Health insurance fee for renewing residency is fixed at 100 dinars.
Minister of Health Dr. Ahmed Al-Awadi has issued the executive regulations for Law No. 1 of 1999, as amended, governing health insurance for foreigners, making health insurance mandatory for obtaining residency and visit visas and defining the applicable fees. The regulations are set to take effect on December 23.
Under the new regulations, a 5-dinar fee is imposed for eight categories of entry visas for residency, including:
- Employment in the government sector
- Employment in the private sector
- Engagement in commercial or industrial activities
- Family reunification
- Study
- Foreign investors
- Temporary government contracts
- Temporary employment in the oil sector
The regulations also state that health insurance fees for visit visas are determined in accordance with the private sector health insurance system and apply to nine types of visit permits, namely — government visits, business visits, family visits, private visits, medical visits, multiple-entry visits, tourist visits, sports-related visits, and cultural or social visits, reports Al-Rai daily.
A 5-dinar fee is also set for four additional visa categories — transit entry visas, entry visas for drivers of transport vehicles (trucks and buses), emergency entry visas, and a newly introduced entry category.
For residency permits, the regulations set a health insurance fee of 100 dinars for 10 categories — government and private sector employees, foreign partners, foreign investors, foreign students, foreigners who sponsor themselves, property-owning foreigners, certain categories of former illegal residents (bedoun) who have obtained foreign passports, religious figures such as imams and preachers of Husseiniyas, as well as a newly introduced residency category.
A 10-dinar fee is imposed for establishing work in the private sector under Article 18 for specific professions, including agricultural workers, fishermen, camel and sheep herders, and employees of dairy companies.
The regulations exempt domestic workers and similar categories serving Kuwaiti families from health insurance fees for the first three workers, while a 10-dinar fee is applied for the fourth domestic worker and above.
In addition, the health insurance fee for family reunification has been set at 100 dinars, depending on the residency status of the sponsor.
This applies to family members of government and private sector employees, foreign partners and investors, students, self-sponsored residents, property owners, religious figures, and foreigners who are children of Kuwaiti women who acquired citizenship through dependency.












