the question is not about moving for extended periods. Rather it's about health insurance whilst travelling.
– JoErNanO
May 18 '15 at 12:59










2 Answers
2






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oldest

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up vote
14
down vote













From the NHS Information for visitors to England site:




The NHS is a residence-based healthcare system



....



Hospital treatment is free to 'ordinary residents' of the UK. But if you are visiting the UK – to stay with family, on business, as a tourist, or if you are living here without proper permission – then you are likely to be charged by an NHS hospital for the treatment you receive




As such, since you're a Canadian resident, you're not entitled to NHS coverage through the normal route. Citizenship doesn't help, it's the residency (and hence paying for it through taxes) that counts



There are quite a few countries with reciprocal healthcare agreements, under which residents of those countries can use the NHS while visiting, and UK residents can use their system when registering there. Unfortunately, Canada is not one of them.



As a British citizen, you're entitled to move to the UK. If you did, you could register with a GP, and start accessing NHS treatments. However, if you're just visiting, and don't qualify for one of the exemptions on this page, you'll need to take out travel insurance with a health component / arrange for your existing health insurance at home to cover you abroad.






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  • 2




    As an aside, the answer would be the same if you were travelling on your British passport.
    – DJClayworth
    Jun 4 '14 at 17:19






  • 1




    I think they figure that if you've paid enough years worth of NI contributions to qualify for a state pension, you've funded the system enough to be entitled!
    – Gagravarr
    Jun 4 '14 at 20:35

















up vote
3
down vote













If you are receiving a Uk pension you are entitled to free emergency in hospital medical. ie if you go to emergency for treatment and are kept in then your treatment is free. You cannot just go for a hip replacement or something like that, it has to be as an emergency in patient.






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  • 4




    This answer would probably be improved with a link to an official site with more details.
    – hippietrail
    May 18 '15 at 12:20










  • While I believe this may have been true in the past, I don't believe it is any more.
    – DJClayworth
    Sep 19 '17 at 1:58









protected by Community Nov 24 '16 at 10:16



Thank you for your interest in this question.
Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



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2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
14
down vote













From the NHS Information for visitors to England site:




The NHS is a residence-based healthcare system



....



Hospital treatment is free to 'ordinary residents' of the UK. But if you are visiting the UK – to stay with family, on business, as a tourist, or if you are living here without proper permission – then you are likely to be charged by an NHS hospital for the treatment you receive




As such, since you're a Canadian resident, you're not entitled to NHS coverage through the normal route. Citizenship doesn't help, it's the residency (and hence paying for it through taxes) that counts



There are quite a few countries with reciprocal healthcare agreements, under which residents of those countries can use the NHS while visiting, and UK residents can use their system when registering there. Unfortunately, Canada is not one of them.



As a British citizen, you're entitled to move to the UK. If you did, you could register with a GP, and start accessing NHS treatments. However, if you're just visiting, and don't qualify for one of the exemptions on this page, you'll need to take out travel insurance with a health component / arrange for your existing health insurance at home to cover you abroad.






share|improve this answer


















  • 2




    As an aside, the answer would be the same if you were travelling on your British passport.
    – DJClayworth
    Jun 4 '14 at 17:19






  • 1




    I think they figure that if you've paid enough years worth of NI contributions to qualify for a state pension, you've funded the system enough to be entitled!
    – Gagravarr
    Jun 4 '14 at 20:35














up vote
14
down vote













From the NHS Information for visitors to England site:




The NHS is a residence-based healthcare system



....



Hospital treatment is free to 'ordinary residents' of the UK. But if you are visiting the UK – to stay with family, on business, as a tourist, or if you are living here without proper permission – then you are likely to be charged by an NHS hospital for the treatment you receive




As such, since you're a Canadian resident, you're not entitled to NHS coverage through the normal route. Citizenship doesn't help, it's the residency (and hence paying for it through taxes) that counts



There are quite a few countries with reciprocal healthcare agreements, under which residents of those countries can use the NHS while visiting, and UK residents can use their system when registering there. Unfortunately, Canada is not one of them.



As a British citizen, you're entitled to move to the UK. If you did, you could register with a GP, and start accessing NHS treatments. However, if you're just visiting, and don't qualify for one of the exemptions on this page, you'll need to take out travel insurance with a health component / arrange for your existing health insurance at home to cover you abroad.






share|improve this answer


















  • 2




    As an aside, the answer would be the same if you were travelling on your British passport.
    – DJClayworth
    Jun 4 '14 at 17:19






  • 1




    I think they figure that if you've paid enough years worth of NI contributions to qualify for a state pension, you've funded the system enough to be entitled!
    – Gagravarr
    Jun 4 '14 at 20:35












up vote
14
down vote










up vote
14
down vote









From the NHS Information for visitors to England site:




The NHS is a residence-based healthcare system



....



Hospital treatment is free to 'ordinary residents' of the UK. But if you are visiting the UK – to stay with family, on business, as a tourist, or if you are living here without proper permission – then you are likely to be charged by an NHS hospital for the treatment you receive




As such, since you're a Canadian resident, you're not entitled to NHS coverage through the normal route. Citizenship doesn't help, it's the residency (and hence paying for it through taxes) that counts



There are quite a few countries with reciprocal healthcare agreements, under which residents of those countries can use the NHS while visiting, and UK residents can use their system when registering there. Unfortunately, Canada is not one of them.



As a British citizen, you're entitled to move to the UK. If you did, you could register with a GP, and start accessing NHS treatments. However, if you're just visiting, and don't qualify for one of the exemptions on this page, you'll need to take out travel insurance with a health component / arrange for your existing health insurance at home to cover you abroad.






share|improve this answer














From the NHS Information for visitors to England site:




The NHS is a residence-based healthcare system



....



Hospital treatment is free to 'ordinary residents' of the UK. But if you are visiting the UK – to stay with family, on business, as a tourist, or if you are living here without proper permission – then you are likely to be charged by an NHS hospital for the treatment you receive




As such, since you're a Canadian resident, you're not entitled to NHS coverage through the normal route. Citizenship doesn't help, it's the residency (and hence paying for it through taxes) that counts



There are quite a few countries with reciprocal healthcare agreements, under which residents of those countries can use the NHS while visiting, and UK residents can use their system when registering there. Unfortunately, Canada is not one of them.



As a British citizen, you're entitled to move to the UK. If you did, you could register with a GP, and start accessing NHS treatments. However, if you're just visiting, and don't qualify for one of the exemptions on this page, you'll need to take out travel insurance with a health component / arrange for your existing health insurance at home to cover you abroad.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Sep 18 '17 at 19:20









DJClayworth

31.4k580118




31.4k580118










answered Jun 4 '14 at 16:09









Gagravarr

47k32183390




47k32183390







  • 2




    As an aside, the answer would be the same if you were travelling on your British passport.
    – DJClayworth
    Jun 4 '14 at 17:19






  • 1




    I think they figure that if you've paid enough years worth of NI contributions to qualify for a state pension, you've funded the system enough to be entitled!
    – Gagravarr
    Jun 4 '14 at 20:35












  • 2




    As an aside, the answer would be the same if you were travelling on your British passport.
    – DJClayworth
    Jun 4 '14 at 17:19






  • 1




    I think they figure that if you've paid enough years worth of NI contributions to qualify for a state pension, you've funded the system enough to be entitled!
    – Gagravarr
    Jun 4 '14 at 20:35







2




2




As an aside, the answer would be the same if you were travelling on your British passport.
– DJClayworth
Jun 4 '14 at 17:19




As an aside, the answer would be the same if you were travelling on your British passport.
– DJClayworth
Jun 4 '14 at 17:19




1




1




I think they figure that if you've paid enough years worth of NI contributions to qualify for a state pension, you've funded the system enough to be entitled!
– Gagravarr
Jun 4 '14 at 20:35




I think they figure that if you've paid enough years worth of NI contributions to qualify for a state pension, you've funded the system enough to be entitled!
– Gagravarr
Jun 4 '14 at 20:35












up vote
3
down vote













If you are receiving a Uk pension you are entitled to free emergency in hospital medical. ie if you go to emergency for treatment and are kept in then your treatment is free. You cannot just go for a hip replacement or something like that, it has to be as an emergency in patient.






share|improve this answer
















  • 4




    This answer would probably be improved with a link to an official site with more details.
    – hippietrail
    May 18 '15 at 12:20










  • While I believe this may have been true in the past, I don't believe it is any more.
    – DJClayworth
    Sep 19 '17 at 1:58














up vote
3
down vote













If you are receiving a Uk pension you are entitled to free emergency in hospital medical. ie if you go to emergency for treatment and are kept in then your treatment is free. You cannot just go for a hip replacement or something like that, it has to be as an emergency in patient.






share|improve this answer
















  • 4




    This answer would probably be improved with a link to an official site with more details.
    – hippietrail
    May 18 '15 at 12:20










  • While I believe this may have been true in the past, I don't believe it is any more.
    – DJClayworth
    Sep 19 '17 at 1:58












up vote
3
down vote










up vote
3
down vote









If you are receiving a Uk pension you are entitled to free emergency in hospital medical. ie if you go to emergency for treatment and are kept in then your treatment is free. You cannot just go for a hip replacement or something like that, it has to be as an emergency in patient.






share|improve this answer












If you are receiving a Uk pension you are entitled to free emergency in hospital medical. ie if you go to emergency for treatment and are kept in then your treatment is free. You cannot just go for a hip replacement or something like that, it has to be as an emergency in patient.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Mar 15 '15 at 23:45









Rose

311




311







  • 4




    This answer would probably be improved with a link to an official site with more details.
    – hippietrail
    May 18 '15 at 12:20










  • While I believe this may have been true in the past, I don't believe it is any more.
    – DJClayworth
    Sep 19 '17 at 1:58












  • 4




    This answer would probably be improved with a link to an official site with more details.
    – hippietrail
    May 18 '15 at 12:20










  • While I believe this may have been true in the past, I don't believe it is any more.
    – DJClayworth
    Sep 19 '17 at 1:58







4




4




This answer would probably be improved with a link to an official site with more details.
– hippietrail
May 18 '15 at 12:20




This answer would probably be improved with a link to an official site with more details.
– hippietrail
May 18 '15 at 12:20












While I believe this may have been true in the past, I don't believe it is any more.
– DJClayworth
Sep 19 '17 at 1:58




While I believe this may have been true in the past, I don't believe it is any more.
– DJClayworth
Sep 19 '17 at 1:58





protected by Community Nov 24 '16 at 10:16



Thank you for your interest in this question.
Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?



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