HelloSafe Study — May 2026

The UK loses £293 million a year through cross-border healthcare

£293 million. That is how much more UK health authorities pay to their European partners each year than they receive in return. With gross reimbursements of €319 million, the UK is the single biggest net loser in the entire EHIC (European Health Insurance Card) system. I went through the latest official European Commission report to understand how this deficit works and why it has been getting worse every year since 2021.

Primary sourceEuropean Commission · DG EMPL
Scope32 states (EU-27 + EEA + UK)
Year2025
Overview

The EHIC: €1.5 billion that flies under the radar

The EHIC (European Health Insurance Card) covers unexpected medical treatment during a temporary stay in another EU country. On paper, it is a universal right. In practice, it is a €1.5 billion market between national social security systems, with fixed winners and losers. The UK sits firmly in the loser column.

291 M
EHIC cards in circulation in 2025 across the 32 states covered (EU + EEA + UK)
€1.5 bn
Reimbursed between European social security systems in 2025
2.6 M
Cross-border reimbursement claims processed between states in 2025
48%
of Europeans hold an EHIC. One in two travellers leaves home without any cover.
Analysis

Why the UK loses €293 million a year: three structural factors

The UK's deficit is not a fluke. It comes from three structural imbalances that reinforce each other. The post-pandemic rebound in tourism turned a manageable gap into a structural drain.

Factor 1

Asymmetric tourism flows

British travellers pour into France, Spain, Italy and Greece — all net beneficiaries of the EHIC system. The UK, on the other hand, attracts mainly business visitors, not leisure tourists seeking treatment. The direct result: the UK funds 365,000 claims abroad but only collects on 26,000 foreign patients treated at home.

Factor 2

The highest cost per claim in Europe

UK health authorities reimburse at the local tariff of the treating country. When a British tourist ends up in a Dutch hospital, the bill comes back at €904 per case. For Polish hospitals it reaches €1,070. At 365,000 claims a year, even a moderate per-unit cost adds up fast. The UK's average cost per claim is €1,004 — the second highest in Europe.

Factor 3

Post-Brexit exposure

After Brexit, the UK negotiated continued EHIC participation through the Trade and Cooperation Agreement. The arrangement kept outgoing British claims intact but sharply reduced the number of EU visitors treated on UK soil — cutting incoming revenue while outgoing costs kept growing. It is the worst of both worlds from a balance-sheet perspective.

HelloSafe Analysis

A deficit that will keep growing through 2030

Three structural trends will push the bill higher by 2030. An ageing travelling population generates longer, more intensive treatment episodes (cardiology, orthopaedics). The growing community of British retirees in Spain, Portugal and France accelerates outflows. And European hospital tariffs keep rising mechanically. On this trajectory, the deficit could exceed −€370 million by 2030.

−€370 M
HelloSafe projection
UK deficit 2030
Historical trend

2021: the year the UK's deficit multiplied fivefold

In 2017 the UK's net balance stood at around −€45 million — already negative, but manageable. By 2020 it had barely moved. Then came 2021. In a single year the deficit jumped to −€145 million. That was not a temporary blip. It was a structural break.

2017–2020
−€50 M/year
Average annual deficit over the period. Already negative, but the gap between outflows and inflows remained contained.
2021: the turning point
−€145 M
The deficit roughly tripled in one year. Post-pandemic travel recovery drove outgoing claims up sharply while incoming revenue recovered far more slowly.
2025
−€293 M
The deficit keeps widening. Without reform of card issuance or tariff policy, there is no reason for the trend to reverse.
Analysis

Why 2021 changed everything: three mechanisms feeding off each other

The 2021 turning point is not an accounting anomaly. It reflects a lasting reshaping of intra-European travel patterns, compounded by the demographic profile of British holidaymakers. These three mechanisms compound.

1

Asymmetric tourism recovery

From 2021, British travellers flooded back into France, Spain, Greece and Italy — all net beneficiaries of the EHIC system. At the same time, post-Brexit friction reduced the flow of EU visitors seeking treatment in the UK. Outgoing claims surged; incoming revenue crept up only slowly.

2

European hospital price inflation

After the pandemic, hospital tariffs in Austria, Spain and Italy rose steeply — driven by energy, wages and equipment replacement. Reimbursements track the local tariff, so the bill grows mechanically with the same volume. Eurostat's harmonised health price index for the euro area rose 12% between 2020 and 2023.

3

Ageing traveller effect

The age group that travels most in Europe today is the 60 to 75 bracket. These travellers also generate the most intensive medical episodes: cardiology, orthopaedics, post-operative care. Each UK claim handled abroad costs an average of €1,004 — the second highest in the system, behind Poland at €1,070.

€1,004
Average cost per reimbursement claim for unplanned medical care received abroad in 2025. For a hospital stay or emergency surgery, the bill can reach between €3,000 and €8,500 depending on the country and the type of treatment.
Ranking 1 — Top payers

The 5 countries that pay most for their citizens' healthcare abroad

When a UK-insured patient is admitted to hospital in France, the UK authority settles the bill through form E125 (the inter-state reimbursement form). The UK, Germany and France together account for 82% of all outgoing payments across EU-27.

Paying country
Amount reimbursed 2025
1
🇩🇪
Germany690,000 claims per year
€336 M€560 per claim
2
🇬🇧
United Kingdom365,000 claims per year
€319 M€1,004 per claim
3
🇫🇷
France470,000 claims per year
€291 M€712 per claim
4
🇳🇱
Netherlands123,000 claims per year
€97 M€904 per claim
5
🇵🇱
Poland89,000 claims per year
€83 M€1,070 per claim
Ranking 2 — Top receivers

The 5 countries acting as Europe's hospital

Some countries treat European patients at scale and get reimbursed for it. Spain handles 454,000 foreign cases a year. Austria, with barely a third of that volume, bills nearly as much — its hospital tariffs are simply higher.

Treating country
Amount billed 2025
1
🇩🇪
Germany277,000 foreign patient cases
€229 M
2
🇪🇸
Spain454,000 cases — European volume record
€182 M
3
🇫🇷
France65,000 foreign patient cases
€173 M
4
🇦🇹
Austria258,000 cases — alpine health hub
€170 M
5
🇧🇪
Belgium374,000 cases
€107 M
Healthcare migration balance

Winners and losers: the system's bottom line

Each country's net balance is simple arithmetic: amounts collected from other states minus amounts paid out for its own insured citizens. The result reveals a stable geographic split: Mediterranean and Alpine countries collect; the large tourist-origin countries (UK, France, Germany) foot the bill.

🏆 Winners

Positive balances 2025

Country Collected Paid out Balance
🇦🇹Austria €170 M €30 M +€140 M
🇪🇸Spain €182 M €47 M +€135 M
🇧🇪Belgium* €107 M €43 M +€63 M
🇬🇷Greece €37 M €7 M +€29 M
🇸🇪Sweden €30 M €10 M +€20 M
🇭🇷Croatia €30 M €13 M +€16 M
🇨🇿Czech Republic €30 M €28 M +€2 M
📉 Losers

Negative balances 2025

Country Collected Paid out Balance
🇬🇧United Kingdom** €26 M €319 M −€293 M
🇫🇷France €173 M €291 M −€118 M
🇩🇪Germany €229 M €336 M −€107 M
🇵🇱Poland €53 M €83 M −€29 M
🇷🇴Romania €2 M €27 M −€25 M
🇧🇬Bulgaria €10 M €27 M −€17 M
🇱🇹Lithuania €2 M €17 M −€15 M
🇸🇰Slovakia €8 M €22 M −€14 M
🇳🇱Netherlands €83 M €97 M −€14 M
How to read this table. A positive balance means the country collects more than it pays out: it treats more foreign patients than it sends abroad. The healthcare migration balance (net balance) measures each country's position within the European health system: net patient exporter (net payer), importer (net beneficiary), or roughly neutral.

Italy, Switzerland and Luxembourg excluded from the ranking due to incomplete symmetrical data for 2025.
Bilateral corridors

The 6 bilateral corridors that shape the system

The bilateral corridors mirror travel habits: Brits in France, Germans on Austrian ski slopes, French travellers in Spain and Belgium. The UK → France corridor is the single largest financial flow in the entire European system. That alone says a lot about the UK's position.

🇬🇧 United Kingdom 🇫🇷 France
€208 M
Europe's largest corridor: 141,000 British cases treated in France in 2025, generating €208 million in inflows for France.
🇩🇪 Germany 🇦🇹 Austria
€87 M
152,000 cases linked to Alpine tourism. Combined with Swiss and Italian flows, Austria has built an economic model around treating European skiers.
🇫🇷 France 🇧🇪 Belgium
€69 M
305,000 cases — Europe's highest-volume corridor. The French-Belgian border functions as a shared living space, not a purely tourist flow.
🇩🇪 Germany 🇵🇱 Poland
129,000 cases
129,000 cases, fed by German-Polish minority communities, economic mobility, and tourist flows toward the Baltic coast.
🇫🇷 France 🇵🇹 Portugal
147,000 cases
147,000 cases. Portugal is absorbing a growing share of French retirees who settle or spend extended periods there. The figure rises year on year.
🇩🇪 Germany 🇪🇸 Spain
87,000 cases
87,000 cases. Spain is the primary emergency treatment destination for German holidaymakers, growing with an ageing travel population and the German retiree community on the Costa del Sol and Mallorca.
The coverage gap

EHIC coverage: from 1.8% to 100% depending on the country

EHIC coverage rates vary between 1.8% and 100% across Europe. It is not a question of national wealth. It comes down to the issuance process: automatic (built into the national health card) or on explicit request, as in France.

✅ Best protected

  • 🇱🇮Liechtenstein100%
  • 🇩🇪Germany100%
  • 🇮🇹Italy100%
  • 🇨🇭Switzerland100%
  • 🇨🇿Czech Republic95%
  • 🇦🇹Austria93%

⚠️ Most exposed

  • 🇬🇷Greece1.8%
  • 🇷🇴Romania2.8%
  • 🇧🇬Bulgaria5.8%
  • 🇪🇸Spain11.7%
  • 🇵🇱Poland18%
  • 🇫🇷France24%
💡 Note on UK coverage: The UK EHIC (now officially called the GHIC — Global Health Insurance Card — for new applicants) is issued separately on application through NHS England, NHS Scotland, NHS Wales or the HSC in Northern Ireland. Unlike Germany, where the card is embedded automatically in every health insurance card, UK residents must apply deliberately. The card is free but not automatic — which means a portion of British travellers depart without one.
Numbers that stand out

Four figures that deserve an explanation

+14,463%
The Greek explosion
In a single year, Greece's claim count jumped from 71 to 10,340 — a roughly 144-fold increase. The European Commission attributes this to the clearing of an administrative backlog, after several years of near-total paralysis in the reimbursement system.
4 weeks
Germany's issuance time
Getting an EHIC card in Germany can take up to 4 weeks. In Croatia the same card arrives in 1.67 days. Same card, same European law, no comparison on turnaround. For a last-minute trip, the wait can become a real problem.
49%
The Hungarian puzzle
49% of Hungary's submitted claims are rejected by other EU member states. The trajectory speaks for itself: 4.8% in 2020, 20% in 2021, 35% in 2022. No other European country comes close to this rejection rate.
€773,400
France's fraud record
22 detected cases in France, with a total damage of €773,400 — the highest amount in Europe. Austria detects 30 times more cases (660 cases) but stays below €357,000. France catches few cases, but when it does, they are large.
Administrative quirks

How card issuance differs across Europe

Country to country, EHIC issuance conditions are anything but uniform. Validity periods, processing times, application channels: the differences are sometimes striking.

🏆 Validity record
20 years
Poland
For Polish retirees, the EHIC is valid for 20 years. No other country in Europe comes close. Germany issues a card valid for 5 years before renewal.
⚡ Fastest issuance
1.67 days
Croatia
1.67 days in Croatia to receive your EHIC. In Germany the same process can take up to 4 weeks. Same card, same right, no comparison.
📉 Shortest validity
1 year
Greece
Greek working-age residents receive a card valid for just 1 year. Combined with Europe's lowest coverage rate (1.8%), the vast majority of Greeks travel without EHIC protection.
📱 Innovation
WhatsApp
Netherlands
The Netherlands accepts EHIC applications via WhatsApp, X or Facebook. No other European country offers this level of accessibility. In Germany, applications still run exclusively through the insurer, by post or online portal.
🏥 Europe's hospital
454K
Spain
454,000 foreign patient cases in 2025. Spain remains the primary emergency treatment destination in Europe, driven by its tourist appeal and the strong presence of retirees from across the continent.
⚠️ No chip
None
No electronic chip
The EHIC contains no electronic chip. Providers cannot read it the way they read a national insurance card. In practice, this leads to direct refusals of treatment and administrative errors across all member states.
UK Focus

The UK's position in numbers

The UK is the single biggest net loser in the European EHIC system, with a deficit of −€293 million in 2025. That figure breaks down into two straightforward numbers.

Claims funded
365,000
UK claims abroad in 2025
UK health authorities reimbursed 365,000 claims made by British-insured patients treated in other European countries. Average cost per claim: €1,004 — second only to Poland.
Net outflow
€319 M
Reimbursements paid in 2025
The total paid by UK health authorities to other European states in 2025, covering care received abroad by UK-insured patients. Germany pays more in gross terms (€336M), but at a lower per-claim cost.
Revenue
€26 M
Collected from other states
What the UK receives for treating foreign insured patients on its territory. The gap against the €319 million paid out gives a net balance of −€293 million. The UK is the largest net payer in the system, ahead of France (−€118M) and Germany (−€107M).

The EHIC covers public care. Nothing more.

Private clinics, medical repatriation and excess charges (the portion of costs that remain your responsibility) are not covered by the card. I have compared policies in this space: a full travel insurance policy picks up where the EHIC stops, from around £25 to £65 depending on duration and destination.

Compare travel insurance on HelloSafe →
Methodology

Sources & scope

Data
This study is based on cross-border EHIC (European Health Insurance Card) reimbursement data transmitted to HelloSafe by the Directorate-General for Employment, Social Affairs and Inclusion (DG EMPL) of the European Commission. The figures cover financial flows between European social security systems for unplanned care received during a temporary stay in another member state.

Scope
32 states: 27 EU member states + 4 EEA states (Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, Switzerland) + United Kingdom. Italy, Switzerland and Luxembourg are only partially covered for certain indicators due to incomplete symmetrical data.

Calculation method
• Average cost per claim: total reimbursement amount divided by the number of E125 forms (the inter-state reimbursement form) processed.
• Net balance (healthcare migration balance): amount collected from other states minus amount paid to other states.
• Historical trend 2017–2025: time series consolidated by DG EMPL through the annual EHIC questionnaires sent to member states.

Coverage and limitations
This study covers exclusively unplanned care during a temporary stay (EHIC framework, coordination regulations 883/2004 and 987/2009). Planned treatment abroad falls under Directive 2011/24/EU and is not included. The amounts reflect reimbursements between administrations, not the residual costs borne by patients (excess charges, overruns, private treatment, medical repatriation).