Healthcare in Taipei for Expats (2026)
Understanding the healthcare system is crucial for any expat β it affects your daily peace of mind, your budget, and your visa eligibility. Here's a comprehensive guide based on real advisory experience.
Taiwan's National Health Insurance (ε ¨ζ°ε₯εΊ·δΏιͺ, NHI) is consistently ranked among the world's best healthcare systems. Coverage is comprehensive: doctor visits, hospitalization, surgery, prescriptions, dental, Traditional Chinese Medicine, and mental health β all for approximately NT$750-1,500/month ($24-48). Co-payments are minimal: NT$50-420 per outpatient visit, NT$150-1,400 per day for hospitalization. Wait times are short β you can often see a specialist the same day. Quality is excellent: modern facilities, well-trained doctors, and many English-speaking physicians in Taipei. NHI eligibility begins after 6 months of continuous residence (Gold Card holders enroll immediately).
Public vs Private Healthcare
Most expats in Taipei use a combination of public and private healthcare. The public system provides baseline coverage (often through mandatory contributions), while private insurance offers faster specialist access, English-speaking doctors, modern facilities, and shorter waiting times.
Health Insurance Options for Expats
Your insurance needs depend on your visa status and employment situation:
- Employed locally: Typically covered through employer-provided or mandatory social insurance
- Freelancer/self-employed: Must arrange own insurance β private or mandatory public depending on country
- Digital nomad/remote worker: International nomad insurance (SafetyWing, World Nomads) or local private insurance
- EU citizens in EU countries: EHIC card provides emergency coverage; still need local registration for full access
SafetyWing offers affordable travel & health insurance from $45/mo β designed for digital nomads and remote workers in 195+ countries.
Get Covered βFinding English-Speaking Doctors
In Taipei's city center, most private clinics and international hospitals have English-speaking staff. For public healthcare, English availability varies. Facebook expat groups are the best resource for doctor recommendations β ask the community who they trust.
Emergency Services
In an emergency, go directly to the nearest hospital emergency room. Most countries have a universal emergency number (112 in the EU, 911 in North America). Hospital emergency departments will treat everyone regardless of insurance status β billing comes later.
Prescription Medications
If you take regular medication, research availability before moving. Some medications available over-the-counter in your home country may require prescriptions in Taipei, and vice versa. Bring a 3-month supply with you and get a letter from your doctor listing your medications by generic name.
Mental Health Services
Access to English-speaking mental health professionals varies by city. International counseling platforms (BetterHelp, Talkspace) work globally as a supplement. Expat-specific therapists understand the unique challenges of living abroad β loneliness, culture shock, identity shifts.