Nomadsurance

Nomad insurance

Digital nomad insurance for Montserrat

Built for people who stay in Montserrat for months at a time but aren't relocating. Hybrid medical + travel + gear cover, written for the way nomads actually live.

Montserrat runs a one-year Remote Workers Stamp for digital nomads: English-speaking, a British territory, and one of the quietest corners of the Caribbean. Health insurance valid in Montserrat is a written condition of the stamp, but the figure that matters is medical evacuation, because the island has a single small hospital and serious cases are flown to Antigua or further. With an active volcano in the south and a hurricane belt overhead, evacuation cover is the line that earns its keep here.

What nomad insurance covers in Montserrat

Nomad insurance is built for long-stay nomads, perpetual travelers, slowmads who change country every few months. The lines below are the base. Exact terms are carrier-specific, so always check the policy document for the Montserrat situation you care about.

What you get

  • Medical care while abroad (inpatient + outpatient on better plans)
  • Trip cancellation and luggage
  • Laptop / camera / gear cover (add-on)
  • Adventure activities included by default on most nomad plans
  • Multi-country coverage without resetting the policy

What it won't do

  • Treatment in your home-country tax residence (often excluded)
  • Long-term chronic-condition management on the cheaper plans
  • Routine preventive care (varies by plan)

Typical local costs in Montserrat

What insurance protects you from. Costs vary by region inside Montserratand between public and private facilities; these are the numbers we've seen most often in 2026.

Private GP or consultationno official tariff is published; expect to pay out of pocket and budget for it
Private health insurance for a nomad, with evacuationcommonly cited around US$200 to US$400 a month, depending on age and cover
Emergency room or hospital service at Glendonyou may have to pay in advance, and a new fee schedule took effect in February 2026
A medical evacuation off-islandtypically thousands of US dollars, often US$15,000 or more for a Caribbean air ambulance

Montserrat publishes no consolidated private price list, so treat the figures above as indicative rather than fixed; the local currency is the Eastern Caribbean dollar, pegged to the US dollar at EC$2.70 to US$1. The number that should drive your decision is the last one: a serious case or a medical flight off the island is exactly the cost insurance exists to cover, and a routine consultation is not.

Healthcare in Montserrat: what you're dealing with

Montserrat has one small hospital, Glendon Hospital in Brades, plus four district health centres spread across the safe northern half of the island. The original hospital in the capital, Plymouth, was destroyed when the Soufriere Hills volcano erupted in the 1990s, and Glendon is the rebuilt successor in the north. It covers laboratory, pharmacy, general medicine, general surgery and maternity, and the Accident and Emergency unit runs 24 hours, staffed by nurses with a doctor on duty during the day and on call at night and weekends. For routine needs, nomads also use private practice, including the Esbecan Medical Centre in Brades. The key thing to understand is what the island does not do: there is no dialysis, chemotherapy, cardiac intervention, advanced surgery or oncology on Montserrat, so any of that means leaving.

English is the official language, so navigating care is straightforward and the emergency number is 911 (999 also works). The off-island reality is the one that drives the insurance decision. When a case needs specialist treatment, patients are evacuated, usually to Mount St John's Medical Centre on Antigua, a short flight away, and sometimes onward to Jamaica or the UK. The UK Foreign Office is blunt about it: limited healthcare is available, you may have to pay in advance and it can be expensive, and you should have insurance for local treatment or unexpected medical evacuation. Two pharmacies operate, one at Glendon Hospital and Lee's Pharmacy in Brades, but the government warns of shortages and tells travellers to bring a full supply of any prescription medicine.

What to watch out for in Montserrat

  • Off-island evacuation. Specialist and serious cases leave Montserrat by air, usually to Antigua, so a policy with strong medical evacuation cover is genuinely important, not a box-tick.
  • A live volcano. Soufriere Hills remains active and the southern exclusion zone, including Plymouth, is off-limits except on a permitted guided tour; activity is currently low but monitored daily.
  • Hurricane season. The Atlantic season runs June to November, and storms can disrupt the small airport, ferries, power and medical services, so build in flexibility and follow local advisories.
  • Pay upfront, then claim. You may have to pay in advance for medical services and they can be expensive, so keep accessible funds and itemised receipts to claim back later.
  • Medicine shortages. Pharmacy stock can run short on a small island, so travel with a full supply of any essential prescription and a doctor's letter.

FAQ

Montserrat doesn't usually require visitors to carry nomad insurance for short stays, but the moment something goes wrong it's cheaper to have it than to buy at the hospital. Check the visa-class requirements for your specific situation.

Premiums vary by age, plan and deductible far more than by country; the underwriting risk is priced, not the postal code. Use the "Typical local costs" table above to gauge what your insurance protects you from, then run a real quote to see your own number.

It depends on your situation: how long you're staying, your visa class, your age and health, and whether you want cashless treatment or are fine with reimbursement. Rather than push one plan, we match you against the options that actually fit a stay in Montserrat: answer a few honest questions and see only what's relevant.

Yes. The Remote Workers Stamp, introduced in 2021, lets you live in Montserrat while working for an employer, business or clients outside the territory. It runs one year, requires declared income of at least US$70,000, and costs US$500 for a single applicant or US$750 for a family with up to three dependents.

Yes. The official application requires you to hold health insurance with valid Montserrat and COVID-19 coverage. No minimum sum is published, so prioritise a policy that includes medical evacuation and repatriation, which is the cover that matters on a small island.

US, British, Canadian and Australian visitors enter visa-free, commonly for up to 180 days, with the length set on arrival. You need a passport valid for at least six months, an onward ticket and proof of funds.

Glendon Hospital stabilises and handles routine and emergency care, but specialist and serious cases are evacuated off-island, usually to Mount St John's Medical Centre on Antigua and sometimes onward. That air transfer is expensive, which is why evacuation cover is the priority.

The northern and central parts of the island where people live and visit are considered safe and volcanic activity is currently low. The southern exclusion zone, including Plymouth, is restricted and can only be visited on a permitted guided tour.

Often yes. The UK Foreign Office warns you may have to pay in advance for medical services in Montserrat and that they can be expensive, so keep accessible funds and detailed receipts to claim from your insurer afterwards.

Other insurance for Montserrat

Different stages of nomad life need different cover. Here's the full set we've mapped for Montserrat.

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