Healthcare in Cyprus: What Expats Need to Know

Header Image

A practical guide to Cyprus’ public healthcare system, Gesy, including who is eligible, how to register and what to expect once enrolled.

 

For many foreign residents, it is one of the most important things to understand after moving to the island. But eligibility is not automatic simply because someone lives in Cyprus. Access depends on where a person resides, their legal status, and in some cases whether they are employed, permanently resident, a family member of a beneficiary, or insured through another EU member state.

Here is what expats need to know.

What Is Gesy?

Gesy is Cyprus’ public healthcare system. Once registered, eligible beneficiaries can access healthcare through contracted providers, including personal doctors, outpatient specialists, laboratories, pharmacies, hospitals, nurses, midwives, allied health professionals, dentists for preventive care, ambulance services and Accident and Emergency departments.

The system does not mean that every service is completely free. Many services are covered, but beneficiaries may still pay small co-payments or personal contributions depending on the type of care and how they access it.

Who Is Eligible?

The basic rule is that a person must reside in the areas controlled by the Republic of Cyprus. Beyond that, eligibility depends on the person’s category.

EU citizens living in Cyprus may be eligible if they are employed, have acquired permanent residence status, are a family member of a Gesy beneficiary, or are insured in another EU member state.

Third-country nationals, meaning non-EU citizens, may be eligible if they are employed, have acquired permanent residence status, have been granted refugee or supplementary protection status, are a family member of a Gesy beneficiary, or are insured in another EU member state.

In practical terms, foreign residents should not assume that a rental contract or long stay alone is enough. Their status must be recognised through the relevant official records.

What About EU Pensioners and S1 Holders?

Some people living in Cyprus may be insured through another EU member state rather than through Cyprus. This often applies to certain pensioners or posted workers who hold an S1 document.

The S1 is issued by the country where the person is insured and confirms their entitlement to healthcare while living in another country. People should only choose the S1 category during Gesy registration if they actually hold the relevant document, as choosing it incorrectly can delay the application.

UK nationals should check their position carefully, especially if they are pensioners or have healthcare rights connected to an S1 form.

What You Need Before Registering

To enrol in Gesy, a person must be identifiable in the relevant official registries. This may include the Civil Registry, the Migration Department Registry and, where applicable, the Social Insurance Services Registry.

For expats, this usually means having the correct residence documents and identification details in order. EU citizens working in Cyprus should also make sure that Social Insurance Services has their Alien Registration Certificate number, commonly known as the ARC, as this may be needed for registration.

The Health Insurance Organisation may ask for additional certificates or evidence to confirm that the eligibility criteria are met.

How to Register

Registration can be done online through the Gesy website.

The applicant first creates an account and then submits an enrolment request through the Beneficiary Portal. The system asks for information that allows the person to be identified in the relevant registries, as well as contact details such as address and telephone number.

If the system cannot complete the application using the available registry information, it may ask the applicant to print the request, attach the required evidence and send it to the Health Insurance Organisation.

People who do not have internet access can enrol with help from a third party who has a Beneficiary Portal account, provided they consent. In some cases, registration can also be done by visiting a Personal Doctor, although this may not be possible if additional documents are required.

Choosing a Personal Doctor

Gesy works around the Personal Doctor system. To access services properly, a beneficiary must be registered not only in the Gesy Beneficiary Record, but also on a Personal Doctor’s list.

This can be done online through the Beneficiary Portal or by visiting a Personal Doctor. Beneficiaries can search for contracted Personal Doctors through the Gesy website or the Beneficiary Portal.

After online registration, the beneficiary must visit the Personal Doctor once the doctor has accepted the request. During the first visit, the doctor confirms the patient’s details and both sides sign the Form of Mutual Acceptance. The doctor can also provide the codes needed to access the patient’s electronic medical history.

Children up to 15 are normally registered with a Personal Doctor for children. Those aged 15 to 18 may choose either a doctor for children or adults. Adults register with a Personal Doctor for adults, while people aged 65 and over may also register with a doctor specialising in geriatrics.

How Specialist Care Works

In most cases, beneficiaries access outpatient specialists through a referral. The referral may be issued by a Personal Doctor, an Accident and Emergency Department or a hospital.

With a referral, the beneficiary pays the standard co-payment for the specialist visit. Without a referral, direct access to an outpatient specialist is possible, but the beneficiary generally pays a personal contribution of €25.

There are exceptions. Female beneficiaries aged 15 and over have direct access to gynaecologists and obstetricians without paying the €25 personal contribution, although the normal specialist co-payment may still apply.

What Services Are Covered?

Gesy covers a wide range of healthcare services through contracted providers. These include personal doctors, outpatient specialists, laboratories, pharmacies, medical devices and supplies, nurses, midwives, allied health professionals, inpatient healthcare, dentists for preventive care, palliative care, rehabilitation care, home care, ambulance services and Accident and Emergency departments.

Access rules differ depending on the service. For example, beneficiaries can access their Personal Doctor directly, while access to pharmacies requires a prescription. Inpatient hospital care usually requires a referral by an outpatient specialist, an Accident and Emergency Department or another hospital.

What Does It Cost?

Gesy is funded through contributions, co-payments and other payments. Employees, employers, self-employed people, pensioners and certain income earners pay contributions under the system.

For patients, the most visible costs are co-payments. A visit to a Personal Doctor does not carry a co-payment. Other common charges include €1 per pharmaceutical product, €1 per lab test or group of lab tests, €6 per visit to a nurse or midwife, €10 for certain radiology services, €10 per visit to allied health professionals and €10 for Accident and Emergency services.

No co-payment is paid for healthcare services provided in the context of inpatient healthcare.

There is also an annual cap on co-payments. The maximum is €75 for recipients of Guaranteed Minimum Income, low-income pensioners and children up to the age of 21. For the rest of the population, the maximum is €150.

These caps apply to co-payments. They do not necessarily cover all possible personal contributions, such as the €25 charge for direct access to an outpatient specialist without a referral or the extra cost of choosing a more expensive medicine than the one fully covered by Gesy.

Do Expats Still Need Private Insurance?

Some expats keep private health insurance even if they are eligible for Gesy. This is a personal choice and may depend on whether they want access to providers outside the Gesy system, private international cover, or additional services not available through public coverage.

However, private insurance is not a substitute for checking Gesy eligibility. A person who wants to use the public system must still be properly registered as a beneficiary and with a Personal Doctor.

Temporary Visitors Are Different

People visiting Cyprus temporarily should not confuse Gesy registration with travel healthcare rights. EU visitors may use a European Health Insurance Card for medically necessary state-provided healthcare during a temporary stay, but that is not the same as becoming a Gesy beneficiary.

Anyone moving to Cyprus long-term should check their status under the Gesy rules rather than relying on visitor arrangements.

Where to Get Help

The safest starting point is the official Gesy website, where applicants can create an account, access the Beneficiary Portal, search for Personal Doctors and review the required forms and documents.

For individual cases, especially where residence status, employment, S1 documents or family-member eligibility are involved, applicants should contact the Health Insurance Organisation directly before submitting the wrong category and delaying their application.

Gesy Contact Centre: 17000 from Cyprus

From abroad: +357 22017000

Email: info@gesy.org.cy