
As an FCA-authorised broker that has helped arrange over 800,000 policies, WeCovr brings clarity to the often-misunderstood world of private medical insurance in the UK. This guide debunks the top 10 myths, empowering you to make an informed decision about your health.
Private Medical Insurance (PMI) is a significant decision, yet it's a subject clouded by misconceptions and outdated beliefs. Many people rule out private health cover based on myths that simply aren't true in today's market. From concerns about cost to confusion over how it works with the NHS, these fictions can prevent you from accessing the valuable benefits of private healthcare.
At WeCovr, we believe in clarity and transparency. Our goal is to empower you with accurate information. In this comprehensive guide, we will systematically tackle the ten most common myths about private health insurance in the UK, using facts, figures, and expert insights to separate reality from rumour.
The Myth: A pervasive belief is that PMI is a luxury product, with premiums so high that it's only accessible to the top 1% of earners. Many assume the monthly cost is equivalent to a mortgage payment.
The Reality: This is perhaps the most persistent myth of all. While comprehensive, top-tier plans can be expensive, the UK private medical insurance market is incredibly diverse and flexible. The cost of a policy is not a fixed, one-size-fits-all figure. It is determined by a range of personalisable factors, meaning you can often build a policy that fits your budget.
Key Factors Influencing Your Premium:
Think of it like buying a car. You can choose a basic, reliable model or a high-performance luxury vehicle. Private health insurance is similar; you tailor the features to match your needs and budget. An expert PMI broker like WeCovr can navigate these options for you, finding the sweet spot between comprehensive cover and affordability.
Sample Monthly Premiums (Illustrative Examples)
| Age Group | Basic Cover (Inpatient, £500 Excess) | Comprehensive Cover (Outpatient, Therapies, £250 Excess) |
|---|---|---|
| 30-year-old | £30 - £45 | £60 - £85 |
| 45-year-old | £45 - £60 | £85 - £120 |
| 60-year-old | £70 - £95 | £150 - £220 |
Note: These are estimates. Your actual quote will depend on your specific circumstances and choices.
The Myth: Young professionals and families often feel invincible. With no current health issues, they believe paying for health insurance is an unnecessary expense, especially when the NHS is available.
The Reality: While the NHS provides excellent emergency care, private health insurance is primarily designed for acute conditions—illnesses or injuries that are likely to respond quickly to treatment. It's about what might happen tomorrow, not just how you feel today.
Unfortunately, NHS waiting lists for elective procedures remain a significant challenge. According to NHS England data, the median waiting time for consultant-led elective care was 14.5 weeks in early 2025, with hundreds of thousands waiting over a year for treatment. These delays can impact your ability to work, care for your family, and enjoy your life.
PMI is valuable for the young and healthy for several reasons:
Consider this: a sports injury like a torn ACL could leave you waiting months for surgery on the NHS, significantly impacting your active lifestyle. With PMI, you could be seen by a top orthopaedic surgeon and have the operation scheduled promptly.
The Myth: A common and dangerous assumption is that once you buy a policy, the insurer will pay for any and all medical treatments you might need, including ongoing management of conditions you already have, like diabetes or asthma.
The Reality: This is unequivocally false and the single most important concept to understand about private medical insurance in the UK. Standard PMI is designed to cover new, acute conditions that arise after your policy begins. It does not cover:
Acute vs. Chronic: The Decisive Factor
| Condition Type | Description | PMI Coverage | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Acute | A condition that comes on suddenly and has a limited duration. It is expected to respond to treatment and return you to your previous state of health. | Covered | A bone fracture, appendicitis, cataracts, a hernia, or a treatable infection. |
| Chronic | A condition that is long-lasting, recurrent, or incurable. It requires ongoing monitoring and management rather than a single course of curative treatment. | Not Covered | Diabetes, high blood pressure, asthma, arthritis, or lupus. |
Even if a chronic condition is diagnosed after you take out a policy, PMI will typically only cover the initial diagnostic phase and stabilisation. The long-term, ongoing management will then revert to the NHS.
How Insurers Handle Pre-existing Conditions:
When you apply, you'll choose one of two underwriting methods:
Understanding this distinction is crucial to avoid disappointment at the point of claim.
The Myth: Some people believe that taking out PMI means they can opt out of the NHS entirely, using private services for everything from a GP visit to A&E.
The Reality: Private medical insurance is designed to work in partnership with the NHS, not replace it. The two systems are complementary, each with distinct strengths. You will always be entitled to use the NHS, and in some situations, you will have to.
How PMI and the NHS Work Together:
A Typical Patient Journey with PMI:
The NHS is the safety net for everyone; PMI is the choice for faster, more convenient access to planned care.
The Myth: People often think "health insurance is health insurance," assuming all policies from different providers offer the same benefits and just vary slightly on price.
The Reality: This is far from the truth. The UK PMI market is highly competitive, and policies can differ dramatically in their scope of cover, benefits, and limitations. Choosing the best PMI provider depends entirely on your individual needs.
Policies are generally structured in tiers, but the specifics within each tier vary significantly.
Common Tiers of Cover:
| Level of Cover | What's Typically Included | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Basic / Inpatient-Only | Covers costs associated with a hospital stay: surgery, accommodation, nursing care, specialist fees, anaesthetists. | Those on a tighter budget who want peace of mind against major medical expenses but are happy to use the NHS for diagnostics. |
| Mid-Range / Standard | Includes everything in a Basic policy, plus a set level of outpatient cover. This pays for specialist consultations and diagnostic tests before you are admitted to hospital. | A good balance of cost and cover. It speeds up the diagnostic process, which is often where the longest NHS waits occur. |
| Comprehensive | Includes full inpatient and extensive (often unlimited) outpatient cover. Also adds therapies (physiotherapy, osteopathy), mental health support, and sometimes alternative therapies. | Those who want the most complete cover, maximum choice, and minimal reliance on the NHS for eligible treatments. |
Beyond the Tiers: Key Differences to Look For:
The team at WeCovr specialises in breaking down these complex options into simple, understandable choices, ensuring you only pay for the cover you actually need.
The Myth: There's a fear that the claims process is an administrative nightmare designed to prevent you from getting treatment, and that a single claim will cause your future premiums to become unaffordable.
The Reality: Reputable insurers want you to use your policy; a smooth claims process is a key selling point. While there are steps to follow, they are generally straightforward. Furthermore, while a claim will affect your premium, the impact is often managed by a structured No-Claims Discount (NCD) system.
The Standard Claims Process:
The Impact on Premiums and the No-Claims Discount (NCD):
Most PMI policies use an NCD scale, often ranging from 0% to 75%.
So, while a claim will increase your net premium (as your discount is reduced), the NCD structure prevents it from "skyrocketing" in an uncontrolled way.
The Myth: Some people prefer to "self-insure," setting money aside in a savings account to pay for any private treatment they might need, assuming this is more cost-effective than paying a monthly premium.
The Reality: While this might work for a one-off consultation or a few physiotherapy sessions, the costs of significant medical procedures can be astronomical and far exceed what most people can save. A single serious diagnosis could wipe out a lifetime of savings.
Relying on self-funding is a high-stakes gamble. Private medical insurance works by pooling the risk; your relatively small monthly premium contributes to a large fund that can cover enormous costs if you're unlucky enough to need it.
Average Costs of Common Private Procedures in the UK (2025 Estimates)
| Procedure | Average Private Cost | Equivalent Monthly PMI Premium (40-year-old) |
|---|---|---|
| MRI Scan | £400 - £800 | 6-12 months of premiums |
| Cataract Surgery (one eye) | £2,500 - £4,000 | 3-5 years of premiums |
| Hip Replacement | £13,000 - £15,000 | 15-20 years of premiums |
| Knee Replacement | £14,000 - £16,000 | 16-22 years of premiums |
| Heart Bypass Surgery | £20,000 - £30,000 | 25-40 years of premiums |
| Cancer Treatment (course) | £30,000 - £100,000+ | A lifetime of premiums |
Source: Analysis based on data from private hospital groups and industry reports.
As the table shows, the cost of a single major operation can be more than a decade's worth of PMI premiums. A complex cancer diagnosis requiring surgery, chemotherapy, and advanced drugs could lead to bills well into six figures, a sum that is simply out of reach for the vast majority of UK households.
The Myth: A common point of confusion is whether taking out a private policy means you must leave your trusted NHS GP and find a private doctor for all your primary care needs.
The Reality: This is incorrect. You absolutely keep your NHS GP. In fact, your NHS GP is a crucial part of your private healthcare journey. They act as the gatekeeper, providing the initial diagnosis and the all-important referral that allows you to start the claims process with your insurer.
The relationship is symbiotic:
Some modern policies offer access to a Private Digital GP service as an added benefit. This is a fantastic perk for convenience—allowing you to get a video consultation quickly for minor issues, advice, or prescriptions. However, this service is an addition to, not a replacement for, your registered NHS GP, who remains central to your overall care and the referral process for specialist treatment.
The Myth: Traditionally, mental health was a common exclusion on health insurance policies, leading to the belief that PMI is only for physical ailments.
The Reality: The landscape of mental health cover has changed dramatically for the better. Recognising the vital link between mental and physical wellbeing, most leading UK insurers now offer some level of mental health support, with comprehensive policies providing extensive cover.
The stigma around mental health is reducing, and insurers have responded. This is one of the most significant positive developments in the private health cover market in the last decade.
What Can Be Covered?
Important Considerations:
Proactive Mental Wellbeing: Taking care of your mental health is just as important as physical fitness. Simple practices like regular exercise, a balanced diet, sufficient sleep (7-9 hours per night), and mindfulness can build resilience. PMI can be the safety net you need if you require professional support.
The Myth: People see PMI purely as a reactive product—something you only use when you're ill. They assume there's no value in it during the years when you are healthy and not making claims.
The Reality: The best PMI providers in the UK have evolved. They are no longer just passive payers of medical bills; they are proactive health and wellness partners. Insurers have realised that it's better (and cheaper) to help you stay healthy than to pay for expensive treatment down the line.
This has led to a wealth of value-added benefits and wellness programmes designed to provide value every single day, not just when you're sick.
Examples of Added Benefits and Wellness Perks:
The WeCovr Advantage:
At WeCovr, we enhance this value even further for our clients. When you arrange a Private Medical Insurance or Life Insurance policy through us, we provide:
These benefits mean your health insurance policy is working for you all the time, actively supporting your journey to a healthier, happier life. Our high customer satisfaction ratings reflect this commitment to providing holistic value beyond the core policy.
1. What is the difference between moratorium and full medical underwriting? Moratorium underwriting is the most common type. You don't declare your medical history, but any condition you've had in the 5 years before the policy starts is automatically excluded. If you then go 2 continuous years without symptoms, treatment, or advice for that condition, it may become covered. Full Medical Underwriting (FMU) requires you to disclose your full history upfront. The insurer then gives you a clear list of what is permanently excluded, providing more certainty from day one.
2. Does private health insurance in the UK cover cancer? Yes, cancer cover is a cornerstone of almost all PMI policies. However, the level of cover varies. Basic policies will cover surgery and core treatments like radiotherapy and chemotherapy. More comprehensive policies provide access to the latest, most advanced drugs and therapies (including some not yet available on the NHS), as well as supportive care like home nursing and palliative options. It is vital to check the specifics of the cancer cover on any policy you consider.
3. Can I add my family to my private health insurance policy? Yes, you can usually cover your partner and your children on the same policy. Insurers often provide a small discount for adding family members compared to buying separate individual policies. Children can typically remain on a family policy until they are 18 or, if they are in full-time education, up to their early twenties (e.g., 21 or 24, depending on the provider).
4. How does the excess on a PMI policy work? The excess is a pre-agreed amount that you pay towards the cost of a claim each policy year. For example, if you have a £250 excess and your claim for a series of physiotherapy sessions costs £1,000, you would pay the first £250, and the insurer would pay the remaining £750. You typically only pay the excess once per policy year, regardless of how many claims you make. Choosing a higher excess is a common way to lower your monthly premium.
Navigating the world of private medical insurance can feel complex, but you don't have to do it alone. The myths we've debunked show that modern PMI is a flexible, accessible, and valuable tool for taking control of your health.
The expert, FCA-authorised team at WeCovr is here to provide personalised advice tailored to your unique needs and budget. We compare policies from leading UK insurers to find the right fit for you, at no extra cost.
Ready to separate fact from fiction for yourself? Get your free, no-obligation quote today and discover how affordable peace of mind can be.






