If you have held the same health insurance policy in Thailand for years, the renewal cycle can start to feel routine. The bill arrives, you pay it, and the cover continues. What is easy to miss, even for experienced expats, is that most Thai domestic health insurance policies carry age-based ceilings that can end that continuity without much warning, and the renewal cycle makes it easy to assume the cover will simply keep going. For most local plans, new applicants are cut off somewhere between 60 and 70, with renewals typically ending between 75 and 80. Beyond the renewal ceiling itself, premiums on comparable Thai plans can roughly double between the ages of 65 and 75, meaning the policy becomes significantly more expensive at exactly the point in life when you are most likely to need it. If your policy lapses or gets declined at that point, getting comparable cover at your current age is far harder than most people expect. How age limits work on expat health insurance in ThailandThai domestic health insurance applies two separate age thresholds: a maximum entry age for new applicants, and a maximum renewal age for existing policyholders. Thailand's Office of Insurance Commission (OIC) does not set a national standard for either figure. Entry and renewal ages are decided product by product under the OIC's New Health Standard framework, which is why you will see different numbers quoted across brokers and comparison sites. Several internationally regulated carriers also refuse new applicants from the mid-70s onward, so the problem is not unique to Thai domestic plans. What happens if your policy lapsesThe renewal ceiling gets most of the attention, but there is a more important risk: what happens to your cover if it lapses for any reason before you reach that ceiling. If your policy is declined or lapses, you have to reapply as a new applicant at your current age and with your current health profile, which means going through medical underwriting all over again. Any conditions your existing policy covers today - managed hypertension, early-stage diabetes, a previously treated joint issue - can come back as exclusions on a new application. The policy you hold now reflects your health profile when you first joined, and that history does not transfer to a new insurer. The real cost of health insurance over 65 in ThailandMedical costs in Thailand are rising faster than almost anywhere else in the world. Willis Towers Watson's 2026 Global Medical Trends Survey puts Thailand's medical inflation at 14% annually, and premiums on comparable Thai plans roughly double between the ages of 65 and 75 before a single claim is made. The gap between what the coverage costs and what treatment actually costs is wider than most people plan for. A heart bypass at a top Bangkok private hospital runs somewhere between 600,000 and 800,000 baht. A knee replacement typically costs around 300,000 baht for a standard procedure, though more complex cases at premium hospitals can run considerably higher. Multi-year cancer treatment incorporating targeted therapies like immunotherapy can exceed 5 million baht over the course of treatment. The standard O-A visa minimum of 400,000 baht inpatient cover does not come close to covering a single bypass, and the OIC co-payment rule, which came into effect on March 20, 2025, adds further financial pressure for older policyholders who claim more frequently. The O-A visa problemFor expats on a retirement visa, health insurance is a formal visa requirement, with the O-A requiring coverage from an OIC-approved Thai insurer for annual extensions filed inside Thailand. The minimum required for annual extensions inside Thailand is 400,000 baht inpatient and 40,000 baht outpatient, while most embassy applications have moved to a minimum of 3,000,000 baht total, though you should confirm the current figure with your specific embassy. If your OIC-approved plan declines renewal in your mid-70s, or if you arrive in Thailand after the entry age has already passed, you may find yourself unable to meet a requirement you have been satisfying for years. What Cigna Global offersCigna Global sets no upper age limit on new applications, and its plans are guaranteed renewable, meaning they cannot decline to renew your policy based on your age or claims history. It is worth being clear about what that means: it protects you from being cut off, but premiums will still rise with age and medical inflation. The decision to continue your cover stays with you, not your insurer. Cigna Global is internationally regulated, sitting outside the OIC framework and not subject to the co-payment rule. Its plans meet the Thai government's O-A and O-X extension minimums, and for applicants over 60, Silver, Gold, and Platinum plans all include a pre-existing condition maintenance benefit covering hypertension, type 2 diabetes, glaucoma, arthritis, joint and back pain, and osteoporosis, with a 10% senior discount also applying to the Silver core plan. Close Care does not include this benefit, making Silver the minimum recommended starting point for applicants over 60. *Terms and conditions apply, including a minimum deductible condition. Policy age limits matter more than most expats realiseThe longer a policy is held, the more it reflects who you are now rather than who you were when you joined - and that continuity has real value. Age-based ceilings on Thai domestic plans are not always prominently disclosed, and the renewal cycle makes it easy to assume the cover will simply continue. For expats who want certainty that their cover cannot be ended by their insurer regardless of age or claims history, Cigna Global is worth looking at before the question becomes urgent rather than after. Get a free quote from Cigna Global today. Sponsored -
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