Your experience is more realistic than the one in the post. EU citizens in EU countries “don’t pay” for healthcare services because it’s already paid through taxes, foreigners are supposed to be billed because they don’t pay taxes in the EU. (it doesn’t always happen tho, you know, administrative error, oops)
Not necessarily true for all foreigners. Australia has reciprocal healthcare agreements with many EU countries. That means if an Aussie visits those countries, healthcare is covered and the opposite is true as well. Whereas that wouldn’t apply for a USian.
Your experience is more realistic than the one in the post. EU citizens in EU countries “don’t pay” for healthcare services because it’s already paid through taxes, foreigners are supposed to be billed because they don’t pay taxes in the EU. (it doesn’t always happen tho, you know, administrative error, oops)
Not necessarily true for all foreigners. Australia has reciprocal healthcare agreements with many EU countries. That means if an Aussie visits those countries, healthcare is covered and the opposite is true as well. Whereas that wouldn’t apply for a USian.
Well you don’t pay for it but your country’s mutual assistance fund does that for you. That’s the same arrangement intra-EU.
As far as I’m aware, it’s just a “we cover your citizens if you cover our citizens” sort of arrangement.