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Visit the Hospital de Sant Pau Barcelona (Modernist Hospital)

the façade at the hospital de sant pau barcelona spain

The ornate Hospital de Sant Pau is a grand old hospital.

It just happens to be one of the most complex art nouveau-style buildings in all of Europe.

This magical hospital, full name Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau , actually helped rehabilitate the sick with light and art – revolutionary stuff!

Let’s take a look at how to visit the Hospital de Sant Pau Barcelona.

outside square at the hospital sant pau in barcelona spain

Hospital de Sant Pau Recinte Modernista

This vast former hospital, aka the Recinte Modernista de Sant Pau (full name  Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau ) is actually Europe’s biggest modernist complex .

It was built between 1901-1930 and later declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1997.

As mentioned, it was the masterpiece of local Catalan architect Lluís Domènech i Montaner – the brains behind other such amazing top arcelona attractions as the music lover’s dream Palau de la Musica .

With the exception of the master himself, Antoni Gaudi , there is perhaps no Catalan architect that has left a bigger imprint on the city of Barcelona.

⚠️  Warning ⚠️ : Barcelona’s top two attractions must now be booked in advance .

You can book fast track tickets to both individually or get them as part of a discount pass:

  • ⛪ Buy now:  Sagrada Familia Fast Track Admission (skip the lines)
  • 🏞️ Buy now:  Park Guell Fast Track Admission  (skip the lines)
  • 🎟️  Buy now: Best of Barcelona Bundle (Sagrada + Park Guell + 10% discount code for all else)

You will not be able to book these tickets on site – lock in your tickets ASAP or you could miss out.

Domènech i Montaner envisioned Sant Pau Hospital as an urban garden with a  modern village : streets, pavilions, and even a church and convent. All would be connected via underground passageways so as not to upset the complex’s aesthetic harmony .

This art nouveau site is just an explosion of colour and ornamentation – a true feast for the eyes which begs the question… why can’t all medical facilities be like the Hospital Sant Pau?

Hospital de Sant Pau History

The Hospital de Sant Pau was built on the foundations of an old religious hospital dating back to the end of the 800s.

In all, the site is really the product of the convergence of 6 small medieval hospitals and was officially founded in 1401.

As Barcelona became the industrial engine of Catalonia, the city’s growth called for a new hospital, and the area called Guinardó (at the time isolated from the rest of the city) was perfect due to its slight elevation – and distance from the densest parts of the city.

This was of great importance during epidemics.

It was the queen’s banker Pau Gil who donated a considerable fortune upon his death in 1896, that allowed the city to move ahead with its new modernist hospital. Domènech i Montaner was put in charge.

Even though construction on the Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau started in 1905 , it was not inaugurated until 1930 due to a lack of funds and problems with the local bishop – and out of the 48 pavilions envisioned, only 27 were built.

The Recinte Modernista in Barcelona stopped being a functional hospital in 2009.

The hospital complex that we enjoy today is the result of some amazing €100 million restoration works in the past years (the work of Barcelona city council and others) that have given us an amazing museum and cultural centre .

And even though Barcelona is rich in modernist attractions like Casa Batllo and La Pedrera , it’s still worth a visit.

tourist hospital barcelona

What to See at Recinte Modernista de Sant Pau

The Hospital de Sant Pau is an eclectic mix of neo-Gothic influences where bricks, glazed tiles, mosaics, and stained glass create an ornamental richness that’s hard to match.

You might get so lost in the beauty that you’ll come to believe that it was the artistry of the complex itself that was able to cure the sick!

The visit starts in the massive main courtyard, which consists of two large v-shaped buildings that almost form arms to welcome patients to the hospital.

This should be a stop on any Barcelona weekend itinerary , especially since it’s just up the road from Sagrada Familia .

🧑‍🎨 Want more of Gaudi? Unlock his masterpieces with the top Gaudi tours in Barcelona .

pavillion exterior of the hospital sant pau barcelona

The symmetrical complex surrounds two streets that run north to south and east to west.

On every side, you’ll find a different hospital building dedicated to different fields of medicine, all isolated from each other and with one or even two basements to prevent the spread of disease.

The connection between the various buildings of Sant Pau Recinte Modernista is via a series of underground tunnels which are partially open to visitors.

Inside you also get two huge gardens  intended for growing flowers and purifying the air.

It is said that Domènech i Montaner was more interested in the beauty of the complex than its functionality as a hospital.

He thus undervalued many structural questions: for this reason, many of the buildings, like the patients, had to be stabilized.

a hospital ward at hospital sant pau, barcelona

Visiting the Barcelona Hospital de Sant Pau

Any thorough visit includes seeing the three major buildings, of which you’ll come across surgical theatres, recovery wards, hospital beds, and more.

The Pabellón de Sant Salvador  (Sant Salvador Pavilion) is a reconstruction of the hospital’s history as the Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau – from its creation in 1401 to its closure in 2009.

On the top floor, you’ll find an exhibit which symbolizes a dragon and pays homage to the life and works of Lluís Domènech i Montaner.

From here, you’ll head on to the external spaces where you truly see Montaner’s city-garden vision on full display. There’s no better place than here to admire the exterior beauty of the buildings.

You’ll also see the  Pabellón de Sant Rafael , which has been restored almost exactly as it was when it was a fully-functioning hospital in the 1920s.

Here you’ll get tons of information on how the Hospital Sant Pau operated, the types of medicine practiced here, and how citizens lived in Barcelona at the beginning of the last century.

It’s then on through the underground tunnels that you’ll end up at the  Pabellón de la Administración – the administration wing of the Sant Pau Hospital that displays some of the building’s most impressive decoration.

Once you’re out on the atrium, make sure to soak in the incredible panorama (comparable perhaps only to Park Guell ) of the Sagrada Familia, which is reachable on foot just 10 minutes down the famous Avinguda Gaudí.

a spread of modern tapas at season restaurant in barcelona spain

Barcelona Hospital de Sant Pau Tickets

As with most of your Barcelona itinerary , you’ll be able to buy tickets at ticket windows. However, with this method, you run the risk of having to stand in line.

My suggestion is always to buy skip-the-line tickets in advance online via ticket giant Tiqets.

Hospital Sant Pau Ticket Prices

  • General admission: €16.00.
  • Visit with an audio guide (English, Catalan, Spanish, French, German, or Japanese): €20.00.
  • Reduced tickets (residents, 12-29, 65+): €11.20 (€15.20 with audio guide).
  • Children under 12: free.
  • Private groups (max 30 people): €250.00.
  • First Sunday of every month, Feb 12, Apr 23, Sept 24: free.

Those Barcelona travellers with disabilities of 65% or higher or a degree of dependency of 3 also go free with a companion.

There is also a 20% discount for the Recinte Modernista using the (almost) all-inclusive tourist discount pass called the Barcelona Card .

Those interested in booking groups need to email  [email protected] .

Guided Tours of the Hospital de Sant Pau in Barcelona

You can also get a full guided tour accompanied by a licensed guide .

They will explain the history of the Recinte Modernista de Sant Pau, go in-depth into the building’s unique and artsy characteristics, and its evolution with the city of Barcelona.

The guided tour of the Hospital de Sant Pau lasts an hour and a half.

Hours: English (10:30 am), French (11:00 am Fridays), Spanish (noon), Catalan (12:30 on Fridays, weekends, and holidays)

Price: €20.00 (senior, 12-29: €14.00).

FYI: guided tours are not available on free entrance days (listed above).

Hospital San Pau Opening Hours

  • April to October: Monday – Sunday from 10:00 am to 6:30 pm
  • November to March: Monday – Sunday from 10:00 am to 5:00 pm
  • Closed December 25th.

The last entrance is 30 minutes before closing time.

How to Get to El Hospital de Sant Pau

The address is  Carrer de Sant Antoni Maria Claret, 167.

While it isn’t one of the city’s best neighbourhoods to stay for tourists, the Guinardò neighbourhood is served by a fairly convenient Barcelona metro station from the centre:  Sant Pau – Dos de Maig (blue line L5).

It’s also about a 12-minute walk from the Sagrada Familia metro station.

Due to its proximity to the city’s most popular attraction (the Sagrada Familia), most people simply take the 10-minute walk from there. Combining visits to these two titans on the same day is recommended.

If you’re looking to arrive via bus, you’ll find that lines H8, 19, 20, 45, 47, 50, 51, 92, 117, 192 stop there.

Numbers 19 and 47 pass through the city’s centre: Plaça Catalunya .

a panoramic view of hospital de sant pau, barcelona

Hospital de la Santa Creu i de Sant Pau FAQs

What is hospital de sant pau in barcelona.

Hospital de Sant Pau is a historic hospital complex in Barcelona, Spain, that was built in the early 20th century. It is known for its impressive modernist architecture that was devised by famed architect Lluís Domènech i Montaner.

What makes the Hospital de Sant Pau unique?

Hospital de Sant Pau is unique for its historic modernist architecture. Though most departments are closed,the hospitals there are still a few that remain in its historic confines. The hospital is now a popular tourist attraction that offers guided tours.

How do you get to El Hospital de Sant Pau?

From the city centre, you can take the metro L5 (blue line) and get off at the Sant Pau / Dos de Maig station. The hospital is just a few minutes walk from the station.

Alternatively, you can take bus lines H8, 19, 20, 45, 47, 50, 51, 92, or 117 and get off at the hospital’s main entrance. The journey takes around 20-30 minutes, depending on traffic and your starting location in the city center.

Does Hospital de Sant Pau offer guided tours?

Yes, Hospital de Sant Pau in Barcelona offers guided tours of its impressive modernist architecture and historic buildings. The tour also includes a visit to the beautiful gardens and courtyards that surround the hospital. Guided tours are available in multiple languages and are led by knowledgeable and friendly guides.

view of the sagrada familia from the hospital sant pau in barcelona

Still looking to visit the Hospital de Sant Pau Barcelona?

Yes, it’s always possible I may have missed something about this top art nouveau site.

So tell me – what else do you need to know about visiting the Hospital de Sant Pau? And how else can I help you along your way in my adopted home?

Enjoy the Hospital Sant Pau 🙂

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  • September 15, 2019 at 11:54 am Pedro Hola Neetu, 1 hour more or less. Reply

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COMING OVER EASTER HOLIDAYS?

Remember that this is another high season in Barcelona and tickets sell out way in advance!

Make sure you’ve got your attraction tickets booked before you leave or you run the risk of being shut out.

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Headout Blog

Hospital de Sant Pau tickets | Tips for a self guided tour

Things to do in Barcelona Barcelona Attractions Landmarks in Barcelona Hospital de Sant Pau

Barcelona is packed to the brim with breathtaking attractions and iconic landmarks aplenty. Still, there's so much to see and do in the city that often some hidden gems escape the public's attention. One such lesser known attraction is the Hospital de Sant Pau, also known as the Hospital of the Holy Cross and Saint Paul or Recinte Modernista De Sant Pau. The hospital was fully functional till 2009 post which it underwent some restoration work and is presently used as a museum and cultural center. The UNESCO World Heritage Site is a strikingly beautiful, modernistic complex which appears to be straight out of a fantasy tale with its grand interiors and medieval exterior. Add some local flavor to your Barcelona trip with a visit to majestic Hospital de Sant Pau .

Quick Jumplinks to Navigate the Guide

A brief history of recinte modernista de sant pau, how to take a self guided tour of hospital de sant pau, hospital de sant pau opening hours, hospital de sant pau location & directions, quick tips for your visit, things to do around hospital de sant pau.

Often shortened for Hospital de Sant Pau, the hospital's actual name is Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau. All the way back in 1401, Hospital de Sant Pau was the main hospital in Barcelona. This continued till the end of the nineteenth century post which the hospital just couldn't cope with the rapid increase in both the population and territorial growth of Barcelona. After some struggle, the expansion and modernisation project began in 1896, bankrolled by banker Pau Gil i Serra. The name Sant Pau was added in honour of the banker. On January 30 1930, the newly constructed hospital was handed over to King Alfonso XIII of Spain . After 80 years, the hospital moved to a new building next door and the historic facility was opened to visitors. The original hospital buildings from the 15th century now house an art school and the National Library of Catalonia.

recinte modernista de sant pau

While there are many guided tours of Recinte Modernista De Sant Pau available, there's something uniquely charming about embarking on a self guided tour of the enchanting former hospital. There are certain sections of the hospital you need to include in your trip. Here's a handy list you help you better plan your self guided tour. Before going, grab tickets to Recinte Modernista De Sant Pau online and save time in queues!

Hospital de Sant Pau Tickets

Embark on a self-guided tour of the Hospital de Sant Pau and revel in the beauty of its art Nouveau architecture, its manicured gardens and grand exhibitions.

  • Savor an unforgettable experience in one of the most beautiful buildings in the world, the Recinte Modernista Sant Pau.
  • Witness the union of architecture and history as you are transported back to the early part of the 20th century.
  • Learn about the transformation of one of the most acclaimed medical institutes into a center for knowledge and learning.

Save €6 on your first booking with Headout when you use promo code GOBARCA

Pavilion Sant Jordi

Originally designed for patient examination and observation, Pavilion Sant Jordi was later used for general emergencies and paediatrics. To make disinfection of tiles easier, the pavilion, along with the Santa Apol-lonia Pavilion, features smaller dimensions. Presently, the pavilion is used to host exhibitions.

Pavilion Sant Rafael

The Sant Rafael Pavilion is a prime example of what former infirmary pavilions looked like. The present version of the pavilion still features the original volumes of the hospitalisation ward and of the day room. The pavilion is named after Rafael Rabell who funded its construction.

Underground tunnels

A fascinating part of your Hospital de Sant Pau tour will involve exploring the underground tunnels which connect the different hospital wards and pavilions with each other. When the hospital was still active, these tunnels were used to transport patients from one location to the other.

Pavillon de la Administracion and Entrance hall

After a short walk through the underground tunnels, you'll reach the Administration Pavilion, which boasts some of the hospital's most colourful and ornate spaces. The Administration Pavilion is used as a venue for meetings and events with the glorious interiors providing a stunning backdrop.

Sala Pau Gil (former library)

Previously a library, Sala Pau Gil or Pau Gil Room is now used for all kinds of seminars and conferences. Featuring a double height space for 200 people, the room is renowned for its dazzling interiors with rich colours, quaint ceramic decoration on the ceiling and two glorious columns.

The Gardens

Hospital de Sant Pau features a beautiful garden which was used to hold medicinal plants that were used directly on-site back in the day. The design, by Domenech i Montaner, was inspired by Gaudi's work on Park Guell.

April to October

  • Monday - Saturday: 10:00 AM to 6:30 PM
  • Sunday: 10:00 AM to 2:30 PM

November to March

  • Monday - Saturday: 10:00 AM to 4:30 PM

Sant Pau | Dos de Maig is the nearest metro station from Hospital de Sant Pau, which is a mere five minutes walk. Line 5 of the metro will stop here.

Cartagena -Av. Gaudi is the nearest bus stop from Hospital de Sant Pau. Buses 191, 192, N0, V23 will stop here.

  • A fabulous mix of neo-Gothic architecture with a visible dash of modernity, Hospital de Sant Pau features bricks, glazed tiles, mosaics and stained glass to create a visual flair that's never associated with hospitals and hard to match up to! Take some time during your trip to snap up some Instagram worth images of the beautiful architecture.
  • Hospital de Sant Pau is quite massive and there's a lot to see. While there's something special about opting for a self guided tour, it's not an option if you're short on time. Opt for a guided tour of the hospital to cover everything there's to see without getting lost in all the beauty!
  • The iconic Sagrada Familia is just 1000 meters from Hospital de Sant Pau so plan your day in a manner which allows you to visit both landmarks.
  • Some rooms of the former hospital can be rented out for companies to hold seminars, and in some cases, even weddings! You might just walk upon someone's special day during your tour of the hospital!
  • Before taking a self-guided tour, read up as much as you can about its rich past. There are fascinating facts associated with everything from the tiles used in the rooms to the placement of the glass.
  • If you're short on time and don't want to risk waiting in line for your Hospital de Sant Pau tickets , book your tickets online. You can also opt for skip the line tickets to walk right past the waiting line.
  • While you're visiting Hospital de Sant Pau, head to the old hospital in Raval where Gaudi died in 1926. Presently, the building houses an art school and the library of Catalonia. You can also grab a bite on the terrace at El Jardi.

Reviews of Hospital de Sant Pau

Sant Pau Art nouveau hospital was the highlight of our visit in the city. The fantastic Gaudi buildings are not to be missed, but the high entrance fees and masses of people is a challenge. At San Pau it is peaceful and there are very few tourists. The complex is not fully restored yet, but the lovely gardens and buildings is amazing. A number of wards and rooms are open and the outsides of the buildings are beautiful. The entrance fee is very reasonable and it is on the hop on bus route and within walking distance from the Sagrada.

- Go586014, October 2019 Tripadvisor

This is a little-known structure - or complex of buildings - that I recommend for any student of art or architecture. The good doctor's vision of health care that centers the patients proves that beauty can be combined with efficiency. The turrets and towers and tiles, all by Lluis Domenich I Montaner, are just as amazing as Gaudi's, and we are so lucky this place is now renovated. It is the LARGEST ART NOUVEAU structure in Europe, and I guess that makes it the largest in the world.

- hilaryc_pittsburgh, October 2019 Tripadvisor

Read what others have to say about a Hospital de Sant Pau on TripAdvisor .

Apart from Hospital de Sant Pau, there are many nearby landmarks you can visit during your trip. Here are our top picks:

Sagrada Familia

The Basilica de la Sagrada, more commonly known as the Sagrada Familia , is a large unfinished Roman Catholic basilica designed by Antoni Gaudi. Construction began all the way back in 1882 and while there's still some construction work to be done, the architecture and craftsmanship on display in unrivalled.

A public park consisting of gardens and architectonic elements, Park Guell is located on Carmel Hill which belongs to Collserola, a mountain range. The park was designed by Antoni Gaudi and declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1984. Situated next to the Sierra de Collserola, Park Guell spans over 17 hectares, making it one of the largest green spaces in Barcelona.

A modernist building with an unconventional rough-hewn appearance, Casa Mila is also known as 'the stone quarry'. The last private residence to be designed by Antoni Guadi, the landmark was constructed between 1906 and 1912. The building was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1984 and presently hosts exhibitions and other cultural events.

More Barcelona Guides

Here are a few detailed blogs that will help you plan your Barcelona vacation better.

 Best of Gaudi

See more Barcelona. Save more money.

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How much are Hospital de Sant Pau tickets priced at?

Tickets adult 15 € (Tip: Book tickets online, only 10.50 €) 65+ and 12 - 29 years 10,50 € 0 - 12 years: free entry Book tickets online.

Where is Hospital de Sant Pau located?

Carrer de Sant Antoni Maria Claret, 167, 08025 Barcelona, Spain

What is the best time to visit Hospital de Sant Pau?

2-3 hrs for a relaxed visit to Park Guell. 1-3 hrs for Sant Pau Recinte Moderniste. There's a nice tapas place on the street corner.

Who is the architect of Hospital de Sant Pau?

Palau de la Música Catalana and Hospital de Sant Pau are two of the finest contributions to Barcelona's architecture by the Catalan Modernista architect,  Lluís Domènech i Montaner .

When is Recinte Modernista de Sant Pau open?

10am–6:30pm

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Lakshmi Menon

Born to parents bit by the wander bug, Lakshmi calls her love for travel "hereditary and habitual". Perpetually ensconced with a book in her hand and a mug of coffee in the other, she has been to over 15 countries in her 23 years of existence and is currently saving miles and money for her solo trip to Iceland. Always hustling towards the least trodden path, she has encountered some wonderful people during her escapades and if you ever meet her, she won't stop gushing about them.

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Hospital Sant Pau

Experience this masterpiece of modernisme - a hospital to feel good

Entrance of the Hospital Sant Pau

Entrance of the Hospital Sant Pau

Founded around 600 years ago, the "Hospital Sant Pau" developed from a medieval welfare house into a modern hospital complex.

Content of this page

  • Booking tickets for Sant Pau
  • History of the Hospital
  • City within the city
  • Sustainable
  • Why it is worth visiting

Today the "city within the city", as the hospital complex is also called, is one of the most important and most beautiful complexes of modernism.

The clinic complex was declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1997 due to its "architectural uniqueness and artistic beauty". In 2001 the 600th anniversary of the hospital was celebrated.

Tickets for the Hospital Sant Pau

Tickets for Sant Pau Art Nouveau Site: Skip The Line

  • With your Sant Pau ticket, stroll the extensive grounds, see the 16 pavilions, and admire the many details and architectural features
  • Relax in the beautiful gardens of the Recinte Modernista de Sant Pau and enjoy the tranquility - just as the architect intended for his patients at the beginning of the 20th century
  • Admission to the Hospital Sant Pau
  • Ticket also on the smartphone
  • Immediate ticket delivery

Information & booking

Tickets for Sant Pau Art Nouveau Site: Guided Tour

  • Visit to the world-famous work of one of the best Catalan Modernist architects
  • Guided visit with an official guide
  • Language: English
  • Duration approx. 1:15 hours

The history of the Hospital Sant Pau

In 1348, the black plague spread through Barcelona and as a result around a third of the population at that time died. With the help of this terrible apocalypse, the need for an organized health system became more and more apparent to people.

Lluís Domènech i Montaner

With the first modernist building, the "Castell dels tres Dragons", the architect Lluís Domènech i Montaner is now considered the founder of modernism.

  • The life of Domènech i Montaner
  • Modernism in Barcelona

Lluís Domènech i Montaner

The Hospital de la Santa Creu was founded in 1401. At the beginning of the 15th century, a comprehensive hospital complex was built to bring the six existing hospitals in Barcelona all under one roof. The origin of the hospital is in the district of El Raval, the hospital building in its original location is a splendid example of gothic civil architecture. In it, Antoni Gaudí died in 1926 after a traffic accident. Today it houses the Faculty of Medicine and the State Library of Catalonia.

In the late nineteenth century, thanks to the increasing industrialization, there was an economic and social boom in Spain and a major expansion of the urban area of ​​Barcelona. Health care also made a leap into scientific medicine and had to face new hygienic principles. In addition, the buildings in the narrow El Raval district became too small and plans were made to expand the hospital complex.

In 1902 the legacy of the banker Pau Gil made it possible to build a new hospital. So on January 15, 1902, construction work began with the laying of the foundation stone at its current location - only about 1,000 meters from the Sagrada Familia. From then on, the hospital was called "Hospital de la Santa Creu i de Sant Pau" in his honor. A good thirty years later, on January 16, 1930, the new hospital was handed over to the Spanish King Alfonso XIII.

After almost 80 years, hospital operations moved to the new building directly behind the Modernisme complex, and the historic facility, including the sickrooms, has been open to visitors ever since. 

Hospital Sant Pau - The city within the city

The hospital was to be something very special: in a relaxing, tree-lined environment where patients could recover from their illnesses and pains and breathe fresh, clean air. The medieval and Moorish-influenced architecture - typical of much Catalan Art Nouveau - makes it difficult to tell that this is a hospital. The orientation of the buildings to the north-south axis of the site allows for maximum solar radiation on the facades of the pavilions. In addition, the design as a "Park Hospital" created open areas for the well-being of patients, which was considered a novelty at the time.

The hospital area takes up almost an entire block - the almost 30 buildings are located in a park. With the inclusion of two gardens per pavilion, the architect Lluís Domènech i Montaner gave the complex a cheerful, optimistic character that helped the sick and their families to feel better. Horse chestnut, linden and orange trees line the central promenade and provide shade in summer. Medicinal medicinal plants such as laurel, lavender, rosemary and lemon trees grow in the roadside beds.

At the main entrance to the Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau complex is the chapel-like administrative building with a large domed roof and an impressive entrance hall with marble columns and mosaic-covered ceilings. It is no coincidence that the building looks like a church, as it is intended to symbolize the Christian tradition. At the same time, the building should represent a person who spreads his arms and welcomes the patients with open arms.

Behind the administration building you can see the pavilion with the operating room in the middle. The tunnel system that connects the pavilion to the others allowed the patients to be quickly transferred to their rooms.

At the end of the original area was the monastery pavilion. The building was designed by Pere Domènech, son of Lluis Domenèch i Montaner. It consists of three parts connected with small covered pedestrian bridges. The service areas of the hospital were housed here, such as the kitchen, pharmacy and accommodation for the nuns who worked here as nurses.

A new building, which is located behind the monastery building, expanded the old hospital and is now home to the modern hospital. The historic modernist hospital can be visited today.

What can be visited

A sightseeing route is signposted in the hospital complex, which you can, but do not have to, follow.

Beginning of the tour and outdoor area

The visit begins in the Sant Salvador pavilion with an exhibition on the hospital from its foundation to the present day. A symbolic dragon pays homage to the work of Domènech i Montaner.

Outdoor area

The garden city model created at the beginning of the 20th century was the model for the design of the outdoor areas. You can relax here in a beautiful park and admire the beauty of the exterior facades of the pavilions.

Pavilion Sant Rafael

You will experience a journey through time to the 1920s and 1930s: a historic hospital pavilion is recreated here and you can see how a hospital operated in the 1930s. Also see what Barcelona looked like in the 1920s.

Tunnel and administration building

Of particular interest is the tunnel system that connected the buildings and through which the patients could be quickly transferred. The tour ends in the representative and richly decorated administration building, which also served as a reception pavilion.

Early example of sustainable building

Due to the geothermal installations, which ensure the heat supply to various pavilions of the hospital complex in the form of almost 400 wells more than 100 meters deep, the facility is an example of sustainable construction and an efficient energy balance.

For reasons of hygiene, the entire area has been laid out on a slope: as is well known, the warm air moves upwards - so the ventilation system was developed in such a way that all bacteria and viruses are drawn away from the patients with the draft.

The selected building materials are made of durable building materials that do justice to the function of a hospital. As a typical component of modernist architecture, we find a striking mix of materials such as brick, natural stone, iron, glass and ceramics. The mainly processed material is the red brick, which was used exclusively for facades. This is combined with the natural stone, which was used for all decorative, architectural elements, reliefs, sculptures and in the interior ceiling designs.

The Hospital de Sant Pau can be reached within a 10-15 minute walk directly from the Sagrada Familia via the beautiful tree-lined pedestrian street "Avinguda de Gaudí".

Why the Hospital Sant Pau is worth visiting

The Hospital Sant Pau is a beautiful Modernsime complex, a masterpiece by the architect Lluis Domènech i Montaner. Always with the intention of serving people and their health, he built a hospital that, as a total work of art, offered color and freshness instead of sterility.

As a visitor, you feel completely at ease and wonder why today's hospitals aren't built like that. The hospital is rightly on the UNESCO World Heritage List.

Tickets for the Hispital Sant Pau

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Important information

tourist hospital barcelona

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Address Carrer de Sant Antoni Maria Claret, 167 Phone: +34 932 562 504 www.visitsantpau.com

Arrival Metro: Sant Pau – Dos de Maig (L5), Guinardó (L4) Bus Turístic: Sagrada Familia Parking nearby

Opening times Tue. - Fri.: 10.00 - 14.30 On weekends and public holidays: 10.00 - 17.00 Closed: Mondays when working days, 25 Dec.

Admission General admission: Adults 30-64 years: €16.00 Youth 12-29 years: €11.20 Free admission: children under 12 years 23 April, Museum Night, 24 September 20% discount: Barcelona Card, Bus Turístic Guided tour: Adults 16-64 years: €34.00 Reduced (15-15 years, 65+): €27.00 Children 0-11 years: €12.00

From the Sagrada Familia, the c/Gaudi street leads directly to the hospital. The approximately 1,000 meters are worth walking. With a guided tour (English) you get a look behind the scenes of the hospital. You should plan about 1.5-2 hours for the visit (with or without a guide).

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Hospital de Santa Creu i de Sant Pau

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  • Monuments and Tourist attractions

Hospital de Santa Creu i de Sant Pau

The Hospital de Santa Creu i de Sant Pau (Hospital of the Holy Cross and St Paul) is an impressive hospital complex constructed at the beginning of the twentieth century by Lluís Domènech i Montaner and his son. 

The Hospital de Santa Creu i de Sant Pau, commonly known as Hospital de Sant Pau, is an impressive complex constructed at the beginning of the twentieth century by Lluís Domènech I Montaner and his son. The surprising hospital was designed like a small modernist complex. The idea behind the design was to help the patients heal thanks to its pleasant atmosphere. Since 2009, it has no longer functioned as a hospital.  

The impressive buildings covered in red brick were designed as sober country houses surrounded by a lovely setting. Each department was housed in a different building and these were all connected by underground passageways.

Exploring the Hospital

Visitors may take a self-guided visit of Sant Pau or can also take an English-speaking guided tour of the grounds while gaining in-depth knowledge of the history of Sant Pau and life in Barcelona during the twentieth century.

The visit begins in the Pavilion of Sant Jordi, where visitors will get to see an exhibition on the past, present, and future of the Hospital . The tour continues inside the Hospital’s church and then in various other pavilions, where the guide will tell you curious stories that took place in the complex. The visit comes to an end in the underground tunnels that connect all the buildings.

If you decide to visit the center without booking a guided tour , you may only visit some of the Hospital’s pavilions and you won’t be allowed access to the tunnels.

An Open-Air Museum

The Hospital de Santa Creu i de Sant Pau is one of the most exceptional Catalan Art Nouveau complexes in Barcelona. Moreover, in 2014, it was completely renovated and transformed into a research and cultural center. In our opinion, it's definitely worthwhile visiting.

To skip the lines, we recommend booking online:

Sant Pau guided tour

Hospital de la Santa Creu I Sant Pau

Sant Antoni Maria Claret, 167.

November - March: Every day from 10 am to 5 pm April - October:  Every day from 10 am to 6:30 pm Guided tours:  Weekends and holidays: Spanish-language tour : 11 am English-language tour : 10:30 am  French-language tour : 11 am Catalan-language tour : 12:30 pm

Self-guided tour: Adults: € 16 ( US$ 17.40) Youth between 12 and 29 years old and Seniors over 65 years old: € 9.80 ( US$ 10.60) Youth under 12 years old): Free entrance. Guided tour: Adults: € 20 ( US$ 21.70) Youth between 12 and 29 years old and Seniors over 65 years old: € 14 ( US$ 15.20) Youth under 12 years old: € 5 ( US$ 5.40)

Sant Pau Art Nouveau Site Guided Tour € 34 ( US$ 36.90)

Metro: Sant Pau - Dos de Maig , line 5; Guinardó - Hospital de Sant Pau , line 4. Buses: lines H8, 19, 47, 117, 192.

Nearby places

Sagrada Familia (934 m) Torre Glories - Old Torre Agbar (1.6 km) Park Güell (1.9 km) Gaudí House Museum in Barcelona (1.9 km) La Pedrera (Casa Milà) (2.1 km)

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The Palau Güell is a distinctive Modernist mansion built by Antoni Gaudí, the renowned practitioner of Catalan Modernism. The building was commissioned by the industrial magnate Eusebi Güell and was constructed between 1885 and 1890.

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Sant Pau Hospital

A jewel for architecture lovers.

Sant Pau Hospital

Discover this incredible Unesco Art Nouveau site just a few steps from Sagrada Familia with an expert guide. Santa Creu i Sant Pau old Hospital is the most famous and ambitious project designed by the Catalan architect Lluís Domènech i Montaner thanks to the benefactor Pau Gil who made an important charity donation to the city.

Sant Pau is an emsemble of breathtaking pavilions decorated with amazing sculptures, ceramics, stained-glass windows and mosaic telling the history of the building and inspiring gardens and tunnels where architecture meets excellence and functionality. Pavilions are interconnected by an efficient system of underground tunnels now opened to the public after 5 years of renovation. The visitor can also admire the Operations or Surgery pavilion and many of the pavilions where patients recovered.

Doctors from all over came to visit this hospital that changed the history of architecture and the conception of medicine and treatments forever. Now after housing for more than 80 years the former hospital you have this unique opportunity to admire its architecture, exhibitions and historical recreations to understand how this microcosm worked.

In 2 hours you will visit:

  • the Administration pavilion of Sant Pau hospital
  • the surgery or operations pavilion
  • the exhibition about the history of the hospital
  • the underground system of tunnels
  • examples of pavilions where patients recovered
  • the gardens

tourist hospital barcelona

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View of the Hospital Sant Pau (Barcelona, Spain)

Visit the interior of Hospital de Sant Pau (Barcelona, Spain) | Recinte Modernista

Sant pau hospital - a modernist hidden gem.

In 1401 the City Council and the Bishopric of Barcelona agreed to unify the 6 existent hospitals of the city into one single facility. It was the origin of the Hospital de la Santa Creu (hospital of the Holy Cross), the second oldest hospital institution in Europe still active nowadays. Their headquarters were located in the Raval district, in a medieval building whose cloister is now a public garden, and some of its wings are now libraries. 

But in the 1800’s the population of Barcelona had grown a lot due to the industrial revolution and the immigrants coming to work in the factories. The hospital facilities were not enough to serve the city. At the end of the 1800’s the industrialist and philanthropist Pau Gil decided to make a large donation to promote the construction of a new hospital in the Eixample District that was starting to be built outside of the old town. His only condition was to add the name of his patron saint, Saint Paul, to the name of the hospital. That’s how the Hospital de la Santa Creu became the Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau, although locals prefer to use “Santa Creu” to refer to the medieval building and “Sant Pau” for the modernist enclosure and the modern hospital facilities.

The architect Domenech i Muntaner was assigned its design, and for that he travelled to visit the leading sanitary facilities in Europe, learning about the newest hygiene trends. He planned a mini-city of 48 pavilions, and teamed up with the best artists of the time to decorate them according to the Modernisme style that was in vogue at the time. The construction works started in 1902, and the first patients arrived in 1916, even if the official innauguration wouldn’t be until 1930.

The dream of building 48 pavilions was never fulfilled, and only less than half were finally completed. With the years, the pavilions were altered to add divisions and mezzanines due to the lack of space. By 1990 the need of modern facilities was evident, and the local institutions got together to plan the project. It would occupy the backside of the modernist enclosure, facing Ronda Guinardó. In the meantime, in 1997 the Hospital de Sant Pau (Recinte Modernista) together with another work by Domenech i Muntaner, the Palau de la Musica Catalana , were declared Human Heritage by UNESCO and the restoration of the pavilions started. The new Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau moved to the new headquarters in 2003.

Exterior façade of the Hospital de Sant Pau

Administration pavilion of the Hospital Sant Pau de Barcelona

The entrance to the Hospital de Sant Pau modernista is made from the corner of Cartagena and Sant Antoni Maria Claret, which is also where ends Avinguda Gaudi. Three elegant wrought iron gates give entrance to the encloser. The central gate is flanked by 2 groups of three columns holding the coats of arms of the City of Barcelona and the Barcelona Cathedral, founders of the Hospital de la Santa Creu. To the left of the gates stands another column with the sculpture of Saint Paul, and the the right another column supports a Cross - for the Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau.

As you cross the door, a staircase leads to the Administration Pavilion, and in the middle of the staircase there’s a fountain with the bust of Pau Gil, the donor and promotor of the construction of the modernist hospital. The pavilion is built in V shape, with an impressive central façade and two wings. The entrance to the pavilion is made through three arched doors, which are sided by 4 sculptures: the three Christian Theological Vertues (Faith, Hope and Charity), plus one more virtue added by Domenech i Muntaner: “Action”. 

In the center of the façade there’s two angels holding the coat of arms of the Hospital de la Santa Creu, flanked by 6 saints (three females and three males). The building is crowned with a spire featuring a clock, inspired in the medieval belltowers. That gives the pavilion the aspect of a monastery or an old university or Catholic private school rather than a hospital. As for the two wings, their outside is more simple, just decorated with rows of windows and some mosaics about the history of the hospital located in the edges of the estructure.

Hypostyle room and underground tunnels

The entrance to the Hospital de Sant Pau Recinte Modernista is made through the side door on the street level of the right wing (on the left wing there used to be a tapas bar, but it closed with the pandemic). After buying your tickets or getting them scanned if you bought them only (which is recommended to avoid wasting time), you access the hypostyle hall, a room with columns that acts as the basement of the Administration Pavilion.

The Hypostyle room connects with the network of underground tunnels that connect with the different pavilions. They were used by the hospital staff, and at one point even ambulances came in. It’s almost 1km (about half a mile) of underground tunnels! The visit takes you through the central tunnel before taking a detour to the right, to enter the Pavilion of Sant Salvador from its basement.

Pavilion of Sant Salvador

Nowadays it hosts a museum exhibit about the hospital with models of the hospital and a giant structure, vaguely resembling a dragon shape, made of images of the works of the architect Domenech i Muntaner, and references to his political involvement and his career teaching at the architecture school of the University of Barcelona (did you know that Antoni Gaudi was actually one of his students?)

Gardens of the Hospital de Sant Pau

The central gardens of the hospital structure the organization of the pavilions: to the right those for the male patients, and to the left, those for the females. Actually, the ones to the right are named after male saints, and the ones to the left after female saints or virgins. The gardens were a vital part of the project, as Domenech i Muntaner believed that the contact with nature helped in the healing process, and the plants were chosen for their medicinal properties.

Also, from the gardens it’s easy to realize that the pavilions are not structured following the rest of the structure of the Eixample district, but diagonally to it: that was made in purpose to maximize the sun exposition as well as the sea breeze, that purified the air.

This is where during the Christmas season they organize a Christmas Lights Garden.

Surgery Pavilion (Casa d'Operacions)

In the center of the garden stands the Surgery Pavilion, dedicated to the patron saints of Medicine Saint Damien and Saint Cosmas (depicted on mosaics by the windows of the façade). The blue mosaics on top of the balcony and under gothic arches list the names of prominent Catalan doctors.

Go around the pavilion to find the back door that gives you access to Surgery Theater: a semi-circular room with windows all around them and grades around a central table. This was the place where operations took place: the windows allowed for sunlight, in times when electricity wasn’t a reliable source of light and the surgeries had to take place during daytime. The grades around the surgery table allowed medicine students to attend for educational purposes.

The surgery room has two adjacent rooms, one in each side, one was the anesthesia room, the other the post-operations room. In them you can see displayed some surgery instruments used in the early 1900’s. On the second floor there were two more surgery rooms (the windows can be seen from outside) and the third floor had labs and water sterilization machines.

Pavilion of Sant Rafael

There were no partitions: the pavilions were communal dormitories. Domenech i Muntaner was involved in the design of the beds and other pieces of furniture. He even indicated the number of paint layers that needs to be used on the beds. This was the last pavilion built in life of Domenech i Muntaner – after his death it was his son who continued the works. Interestingly, unlike the other pavilions decorated with Ps and Gs for Pau Gil (the Hospital promotor), this one is decorated with Rs in the walls, for Mr. Rafael Rabell, one of the most important donors to the project.

The pavilion also displays a museum exhibit about the history of the Sant Pau Hospital (Barcelona, Spain), with panels with information as well as pictures and old medical instruments. As you exit it, look up to see the sculpture of the archangel Sant Raphael: it’s a portrait of one of the sons of Domenech i Muntaner, who died young at the age of 23 years old during the construction of the hospital.

At the end of the gardens stands another building, that is actually three bodies linked by bridges. The central body was the convent where the nuns that worked as nurses at the hospital used to live. They were the main work force at the hospital in the old times, as there were very few doctors. The left wing was the hospital pharmacy, and the one to the right were the kitchens. This building was added by Domenech i Muntaner’s son Peter in the 1920’s.

Other pavilions not open to the public

Left side (female pavilions).

  • Pavilion of  Santa Apolonia . First starting from the Administration Pavilion. Together with its twin, the pavilion of Saint Georges, they are the smallest pavilions of the Hospital de Sant Pau in Barcelona. It’s currently used for temperary exhibits and it’s closed to the public when there’s no exhibit on show.
  • Pavilion of Our Lady of El Carme . Second to the left. Currently being restored.
  • Pavilion of Our Lady of La Mercè . Third to the left. It is currently used as headquarters of international institutions.
  • Pavilion of Our Lady of Montserrat . Last to the left before the Convent. Closed to the public.

RIGHT SIDE (Male pavilions)

  • Pavilion of Saint Georges (Sant Jordi) . First from the right, starting from the Administration Pavilion. Just as its twin, the Pavilion of Santa Apolonia, it is used for temporary exhibits and only open when there’s an exhibit going on.
  • Pavilion of Sant Leopold . Third to the right. Currently housing headquarters of various institutions. The pavilion was named after a nephew of Pau Gil, Leopold Gil, and the saint crowning the entrance is a portrait of him.
  • Pavilion of Sant Manel . Fifht and last to the right. This pavilion is also used as offices of various international institutions.

Administration Pavilion

Take the grand staircase to the left, presided by a esculpture of Saint Martin of Tours on a horse. He represents charity, as a reminder that the Hospital de la Santa Creu was a hospital for the poor. As you walk up, you’ll be mesmerized at the gorgeous stained glass skylight and the impressive wrought iron lamp. Take first the corridor to the left, taking you to the central part of the building. From the windows you’ll see a great view of Sagrada Familia. 

In front of the windows, there’s the door leading to the Domenech i Muntaner room, that preserves the original decoration. There’s a painting about how  the remains of Saint Eulalia, patron saint of Barcelona, were taken from the church of Santa Maria del Mar to the Cathedral. The words on the balcony translate as “Lord, protect the benefactors of this house, in heaven as on earth”.

Retrace your steps to the stairs, and now take the corridor going on the opposite direction. Along it there’s offices, some currently in use, some freed of furniture so you can see their original looks. At the end of the corridor you’ll reach the conference room from its second floor, the best place to admire its tiled ceiling.

Walk down the stairs to reach the ground level, then exit through the corridor that takes back to the entrance hall. It’s lined up with colorful stained glass windows in one side and more offices in the other. The visit is over: to exit you’ll have to go back to the gardens, and walk down the slope on the right. The exit is through a gift shop in the basement of this wing of the Administration Pavilion, right were you started.

Pavilions outside of Sant Pau Recinte Modernista

There’s a handful of pavilions that are outside the Hospital de Sant Pau Recinte Modernista. They weren’t originals from Domenech i Muntaner’s times and that’s why they were not included in the monumental enclosure. But in case you are curious, it’s the following ones:

  • Chapel of the Hospital . Facing Sant Antoni Maria Claret street, it is still used as a parish church. Designed by Domenech i Muntaner, his son had to modify the original project after the architect’s death due to economical restraints. The result is less monumental, but preserves the idea of a chapel open to the street so it can be accessed without having to cross the hospital area. To one side there’s a wing used by the friars that worked for the hospital (known as the “seminar” even if technically it wasn’t one), the other for the priests. Pere Domenech also attached to the right a small pavilion (Sant Roc), that housed a parking with a weighbridge for the delivery trucks.
  • Pavilions of Sant Frederic, Santa Victoria and Sant Antoni . Accessed from a gate to the right of the Chapel, they are are now used for offices of different departments of the modern Barcelona Hospital de Sant Pau. Sant Frederic and Santa Victoria were built by Pere Domenech although planned initially by his father. The pavilion of Santa Victoria was actually designed by Domenech i Muntaner when it was clear that the original project of 48 pavilions wasn’t going to happen, so it has no “twin”, it has a much more humble architectural style not aligned with the others, and it occupies a space that was originally destined for other non-medical facilities. Sant Antoni was designed and built by Pere Domenech in 1932, but it’s suffered many alterations to adapt it to medical uses.
  • Casa de la Convalescencia . Corner of Sant Antoni Maria Claret and Sant Quinti streets. The Convalescence House was an institution related to the medieval Hospital de la Santa Creu, that wasn’t originally going to move to the new hospital facilities. But once the ambitious original project was abandoned, the land available encouraged them to come. Domenech i Muntaner designed for them what many consider one of the last modernist buildings in Barcelona, even if it was executed by his son after he died. The building consists of two wards, one for male patients and one for females, united by a central chapel. Each ward had communal dormitories as well as private rooms with access to the gardens. They also had separate kitchens and bathrooms for each ward. The building is currently occupied by the Autonomous University of Barcelona. The side of the ward facing Sant Quintí street has a bar accessible from the street.
  • Pavilion of Our Lady of the Assumpció. Access via a gate on Cartagena street and through the road that from Sant Antoni Maria Claret goes around the back of the Recinte Modernista. Twin of the pavilion of Sant Frederic, they are the two modernist pavilions that Pere Domenech built in the style of the ones designed by his father: the rest of his projects are considered eclectic style. In the 1960’s the building had become a urology clinic, the Fundacio Puigverd, and due to the need of more space the pavilion was altered and modern extensions were attached to it.

Planning your visit to the Hospital de Sant Pau Interior

Address : C/ de Sant Antoni Maria Claret, 167, 08025 Barcelona (Spain). Get directions from Googlemaps . Website : http://www.santpaubarcelona.org/ Closest subway station : Sant Pau | Dos de Maig (L5, blue) Closest Tourist Bus stop : Cartagena, 325-329. Get your tickets here . Opening hours : Every day from 10AM to 5PM (April to October until 6.30PM)

Will you be visiting the Sant Pau Hospital Museum on your next trip?

Author Marta Laurent Veciana

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Hospital Sant Pau Barcelona

The old hospital de la santa creu i de sant pau in barcelona.

Hospital de la Santa Creu i de Sant Pau Barcelona

The old hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau is one of the prime examples of Modernisme Català, the Catalan version of the Art Nouveau movement. With its main building and many pavilions, the Barcelona Hospital de Santa Creu is the largest complex of Catalan modernist architecture.

Hospital de la Santa Creu i de Sant Pau

The Hospital de Sant Pau ( 'Hospital de la Santa Creu i de Sant Pau ') is designed by architect Lluís Domènech i Montaner. The hospital is one of the prime examples of Modernisme Català, the Catalan version of the Art Nouveau movement. With its main building and many pavilions, the Hospital de Santa Creu is the largest complex of Catalan modernist architecture.

The old Hospital de Sant Pau and the Palau de la Música Catalana Catalana (also designed by Lluís Domènech i Montaner) were added to the World Heritage List by UNESCO in 1997. Several years ago, the hospital underwent a major renovation, and it's possible to visit this unique complex on your own. The Hospital de Sant Pau is not particularly touristy, and because of its wonderful Art Nouveau architectural style with lots of ceramics and sculptures, it's one of my personal highlights of Barcelona .

Hospital de Sant Pau Barcelona

History of the Sant Pau Hospital

The Hospital de Santa Creu stems from 1401, when Barcelona's then six hospitals merged. By the late 19th century, Barcelona had grown enormously, and developments in medical science required more state-of-the-art facilities. That was the reason for the decision to build a huge hospital complex just outside the city, financed with a donation by banker Pau Gil. Construction started in 1902, and it would be 28 years until it opened in 1930. The symmetrical complex consisted of as much as 27 buildings, 16 of which were built in modernist style. Each pavilion had its own medical expertise, and a system of corridors was constructed underneath the complex for easy access to the pavilions. The architectural style and central gardens of the hospital are intended to create an atmosphere of optimism, helping to speed up the recovery of patients.

Hospital de Sant Pau Barcelona

Out of respect to the will of the mecenas, the name Sant Pau was added to the hospital's name. Since then the hospital has been called the Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau . Today it's primarily known as Hospital de Sant Pau. Antoni Gaudí (known for being the architect of Sagrada Familia and Park Guell ) died in the former hospital de la Santa Creu in 1926, after being hit by a tram in Barcelona city a few days before.

Tour of the Sant Pau hospital

During your visit to Sant Pau you can choose to walk independently through the old hospital. Book your Hospital Sant Pau tickets in advance.

Where is the Hospital de Sant Pau in Barcelona?

The main entrance is in the quarter of Eixample and is four blocks from the Sagrada Familia . It's a good idea to combine both sights during your trip to Barcelona. If you travel by metro, the stop 'Sant Pau' of the L4 is the nearest one.

barcelona Hospital de la Santa Creu

Places to visit in Barcelona

Tourist Attractions Barcelona

Barcelona Tourist Attractions

Sagrada Familia tickets

Sagrada Familia & Tickets

Park Guell tickets

Park Güell & Tickets

Camp Nou tickets

Camp Nou - Stadium of FC Barcelona

Barcelona City Pass

Guided visit

Tours currently only available in Catalan and Spanish. A guided visit is the best way to really discover the Art Nouveau Site. With the help of Sant Pau’s guides, you’ll discover all the artistic details hidden in the former Hospital and the anecdotes that have marked the institution’s evolution in its more than 600 years of history

tourist hospital barcelona

Information

  • Weekends and holidays
  • Languages catalan, spanish
  • Duration 75 min
  • Timetable 11h (CAST), 12.30 (CAT)
  • General rate Guided tour: €21 / €5 (children aged 3 to 11)
  • Reduced rate Guided tour: €14,7

Reduced rate

BCN residents, young people aged 12 to 24, over 65, people with a degree of disability of less than 65% or a degree of dependency 1 or 2, holders of the large family or single parent card, holders of the Tarta Rosa Reduida

Free visit (must be obtained at the box office)

Children under the age of 2, holders of the Free Pink Card, people with a degree of disability equal to or greater than 65% or with a degree 3 dependency and their companion, ICOM members.

20% off: BCN Card, Tourist Bus, City Tours, Library Card, Club TR3SC, members of Òmnium Cultural.

50% of: Members Official College of Doctors of Barcelona and Official College of Nurses of Barcelona.

In compliance with current regulations, guided visits to the Sant Pau Modernista Precinct can only be carried out by Modernista Precinct guides, tourist guides trained by the Generalitat de Catalunya and teachers who accompany groups of students.

Children under 16 must be accompanied by an adult.

You want to know more?

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Self-guided visit

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Visit with Audioguide

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  • Family visit

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  • Combined tickets

The Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau Foundation

Els recursos obtinguts per la Fundació Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau de les visites i gestió del Recinte Modernista es destinen a donar suport a l’activitat assistencial i investigadora de l’Hospital, a promoure diferents projectes d’acció social i a preservar el seu patrimoni.

Art Nouveau Site

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  • Resident organizations
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  • Visit with audio guide
  • Guided tour

Prepare your visit

  • How to get there
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  • Pedagogical activities
  • Historical Archive
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Domènech i Montaner

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Art & Culture , Barcelona , Europe , Photo Series , Spain · 28 March 2021

Hospital Sant Pau: The World’s Largest Art Nouveau Complex

Modernisme Hospital Sant Pau Barcelona

The COVID19 pandemic has forced us all to spend more time at home this year. Luckily for me, my home happens to be the amazing city of Barcelona! Therefore, I have decided to take this as an opportunity to write more about the city where I live. I will be sharing my discoveries with you so that you can travel with your minds, for now, and start planning your trip to Barcelona for when things go back to normal, hopefully very soon! 🙂 This post is about the stunning Hospital Sant Pau .

A city within the city. Sant Pau is the world’s largest Art Nouveau complex, as well as being the most important work by Lluís Domènech i Montaner, the architect of Modernisme, the Catalan Art Nouveau.

Ruta del Modernisme SerenTripidy Feet

Declared World Heritage by UNESCO in 1997 for its singularity and artistic beauty, this Art Nouveau Site comprises an architectural complex of 12 pavilions set in green space and interconnected by a kilometre of underground galleries.

Hospital Sant Pau Entrance

Lluís  Domènech i Montaner  

Father of the  Catalan Art Nouveau , the  architect  Lluís  Domènech i Montaner  began his professional career as an architect. In 1875 when he became an interim lecturer at the Barcelona School of Architecture. His students there included other famous  Art Nouveau architects  such as Gaudí and Puig i Cadafalch.

At the end of his life he delegated most of his work to his son, Pere Domènech i Roura, who completed the Hospital de Sant Pau  after Lluís Domènech i Montaner died in 1923.

Domènech idealised medieval Catalonia and chose to reinforce the Catalan identity of the present with references from the past. His passion for heraldry and the medieval period is very much present throughout this building.

Medieval Catalan History

The History Of The Hospital Sant Pau

The Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau came into being in 1401 with the merging of six hospitals.

By the late nineteenth century, to accommodate the rapidly growing population of the city of Barcelona, a new building was commissioned. Thanks to the bequest of the Catalan banker Pau Gil, the first stone of the new hospital designed by Lluís Domènech i Montaner was laid in January 1902. The new facilities, however, did not open until 1930.

After eighty years of healthcare activity in the Modernista complex, in 2009 the hospital moved to new premises. The historic pavilions, therefore, became a museum and are available for hire for exhibitions and events.

Hospital Sant Pau Barcelona Modernism

A Visit To Hospital Sant Pau

The visit begins with a video about the history of the old  Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau  and the work and career of the architect Lluís Domènech i Montaner .

The visit continues to the  gardens . Here you can enter different pavilions and see how the hospital looked like at the time it was built.

The tour ends in the  Administration Pavilion , the most outstanding building on the site, full of light, colour, mosaics, sculptures, and a wealth of decorative details.

Hospital Sant Pau Recinte Modernista Barcelona

How To Get Tickets to Hospital San Pau

You can get a discounted ticket for a self-guided tour here .

The visit lasts approximately 45 minutes to 1 hour.

For more information about guided tours, check the website of the Hospital Sant Pau

Save Time & Money

If you want to make the most of your stay in Barcelona, I recommend buying the Barcelona Card . It gives you skip-the-line access to over 25 of Barcelona’s best museums and attractions and includes public transportation for 3, 4, or 5-days. You also get an exclusive guidebook in 6 languages and a free map of Barcelona. If you are only staying for a couple of days, then go for a Barcelona Express Card !

How To Get To Hospital Sant Pau

Take the L5 to the Sant Pau /Dos de Maig Station . Take the exit Dos de Maig and walk three minutes from there. Check out the Barcelona metro map

Where To Stay In Barcelona

In order to visit as many sights as possible during your stay, I recommend you book accommodation in these three districts: Sant Antoni , Eixample, and El Born. All three districts are in the city centre and offer good connections to tourist attractions. These are residential districts: locals live here! This means that restaurants are not tourists traps like the ones on La Rambla. I recommend avoiding the Gothic Quarter, especially in summer when it gets very expensive, and El Raval , which is definitely not one of the safest neighbourhoods in town.

Tip: the best way to get to the city centre from the airport is to get the Aerobús. The trip takes about 30 minutes depending on traffic. The first stop is at Pl. Espanya and the last is Pl. Catalunya. Buy your ticket in advance online . A single ticket costs €5.90 and a return ticket is €10.20. Free wifi available onboard.

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Come inside Barcelona’s most beautiful hospital

Barcelona , Catalonia

Barcelona’s Hospital Sant Pau is not only one of the city’s most beautiful examples of Catalan modernist architecture, it’s also a story of a time when a hospital stay was very different for patients. Take a look inside the renovated hospital, now a museum.

Even standing at the bottom of the stairs in front of the main entrance to Sant Pau Hospital in the El Guinardó district, you are struck by an enormous sense of humility towards this majestic piece of architecture.

Despite being close to Gaudí’s famous Sagrada Familia , there are far fewer tourists here. This is despite the fact that it is one of the most formal Modernist buildings in Catalonia, and it was also here that Gaudí breathed his last after being hit by a tram.

Sant Pau Recinte Modernista was built between 1902 and 1930 by the Catalan architect Lluís Domènech i Montaner (1849-1923), who is considered one of the most important architects of Catalan Modernism. He also built the Palau de la Musica concert hall . The project was financed by banker Pau Gil.

The new Sant Pau Hospital was to replace the former Santa Creu in Santa Pau, located in the Raval district, which had become too small as the population grew and medical advances were rapid.

Behind the main building is an entire city within the city, and as well as being Domènech i Montaner’s most important work, Sant Pau is also the largest modernist complex in the world. In addition to the main building, the complex consists of 12 pavilions surrounded by greenery and connected by underground passageways.

In 1997 Sant Pau was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site for its unique architectural and artistic beauty, and in 2009 the hospital moved to newer buildings behind the old complex. This means that the public now has access to see the beautiful hospital, which now functions as a museum.

Historical tour of the hospital and its architecture

A visit to Sant Pau begins underground, in the Hypostyle Hall that once housed the emergency rooms. Black and white photographs of the old operating theatres are projected onto the walls to give an insight into what the examination rooms looked like. The tour continues up to the Sant Salvador Pavilion, which is on two floors and also serves as an exhibition space. Here you can learn about the history of Sant Pau and its importance to the locals, including through exhibits of objects used in the hospital throughout history.

In another room, you can gain insight into the ideology of modernist architects and Domènech in Montaner’s work.

The decor of the space, with vaulted ceilings of turquoise and water blue tiles in a delicate geometric pattern and walls of white tiles and decorations in delicate blue-green and beige colours, is a work of art in itself. I spent a long time studying the beautiful tile work that is the hallmark of Catalan Modernism.

Lush green spaces for healing body and soul

The tour continues in the hospital’s lush gardens, surrounded by pavilions built with inspiration from the forms of nature. There are lots of lights, plants, flowers, herbs and trees and several cosy corners.

The gardens and surrounding pavilions are a beautiful example of how nature and architecture can be united, and how nature played an important role in the healing of the sick.

Patient in beautiful surroundings

In the pavilions, which have towers and domed roofs with colourful mosaics, you can get a glimpse of how the hospital’s wards were laid out and the relationship between patient and doctor in the 1920s.

The most beautiful – and most surprising – is undoubtedly the San Rafael pavilion, but a reconstruction of an old patient’s room with soft and cosy lighting and beautiful tile-flower decorations adorning the cream-coloured tiled walls. The atmosphere is very different from that of modern hospitals, and it gives food for thought. Why don’t we build hospitals where the wards are beautiful and cosy any more?

The pavilion also has a nice and beautiful domed garden room where patients could sit and look out at the greenery through the large windows.

In the surgery pavilion you will get an insight into the medical work during this period.

The public does not have access to all pavilions and the main building, because parts of the complex serve as offices and workplaces for organisations working in innovation, sustainability, health, education and culture.

The tour ends in the main building, where Montaner’s inspiration from the Mudejar style is conspicuous. A style that the modernist architects were all inspired by. The main building houses a library and a church, among other things, and here you can also feel how modernism’s sense of light, colours, columns and decorations blend into one.

Buy a ticket to Sant Pau

During holidays, there may be a queue at the ticket office. Skip the queue and buy your ticket for Sant Pau Recinte Modernista online here (promotional link).

Sant Pau Recinte Modernista , Carrer de Sant Antoni Maria Claret 167

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Barcelona’s hospitals

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Although we hope you won’t need the information provided in this article we want you to have it so if you ever need to go to a hospital you would know what are the closest to your home, your workplace or your study center in case of emergency. If your stay in Barcelona will be for a long term and you are from a country of the European Union, you can get the European Health Insurance Card (EHIC) with this card they will take care of you at any health center or hospital like you were a Spanish person. You must prove that your stay is not for a medical treatment in this case. If you are from a country outside the EU for you the best option would be to get a travel insurance for a year (you can ask for a renovation after this time), to make sure in case you need to get medical care, the costs are on your insurance. Besides hospitals, there are also Primary Care Centres or CAP’s , but they have a more restricted schedule and you may have more difficulties to get some attention there. If you have an emergency the essential phone numbers to consider are the 061 (medical emergencies) or 112 (emergency) .

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Hospital del Mar : is located on the seafront of Barcelona and apart from being one of the best hospitals in the city, is a popular university Medical Research Institute, which has done an excellent job for over 20 years.

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Hospital Vall d’Hebron : in this hospital they have a oncology specialized center where they treat many cancer patients and in which they research on this disease. Besides that, they take medical care in various specialties.

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Hospital de Barcelona : while not the best known hospitals in Barcelona (despite the name) is in a very central location, right on Avenida Diagonal. This hospital has a hospital emergency room, attention to various specialties and inpatient service.

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Barcelona International Hospitals

Barcelona’s best hospitals

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Barcelona has long been one of Europe’s tourist destinations par excellence. And now it is also a medical and healthcare destination, thanks to the quality of its services.

The Catalan capital is a benchmark in the field of hospital and medical excellence. This is demonstrated by its more than fifty hospitals, both public and private. And also the more than 20,000 patients from all over the world who, every year, come for treatment in Barcelona’s clinics.

Moreover, according to the Nature Index 2020 Science Cities , Barcelona and its metropolitan area are ranked 40th in the world out of a total of 200 cities that stand out for their level of research. And, as shown in the BioRegion 2020 Report , Barcelona is the fifth European city in terms of investment in ‘digital health’.

Barcelona is the city with the second highest number of specialists and centres of reference in both public and private hospitals, as published in 2019 by Forbes magazine in its list of the 100 best doctors in Spain , which includes more than 20 specialities. In Barcelona we have world leaders in oncology, transplants, foetal medicine, minimally invasive surgery and highly complex surgeries in all age groups, etc. Doctors such as Eduard Gratacós, Josep Brugada, Antonio de Lacy, Ramón Cugat, Josep Tabernero, Jaume Mora, Susana Rives, José Hinojosa, Antonio Alcaraz and Humberto Villavicencio are just some of the international authorities in these disciplines practising in the Catalan capital.

In the field of telecommunications, Barcelona is a pioneer in the development of 5G technology, having been the capital of the Mobile World Congress since 2006. This has favoured the health and medical sector with the birth of new healthcare start-ups. Their proliferation and consolidation are turning the city of Barcelona into a hub of excellence in emerging therapies and personalised medicine.

Likewise, Barcelona is currently a nerve centre for precision medicine thanks to the support of the Barcelona Supercomputing Centre and its MareNostrum supercomputer, the most powerful in Spain.

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Catalonia, a biomedical hub and a benchmark in clinical trials

Catalonia is a great tourist, architectural, cultural and also medical enclave. According to UNEIX and WHO data collected in 2019 by Biocat , the Catalan life and health sciences sector organisation, Catalonia is among the top 10 countries in Europe in terms of participation in clinical trials and among the top 20 in the world. With regard to the speciality of oncology, Catalonia is in the top 5 in Europe and in the top 10 worldwide.

Moreover, both the WHO and other rankings by independent experts recognise the Catalan Health System as one of the best in the world.

Barcelona is developing substantial advances in precision medicine thanks to the research carried out with the support of the Super Computing Center based on artificial intelligence that allows the development of this advanced equipment whose emblem is the Mare Nostrum supercomputer.

For all these reasons, and as a result of the great support of the health sciences industry, both Barcelona and Catalonia are an incubator of biomedical innovation at national and international level. It is worth highlighting the role played in this sector by the company Grifols, which over time has become one of the world’s leading companies in the development of plasma-derived medicines and other innovative biotechnological solutions for healthcare.

Barcelona International Hospitals (BIH)

Thanks to the existence of several internationally renowned hospitals in the city of Barcelona itself, which have developed an international programme, the most advanced treatments in all medical specialties can now be concentrated in one location.

Most of these internationally renowned hospitals, which have developed advanced technologies, are grouped together in Barcelona International Hospitals (BIH). This association is made up of the 7 most specialised hospitals in Barcelona, characterised by the use of cutting-edge technologies and internationally renowned specialists.

barnaclínic+. Hospital Clínic Group

Global medical centre with more than a century of practice, dedicated to treating all types of pathologies, especially those of high complexity.

It is considered one of the best hospitals in the world, according to the latest World’s Best Hospitals, produced for the fourth year by Newsweek magazine. According to this ranking, Hospital Clínic has managed to place in the top 100 out of a total of 250 hospitals worldwide, being the first Spanish centre in the list with the position number 63.

Hospital Sant Joan de Déu – Barcelona Children’s Hospital

One of the oldest paediatric hospitals in Europe, built in 1867. Today, it is one of the leading university hospitals in Europe for childhood and adolescence, as well as for maternity and foetal medicine.

The quality of its medical team is reflected in the mention of 9 of them in Stanford University’s ranking of the world’s Top 2% scientists .

Puigvert Foundation

A healthcare entity founded in 1961 and specialising in Urology, Nephrology, Andrology and Reproductive Medicine.

Since 2022 it has a new Advanced Dialysis Unit . More than 1,500 m² equipped with the latest technology with the aim of guaranteeing comprehensive care to improve the patient’s quality of life and to establish predictive models for the evolution of kidney disease.

Guttmann Institute. Neurorehabilitation Hospital

This institution has been at the forefront of neurorehabilitation and brain health for more than half a century. Pioneers in their field, they stand out for creating initiatives such as the Barcelona Brain Health Initiative (BBHI), focused on brain health, and the online cognitive telerehabilitation platform Guttmann NeuroPersonalTrainer®.

Teknon Medical Center

Teknon Medical Centre It is the first private hospital in Spain to obtain, 20 years ago, the most prestigious accreditation in the world in terms of patient safety, the Joint Commission International. In 2019 it renewed this seal of quality for the sixth consecutive time.

In addition, in 2019, Teknon Medical Centre was awarded by the International Medical Travel Journey as the Best International Hospital in the world, according to the International Medical Travel Journey. And this year, it is part of the specific ranking of the best centres by country of the World’s Best Hospitals 2022, occupying 19th place in the list of Spain.

Dexeus University Hospital

It is one of the largest private hospitals in Europe and a benchmark in the specialities of gynaecology, obstetrics and reproductive medicine. It has a team of more than 450 medical professionals and has now established itself as a hospital oriented to the training of postgraduates and MIR candidates. In June 2021 it obtained the Joint Commission International quality seal. And in 2002, it became the first private hospital to obtain the ‘Baby-Friendly Hospital’ accreditation, a Spanish initiative promoted by UNICEF, dedicated to supporting, protecting and promoting breastfeeding.

Quirónsalud Barcelona Hospital

It has been designed to provide maximum comfort for patients and their families. For this reason, it has 165 single rooms, including 4 Royal Suites and 39 Suites. It occupies more than 56,000 m² and has the most advanced technological equipment for diagnosis, treatment and telemedicine. In March 2022 it was awarded the Joint Commission International quality seal.

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Visitas para avanzados

La Barcelona que el turista no ve (IV): El trasplante arquitectónico del Hospital de Sant Pau

Un recinto modernista conserva, fuera del recorrido turístico habitual, una fachada barroca procedente de la via laietana, la bcn que el turista no ve (i): la muralla oculta de la rambla, la bcn que el turista no ve (ii): personajes reales tras las esculturas de la sagrada família, la bcn que el turista no ve (iii): el banco del gòtic que no es lo que parece.

Santa Marta y Sant Pau, un maridaje accidental

Santa Marta y Sant Pau, un maridaje accidental

David Martínez Herrada (@Historiesdebcn)

El Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau es una de las joyas del modernismo barcelonés. En la visita al recinto podemos encontrar una sorpresa muy poco conocida, si nos salimos de la ruta más turística. Se trata de una fachada barroca , encastrada en el antiguo pabellón de las cocinas.

¿Qué pinta una obra del siglo XVIII en medio del conjunto modernista proyectado por Lluís Domènech i Montaner? Para encontrar la respuesta a este anacronismo, hay que retroceder a los orígenes del hospital, que se remontan a 1401. Ese año se creó en el Raval el Hospital de la Santa Creu, fruto de la fusión de los seis pequeños hospitales que existían por entonces en Barcelona.

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Uno de los hospitales fusionados era el de la Almonia, fundado en 1308 por un conseller de la ciudad, Pere Desvilar, para dar asistencia y hospedaje a pobres, enfermos y peregrinos. Situado en el barrio de la Ribera , estaba bajo la advocación de Santa Marta y contaba con una capilla dedicada a esta santa, patrona de los hosteleros.

Fachada de la iglesia de Santa Marta, traslada piedra a piedra de Via Laietana

Fachada de la iglesia de Santa Marta, traslada piedra a piedra de Via Laietana / Ferran Nadeu

Tras ser derribado en 1716 para construir la fortaleza de la Ciutadella , el hospital de peregrinos se trasladó a la Riera de Sant Joan , una calle desaparecida cerca de la Catedral, en lo que hoy es la plaza de Antoni Maura . Allí se construyó también la nueva iglesia de Santa Marta , una notable obra barroca del arquitecto y escultor Carles Grau. El templo fue levantado junto a la finca de los marqueses de Sentmenat, que pusieron una curiosa condición para ceder los terrenos: la construcción de una tribuna para oír misa desde su casa.

En 1911, con motivo de la apertura de la Via Laietana , la iglesia de Santa Marta fue derribada, aunque pudo salvarse la fachada barroca. Fue desmontada y trasladada piedra a piedra al hospital de Sant Pau, que por entonces se estaba construyendo para reemplazar al viejo recinto hospitalario del Raval.

La portalada barroca de Santa Marta, sobrepuesta en una de las fachadas laterales del Pabellón Central de Sant Pau

La portalada barroca de Santa Marta, sobrepuesta en una de las fachadas laterales del Pabellón Central de Sant Pau / Ferran Nadeu

La portalada barroca fue remontada en una de las fachadas laterales del Pabellón Central, edificio que albergó las cocinas del complejo sanitario. La reconstrucción la llevó a cabo Pere Domènech i Roura, hijo de Domènech i Montaner, que dirigió las obras de Sant Pau tras la muerte de su padre.

Aunque hoy puede parecer sorprendente, el traslado de edificios fue una práctica relativamente habitual a principios del siglo pasado. Era la única manera de salvar algunas joyas históricas afectadas por la escabechina urbanística de la Via Laietana, como la Casa Padellás trasladada de la calle Montcada a la plaza del Rei. Otro ejemplo lo encontramos en Sant Felip Neri, con una reconstrucción ‘sui generis’ de la antigua Casa del Gremio de Caldereros.

En los años 60 , Santa Marta estuvo a punto de ser nuevamente víctima de la piqueta . En pleno apogeo del desarrollismo porciolista, se planteó el derribo del Pabellón Central para construir unos edificios modernos. Por suerte, el proyecto no prosperó y la figura de Santa Marta sigue hoy en Sant Pau, eso sí, lejos de las miradas de los turistas.

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Passing Thru Travel

Passing Thru Travel

Top Destinations for Health and Medical Tourism in 2024

Posted: February 15, 2024 | Last updated: February 15, 2024

<p><strong>Health and medical tourism has become increasingly popular in recent years, with many people traveling abroad for high-quality medical treatments, wellness retreats, and alternative therapies. These destinations offer top-notch medical services and a chance to recuperate in a relaxing environment. This guide takes you through 15 global destinations renowned for their medical and wellness services.</strong></p>

Health and medical tourism has become increasingly popular in recent years, with many people traveling abroad for high-quality medical treatments, wellness retreats, and alternative therapies. These destinations offer top-notch medical services and a chance to recuperate in a relaxing environment. This guide takes you through 15 global destinations renowned for their medical and wellness services.

<p><span>You’ll discover a world-renowned center for medical tourism in Bangkok where cutting-edge healthcare meets affordability and exceptional service. As you navigate the city, you’ll find state-of-the-art hospitals and clinics offering a wide range of medical treatments, from cosmetic surgery and dental care to comprehensive health check-ups. These facilities are known for their highly trained medical professionals, many of whom have international experience and qualifications.</span></p> <p><span>The allure of Bangkok for medical tourism isn’t just in the cost savings but also in the opportunity to recuperate in a vibrant city known for its rich culture, delicious cuisine, and warm hospitality. Whether you’re exploring the bustling streets, relaxing in a luxurious hotel, or enjoying a tranquil recovery by the picturesque Chao Phraya River, Bangkok provides an ideal setting for both your medical and travel needs. You could even head to one of the southernmost islands, such as Koh Samui, for rest and recuperation.</span></p> <p><b>Services: </b><span>Cosmetic surgery, dental care, and wellness retreats.</span></p> <p><b>Insider’s Tip: </b><span>Many hospitals offer packages, including post-treatment recovery in luxury accommodations.</span></p> <p><b>How To Get There: </b><span>Fly into Suvarnabhumi Airport, served by many international airlines.</span></p>

Bangkok, Thailand

You’ll discover a world-renowned center for medical tourism in Bangkok where cutting-edge healthcare meets affordability and exceptional service. As you navigate the city, you’ll find state-of-the-art hospitals and clinics offering a wide range of medical treatments, from cosmetic surgery and dental care to comprehensive health check-ups. These facilities are known for their highly trained medical professionals, many of whom have international experience and qualifications.

The allure of Bangkok for medical tourism isn’t just in the cost savings but also in the opportunity to recuperate in a vibrant city known for its rich culture, delicious cuisine, and warm hospitality. Whether you’re exploring the bustling streets, relaxing in a luxurious hotel, or enjoying a tranquil recovery by the picturesque Chao Phraya River, Bangkok provides an ideal setting for both your medical and travel needs. You could even head to one of the southernmost islands, such as Koh Samui, for rest and recuperation.

Services: Cosmetic surgery, dental care, and wellness retreats.

Insider’s Tip: Many hospitals offer packages, including post-treatment recovery in luxury accommodations.

How To Get There: Fly into Suvarnabhumi Airport, served by many international airlines.

<p><span>Budapest has carved a niche for itself in the world of medical tourism, particularly noted for its excellent dental care and historic thermal baths. Here, you’ll find top-notch dental clinics offering a range of services at prices significantly lower than in many Western countries without compromising on quality or expertise.</span></p> <p><span>Beyond dental care, Budapest is famed for its thermal baths, sourced from natural hot springs, known for their therapeutic properties. These baths are not just about relaxation; they’re a traditional form of wellness deeply ingrained in the city’s culture. While benefiting from affordable, high-quality medical services, you also get to immerse yourself in the charm of a city that seamlessly blends its rich history with a vibrant contemporary lifestyle.</span></p> <p><span>Wandering through Budapest’s grand architecture and along the Danube, you’ll experience this beautiful city’s unique blend of wellness and culture.</span></p> <p><b>Services: </b><span>Dental care and thermal baths for wellness.</span></p> <p><b>Insider’s Tip: </b><span>Schedule visits to thermal baths for natural healing.</span></p> <p><b>How To Get There: </b><span>Fly to Budapest Ferenc Liszt International Airport.</span></p>

Budapest, Hungary

Budapest has carved a niche for itself in the world of medical tourism, particularly noted for its excellent dental care and historic thermal baths. Here, you’ll find top-notch dental clinics offering a range of services at prices significantly lower than in many Western countries without compromising on quality or expertise.

Beyond dental care, Budapest is famed for its thermal baths, sourced from natural hot springs, known for their therapeutic properties. These baths are not just about relaxation; they’re a traditional form of wellness deeply ingrained in the city’s culture. While benefiting from affordable, high-quality medical services, you also get to immerse yourself in the charm of a city that seamlessly blends its rich history with a vibrant contemporary lifestyle.

Wandering through Budapest’s grand architecture and along the Danube, you’ll experience this beautiful city’s unique blend of wellness and culture.

Services: Dental care and thermal baths for wellness.

Insider’s Tip: Schedule visits to thermal baths for natural healing.

How To Get There: Fly to Budapest Ferenc Liszt International Airport.

<p><span>Seoul is a global leader in medical tourism, especially renowned for its advancements in cosmetic surgery and dermatology. As you explore Seoul, you’ll encounter state-of-the-art medical facilities that offer a wide array of cosmetic procedures, from innovative skincare treatments to high-precision plastic surgeries, all performed by highly skilled doctors. </span><span>These clinics often combine the latest technology with a personalized approach, ensuring both top-quality results and a comfortable experience.</span></p> <p><span>The city itself, a blend of modernity and tradition, provides an exciting backdrop for your medical journey. Whether you’re recovering in a luxury hotel or exploring vibrant neighborhoods like Gangnam, known for its high concentration of clinics, Seoul offers a unique experience where cutting-edge medical care meets rich cultural exploration. This fusion of high-tech healthcare and dynamic urban life makes Seoul a compelling destination for anyone seeking medical services in a cosmopolitan setting.</span></p> <p><b>Services: </b><span>Advanced plastic surgery and dermatological treatments.</span></p> <p><b>Insider’s Tip: </b><span>Explore Gangnam district, known for its high concentration of clinics.</span></p> <p><b>How To Get There: </b><span>Fly into Incheon International Airport.</span></p>

Seoul, South Korea

Seoul is a global leader in medical tourism, especially renowned for its advancements in cosmetic surgery and dermatology. As you explore Seoul, you’ll encounter state-of-the-art medical facilities that offer a wide array of cosmetic procedures, from innovative skincare treatments to high-precision plastic surgeries, all performed by highly skilled doctors. These clinics often combine the latest technology with a personalized approach, ensuring both top-quality results and a comfortable experience.

The city itself, a blend of modernity and tradition, provides an exciting backdrop for your medical journey. Whether you’re recovering in a luxury hotel or exploring vibrant neighborhoods like Gangnam, known for its high concentration of clinics, Seoul offers a unique experience where cutting-edge medical care meets rich cultural exploration. This fusion of high-tech healthcare and dynamic urban life makes Seoul a compelling destination for anyone seeking medical services in a cosmopolitan setting.

Services: Advanced plastic surgery and dermatological treatments.

Insider’s Tip: Explore Gangnam district, known for its high concentration of clinics.

How To Get There: Fly into Incheon International Airport.

<p><span>Find a serene and lush paradise that has become a sought-after destination for medical tourism, known for its affordable yet high-quality medical services in Costa Rica. As you explore this Central American gem, you’ll discover a range of medical offerings, from dental procedures to cosmetic surgeries, all provided in state-of-the-art facilities by experienced healthcare professionals.</span></p> <p><span>What sets Costa Rica apart is its ability to combine medical treatments with a chance to recuperate in a tranquil, natural setting. Imagine recovering amidst the backdrop of rainforests, pristine beaches, and rich biodiversity. This harmonious blend of top-tier medical care and a peaceful environment enhances your recovery and offers a unique opportunity to experience the pura vida lifestyle for which Costa Rica is renowned. Your journey to wellness in Costa Rica is complemented by warm hospitality and the chance to indulge in eco-friendly and wellness-oriented activities, making it a holistic health and travel experience.</span></p> <p><b>Services: </b><span>Dental work and cosmetic surgery in a natural, tranquil setting.</span></p> <p><b>Insider’s Tip: </b><span>Combine your medical trip with a stay near the beach or rainforest for relaxation.</span></p> <p><b>How To Get There: </b><span>Fly into Juan Santamaría International Airport.</span></p>

Find a serene and lush paradise that has become a sought-after destination for medical tourism, known for its affordable yet high-quality medical services in Costa Rica. As you explore this Central American gem, you’ll discover a range of medical offerings, from dental procedures to cosmetic surgeries, all provided in state-of-the-art facilities by experienced healthcare professionals.

What sets Costa Rica apart is its ability to combine medical treatments with a chance to recuperate in a tranquil, natural setting. Imagine recovering amidst the backdrop of rainforests, pristine beaches, and rich biodiversity. This harmonious blend of top-tier medical care and a peaceful environment enhances your recovery and offers a unique opportunity to experience the pura vida lifestyle for which Costa Rica is renowned. Your journey to wellness in Costa Rica is complemented by warm hospitality and the chance to indulge in eco-friendly and wellness-oriented activities, making it a holistic health and travel experience.

Services: Dental work and cosmetic surgery in a natural, tranquil setting.

Insider’s Tip: Combine your medical trip with a stay near the beach or rainforest for relaxation.

How To Get There: Fly into Juan Santamaría International Airport.

<p><span>In Mumbai, India, you’ll find yourself in a bustling metropolis that has emerged as a key destination for medical tourism, attracting patients worldwide with its combination of high-quality healthcare and affordability. The city’s medical facilities are equipped with advanced technology and staffed by skilled healthcare professionals, many of whom have trained internationally.</span></p> <p><span>Mumbai specializes in a range of medical fields, including cardiac surgery, orthopedics, and transplants, offering services at a fraction of the cost compared to Western countries. Beyond the clinical aspect, Mumbai is a city steeped in culture and history, offering you a chance to experience the vibrant life of one of India’s most dynamic cities.</span></p> <p><span>Whether you’re exploring the bustling markets, soaking in the diverse cultural heritage, or enjoying the local cuisine, Mumbai provides an enriching backdrop to your medical journey, blending world-class medical care with the warmth and vibrancy of Indian hospitality.</span></p> <p><b>Services: </b><span>High-quality cardiac surgery, orthopedics, and alternative medicine.</span></p> <p><b>Insider’s Tip: </b><span>Explore Ayurvedic retreats for holistic wellness.</span></p> <p><b>How To Get There: </b><span>Fly to Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj International Airport.</span></p>

Mumbai, India

In Mumbai, India, you’ll find yourself in a bustling metropolis that has emerged as a key destination for medical tourism, attracting patients worldwide with its combination of high-quality healthcare and affordability. The city’s medical facilities are equipped with advanced technology and staffed by skilled healthcare professionals, many of whom have trained internationally.

Mumbai specializes in a range of medical fields, including cardiac surgery, orthopedics, and transplants, offering services at a fraction of the cost compared to Western countries. Beyond the clinical aspect, Mumbai is a city steeped in culture and history, offering you a chance to experience the vibrant life of one of India’s most dynamic cities.

Whether you’re exploring the bustling markets, soaking in the diverse cultural heritage, or enjoying the local cuisine, Mumbai provides an enriching backdrop to your medical journey, blending world-class medical care with the warmth and vibrancy of Indian hospitality.

Services: High-quality cardiac surgery, orthopedics, and alternative medicine.

Insider’s Tip: Explore Ayurvedic retreats for holistic wellness.

How To Get There: Fly to Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj International Airport.

<p><span>Istanbul is at the crossroads of East and West, a city that has become a prominent hub for medical tourism, especially known for its hair transplantation and cosmetic dentistry expertise. As you navigate through Istanbul’s unique blend of historical grandeur and modern sophistication, you’ll find numerous clinics and hospitals offering high-quality medical services at competitive prices. </span></p> <p><span>These facilities are often equipped with the latest technology and staffed by experienced professionals who provide personalized care. Its rich cultural tapestry enhances Istanbul’s appeal as a medical tourism destination, with landmarks such as the Hagia Sophia and the Grand Bazaar. Here, you can seamlessly combine your medical journey with the experience of exploring one of the world’s most historically rich and diverse cities.</span></p> <p><span>Whether you’re strolling along the Bosphorus or savoring Turkish cuisine, Istanbul offers a unique setting where a wealth of cultural and historical experiences complements advanced medical treatments.</span></p> <p><b>Services: </b><span>Hair transplantation and cosmetic dentistry.</span></p> <p><b>Insider’s Tip: </b><span>Post-treatment, enjoy recovery in a city steeped in history and culture.</span></p> <p><b>How To Get There: </b><span>Istanbul Airport or Sabiha Gökçen International Airport.</span></p>

Istanbul, Turkey

Istanbul is at the crossroads of East and West, a city that has become a prominent hub for medical tourism, especially known for its hair transplantation and cosmetic dentistry expertise. As you navigate through Istanbul’s unique blend of historical grandeur and modern sophistication, you’ll find numerous clinics and hospitals offering high-quality medical services at competitive prices.

These facilities are often equipped with the latest technology and staffed by experienced professionals who provide personalized care. Its rich cultural tapestry enhances Istanbul’s appeal as a medical tourism destination, with landmarks such as the Hagia Sophia and the Grand Bazaar. Here, you can seamlessly combine your medical journey with the experience of exploring one of the world’s most historically rich and diverse cities.

Whether you’re strolling along the Bosphorus or savoring Turkish cuisine, Istanbul offers a unique setting where a wealth of cultural and historical experiences complements advanced medical treatments.

Services: Hair transplantation and cosmetic dentistry.

Insider’s Tip: Post-treatment, enjoy recovery in a city steeped in history and culture.

How To Get There: Istanbul Airport or Sabiha Gökçen International Airport.

<p><span>In Sao Paulo, you’ll find yourself in a bustling city that’s increasingly becoming a hotspot for medical tourism, particularly known for its excellence in cosmetic and plastic surgery. As you navigate through Sao Paulo, the largest city in South America, you’ll discover a range of high-quality medical facilities that offer a variety of procedures, from minimally invasive treatments to more complex surgeries, all performed by skilled and experienced surgeons.</span></p> <p><span>The city’s medical services are priced competitively, attracting patients from around the globe. Beyond the operating room, Sao Paulo is a vibrant metropolis brimming with cultural attractions, diverse cuisine, and dynamic nightlife. The opportunity to recover in such a lively urban environment adds an appealing dimension to your medical journey, combining top-tier medical care with the unique experience of exploring one of Brazil’s most dynamic cities.</span></p> <p><b>Services: </b><span>Cosmetic and plastic surgery.</span></p> <p><b>Insider’s Tip: </b><span>Brazil is known for its expertise in cosmetic procedures.</span></p> <p><b>How To Get There: </b><span>Fly into São Paulo–Guarulhos International Airport.</span></p>

Sao Paulo, Brazil

In Sao Paulo, you’ll find yourself in a bustling city that’s increasingly becoming a hotspot for medical tourism, particularly known for its excellence in cosmetic and plastic surgery. As you navigate through Sao Paulo, the largest city in South America, you’ll discover a range of high-quality medical facilities that offer a variety of procedures, from minimally invasive treatments to more complex surgeries, all performed by skilled and experienced surgeons.

The city’s medical services are priced competitively, attracting patients from around the globe. Beyond the operating room, Sao Paulo is a vibrant metropolis brimming with cultural attractions, diverse cuisine, and dynamic nightlife. The opportunity to recover in such a lively urban environment adds an appealing dimension to your medical journey, combining top-tier medical care with the unique experience of exploring one of Brazil’s most dynamic cities.

Services: Cosmetic and plastic surgery.

Insider’s Tip: Brazil is known for its expertise in cosmetic procedures.

How To Get There: Fly into São Paulo–Guarulhos International Airport.

<p><span>Barcelona beautifully marries cutting-edge medical facilities with the charm of a vibrant cultural hub, making it an increasingly popular destination for medical tourism. Known mainly for its advanced fertility treatments and cosmetic surgery, Barcelona’s medical centers boast state-of-the-art technology and highly skilled professionals, offering quality care at competitive prices.</span></p> <p><span>As you embark on your medical journey in this city, you’re also treated to its rich architectural heritage, from Gaudi’s masterpieces to the Gothic Quarter’s winding streets. The city’s Mediterranean climate and inviting beaches provide a serene backdrop for recovery and relaxation. Whether you’re enjoying tapas on a sun-drenched terrace or strolling along the bustling Las Ramblas, Barcelona offers a holistic experience where an immersive cultural journey complements exceptional medical care.</span></p> <p><b>Services: </b><span>Advanced fertility treatments and cosmetic surgery.</span></p> <p><b>Insider’s Tip: </b><span>Take advantage of the city’s rich cultural and gastronomic scene during recovery.</span></p> <p><b>How To Get There: </b><span>Barcelona-El Prat Airport.</span></p>

Barcelona, Spain

Barcelona beautifully marries cutting-edge medical facilities with the charm of a vibrant cultural hub, making it an increasingly popular destination for medical tourism. Known mainly for its advanced fertility treatments and cosmetic surgery, Barcelona’s medical centers boast state-of-the-art technology and highly skilled professionals, offering quality care at competitive prices.

As you embark on your medical journey in this city, you’re also treated to its rich architectural heritage, from Gaudi’s masterpieces to the Gothic Quarter’s winding streets. The city’s Mediterranean climate and inviting beaches provide a serene backdrop for recovery and relaxation. Whether you’re enjoying tapas on a sun-drenched terrace or strolling along the bustling Las Ramblas, Barcelona offers a holistic experience where an immersive cultural journey complements exceptional medical care.

Services: Advanced fertility treatments and cosmetic surgery.

Insider’s Tip: Take advantage of the city’s rich cultural and gastronomic scene during recovery.

How To Get There: Barcelona-El Prat Airport.

<p><span>Tel Aviv is rapidly gaining recognition for its advanced medical treatments and state-of-the-art healthcare facilities. This vibrant coastal city offers a wide range of medical services, including cutting-edge cancer treatments and innovative medical technologies, attracting patients from across the globe. Tel Aviv’s medical institutions are known for their skilled professionals and personalized patient care, set within a competitive pricing framework.</span></p> <p><span>Beyond healthcare, Tel Aviv is a lively, modern city known for its beautiful Mediterranean beaches, rich cultural scene, and bustling nightlife. The city’s warm climate and welcoming atmosphere provide an ideal environment for recovery and relaxation. As you walk along the beachfront promenade or explore the historic streets of Jaffa, Tel Aviv offers a unique blend of top-tier medical care and a lively urban experience, making it an attractive destination for medical tourists seeking both treatment and an enriching travel experience.</span></p> <p><b>Services: </b><span>Cutting-edge cancer treatments and medical technologies.</span></p> <p><b>Insider’s Tip: </b><span>Explore the Mediterranean coast for a relaxing recovery.</span></p> <p><b>How To Get There: </b><span>Ben Gurion Airport is the main international gateway.</span></p>

Tel Aviv, Israel

Tel Aviv is rapidly gaining recognition for its advanced medical treatments and state-of-the-art healthcare facilities. This vibrant coastal city offers a wide range of medical services, including cutting-edge cancer treatments and innovative medical technologies, attracting patients from across the globe. Tel Aviv’s medical institutions are known for their skilled professionals and personalized patient care, set within a competitive pricing framework.

Beyond healthcare, Tel Aviv is a lively, modern city known for its beautiful Mediterranean beaches, rich cultural scene, and bustling nightlife. The city’s warm climate and welcoming atmosphere provide an ideal environment for recovery and relaxation. As you walk along the beachfront promenade or explore the historic streets of Jaffa, Tel Aviv offers a unique blend of top-tier medical care and a lively urban experience, making it an attractive destination for medical tourists seeking both treatment and an enriching travel experience.

Services: Cutting-edge cancer treatments and medical technologies.

Insider’s Tip: Explore the Mediterranean coast for a relaxing recovery.

How To Get There: Ben Gurion Airport is the main international gateway.

<p><span>Kuala Lumpur has established itself as a significant player in the field of medical tourism, offering an impressive array of healthcare services at highly competitive rates. The capital city of Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur, is home to numerous internationally accredited hospitals and clinics that provide a wide range of medical procedures, from complex surgeries to wellness check-ups, all performed by qualified and experienced medical professionals.</span></p> <p><span>These facilities are equipped with modern medical technology, ensuring high treatment standards. Kuala Lumpur’s appeal as a medical tourism destination is further enhanced by its rich cultural diversity, delicious cuisine, and a blend of modern and traditional lifestyles. The city’s excellent infrastructure and English-speaking medical staff make navigating your healthcare journey and the city itself a smooth and comfortable experience.</span></p> <p><span>Whether exploring the iconic Petronas Twin Towers or indulging in the local food scene, Kuala Lumpur offers a unique setting where quality healthcare meets cultural richness.</span></p> <p><b>Services: </b><span>Affordable and quality healthcare covering various specialties.</span></p> <p><b>Insider’s Tip: </b><span>Malaysia’s healthcare system is ranked among the best in the world.</span></p> <p><b>How To Get There: </b><span>Kuala Lumpur International Airport.</span></p>

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

Kuala Lumpur has established itself as a significant player in the field of medical tourism, offering an impressive array of healthcare services at highly competitive rates. The capital city of Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur, is home to numerous internationally accredited hospitals and clinics that provide a wide range of medical procedures, from complex surgeries to wellness check-ups, all performed by qualified and experienced medical professionals.

These facilities are equipped with modern medical technology, ensuring high treatment standards. Kuala Lumpur’s appeal as a medical tourism destination is further enhanced by its rich cultural diversity, delicious cuisine, and a blend of modern and traditional lifestyles. The city’s excellent infrastructure and English-speaking medical staff make navigating your healthcare journey and the city itself a smooth and comfortable experience.

Whether exploring the iconic Petronas Twin Towers or indulging in the local food scene, Kuala Lumpur offers a unique setting where quality healthcare meets cultural richness.

Services: Affordable and quality healthcare covering various specialties.

Insider’s Tip: Malaysia’s healthcare system is ranked among the best in the world.

How To Get There: Kuala Lumpur International Airport.

<p><span>Singapore is a city-state known for its efficiency and modernity; you’ll discover a premier destination for medical tourism, renowned for its exceptional healthcare system. This bustling metropolis boasts state-of-the-art medical facilities that are among the best in the world, staffed with highly trained medical professionals who provide a wide range of specialized treatments and procedures.</span></p> <p><span>Singapore’s hospitals are known for their high standards of patient care and cutting-edge medical technology, offering services from complex surgeries to preventive medicine. The city, known for its cleanliness and order, provides a comfortable and stress-free environment for your medical journey. As you navigate this cosmopolitan city, you can also enjoy its diverse cultural tapestry, lush green spaces, and a culinary scene that’s a melting pot of Asian cuisines.</span></p> <p><span>In Singapore, your pursuit of health and wellness is complemented by the experience of a city that seamlessly blends traditional charm with a forward-thinking approach.</span></p> <p><b>Services: </b><span>State-of-the-art medical technology and facilities.</span></p> <p><b>Insider’s Tip: </b><span>Post-treatment, enjoy the city’s clean and organized environment.</span></p> <p><b>How To Get There: </b><span>Singapore Changi Airport.</span></p>

Singapore is a city-state known for its efficiency and modernity; you’ll discover a premier destination for medical tourism, renowned for its exceptional healthcare system. This bustling metropolis boasts state-of-the-art medical facilities that are among the best in the world, staffed with highly trained medical professionals who provide a wide range of specialized treatments and procedures.

Singapore’s hospitals are known for their high standards of patient care and cutting-edge medical technology, offering services from complex surgeries to preventive medicine. The city, known for its cleanliness and order, provides a comfortable and stress-free environment for your medical journey. As you navigate this cosmopolitan city, you can also enjoy its diverse cultural tapestry, lush green spaces, and a culinary scene that’s a melting pot of Asian cuisines.

In Singapore, your pursuit of health and wellness is complemented by the experience of a city that seamlessly blends traditional charm with a forward-thinking approach.

Services: State-of-the-art medical technology and facilities.

Insider’s Tip: Post-treatment, enjoy the city’s clean and organized environment.

How To Get There: Singapore Changi Airport.

<p><span>Dubai is a luxurious and futuristic city that has rapidly emerged as a key destination for medical tourism. Known for its lavish lifestyle and architectural wonders, Dubai also boasts world-class medical facilities offering a range of high-end medical and wellness services. These facilities are equipped with the latest technology and staffed by top-notch medical professionals, catering to a variety of health needs, from elective surgeries to wellness retreats.</span></p> <p><span>The city’s emphasis on luxury and comfort extends to its healthcare services, ensuring a premium experience for medical tourists. As you explore Dubai, you can indulge in its opulent shopping malls, stunning skyscrapers like the Burj Khalifa, and relaxing beach resorts, which make the perfect backdrop for a recuperative stay. Dubai’s blend of advanced healthcare, luxury, and a unique desert landscape offers a distinctive and indulgent medical tourism experience.</span></p> <p><b>Services: </b><span>Luxury medical treatments and wellness retreats.</span></p> <p><b>Insider’s Tip: </b><span>Experience high-end recovery facilities in this modern metropolis.</span></p> <p><b>How To Get There: </b><span>Dubai International Airport.</span></p>

Dubai, United Arab Emirates

Dubai is a luxurious and futuristic city that has rapidly emerged as a key destination for medical tourism. Known for its lavish lifestyle and architectural wonders, Dubai also boasts world-class medical facilities offering a range of high-end medical and wellness services. These facilities are equipped with the latest technology and staffed by top-notch medical professionals, catering to a variety of health needs, from elective surgeries to wellness retreats.

The city’s emphasis on luxury and comfort extends to its healthcare services, ensuring a premium experience for medical tourists. As you explore Dubai, you can indulge in its opulent shopping malls, stunning skyscrapers like the Burj Khalifa, and relaxing beach resorts, which make the perfect backdrop for a recuperative stay. Dubai’s blend of advanced healthcare, luxury, and a unique desert landscape offers a distinctive and indulgent medical tourism experience.

Services: Luxury medical treatments and wellness retreats.

Insider’s Tip: Experience high-end recovery facilities in this modern metropolis.

How To Get There: Dubai International Airport.

<p><span>In Los Angeles, you’ll immerse yourself in a city that’s not just the epicenter of entertainment but also a growing hub for medical tourism. Known for its advanced medical treatments, particularly in specialties like oncology and cardiology, Los Angeles hosts a range of top-tier hospitals and clinics. These facilities are renowned for their cutting-edge technology and expert medical staff, ensuring you receive high-quality care.</span></p> <p><span>The city’s diverse and wellness-focused culture complements your medical journey, offering numerous options for healthy living and recovery. As you navigate the sprawling metropolis, you can indulge in its unique blend of urban excitement and natural beauty, from the Hollywood hills to the serene Pacific coastline. Los Angeles provides an ideal backdrop for those seeking world-class medical treatment while enjoying Southern California’s vibrant lifestyle and scenic diversity.</span></p> <p><b>Services: </b><span>Advanced medical treatments, especially in oncology and cardiology.</span></p> <p><b>Insider’s Tip: </b><span>The city’s wellness culture is ideal for recuperation.</span></p> <p><b>How To Get There: </b><span>Los Angeles International Airport (LAX).</span></p>

Los Angeles, USA

In Los Angeles, you’ll immerse yourself in a city that’s not just the epicenter of entertainment but also a growing hub for medical tourism. Known for its advanced medical treatments, particularly in specialties like oncology and cardiology, Los Angeles hosts a range of top-tier hospitals and clinics. These facilities are renowned for their cutting-edge technology and expert medical staff, ensuring you receive high-quality care.

The city’s diverse and wellness-focused culture complements your medical journey, offering numerous options for healthy living and recovery. As you navigate the sprawling metropolis, you can indulge in its unique blend of urban excitement and natural beauty, from the Hollywood hills to the serene Pacific coastline. Los Angeles provides an ideal backdrop for those seeking world-class medical treatment while enjoying Southern California’s vibrant lifestyle and scenic diversity.

Services: Advanced medical treatments, especially in oncology and cardiology.

Insider’s Tip: The city’s wellness culture is ideal for recuperation.

How To Get There: Los Angeles International Airport (LAX).

<p><span>Tijuana, just across the border from San Diego, you’ll discover a city that has become a go-to destination for medical tourism, especially known for its affordable dental care and bariatric surgery. This bustling border town offers quality medical services at a fraction of the cost typically found in the United States, drawing patients from all over North America. Tijuana’s medical facilities are modern and well-equipped, staffed by experienced and often bilingual healthcare professionals.</span></p> <p><span>The city’s proximity to the United States adds to its appeal, providing easy accessibility for those seeking efficient and cost-effective medical treatments. Beyond its healthcare offerings, Tijuana boasts a vibrant culture, with lively markets, authentic Mexican cuisine, and a warm, welcoming atmosphere. In Tijuana, you can experience the benefits of affordable medical care while enjoying the rich cultural experiences that this unique border city has to offer.</span></p> <p><b>Services: </b><span>Affordable dental care and bariatric surgery.</span></p> <p><b>Insider’s Tip: </b>It is a popular destination for Americans due to its proximity and lower costs.</p> <p><b>How To Get There: </b><span>General Abelardo L. Rodríguez International Airport or cross the border from San Diego.</span></p>

Tijuana, Mexico

Tijuana, just across the border from San Diego, you’ll discover a city that has become a go-to destination for medical tourism, especially known for its affordable dental care and bariatric surgery. This bustling border town offers quality medical services at a fraction of the cost typically found in the United States, drawing patients from all over North America. Tijuana’s medical facilities are modern and well-equipped, staffed by experienced and often bilingual healthcare professionals.

The city’s proximity to the United States adds to its appeal, providing easy accessibility for those seeking efficient and cost-effective medical treatments. Beyond its healthcare offerings, Tijuana boasts a vibrant culture, with lively markets, authentic Mexican cuisine, and a warm, welcoming atmosphere. In Tijuana, you can experience the benefits of affordable medical care while enjoying the rich cultural experiences that this unique border city has to offer.

Services: Affordable dental care and bariatric surgery.

Insider’s Tip: It is a popular destination for Americans due to its proximity and lower costs.

How To Get There: General Abelardo L. Rodríguez International Airport or cross the border from San Diego.

<p><span>Vienna is renowned for its classical music, stunning architecture, and, increasingly, for its high-quality preventive medicine and diagnostics. This elegant capital offers a range of sophisticated healthcare services, focusing on preventive care that emphasizes early detection and holistic treatment approaches.</span></p> <p><span>Vienna’s medical facilities are world-class, featuring state-of-the-art technology and staffed by highly trained medical professionals. The city’s healthcare system is recognized for its efficiency and patient-centric approach, ensuring a comfortable and reassuring experience.</span></p> <p><span>Beyond its medical offerings, Vienna is enchanted with its imperial history, vibrant cultural scene, and cozy coffee houses, making it an ideal destination for those seeking top-tier medical services in a serene and culturally rich setting. In Vienna, the pursuit of health is complemented by the opportunity to immerse oneself in a city steeped in history and renowned for its contributions to art and science.</span></p> <p><b>Services: </b><span>High-quality preventive medicine and diagnostics.</span></p> <p><b>Insider’s Tip: </b><span>Enjoy the city’s classical music scene and historical ambiance during your stay.</span></p> <p><b>How To Get There: </b><span>Vienna International Airport.</span></p>

Vienna, Austria

Vienna is renowned for its classical music, stunning architecture, and, increasingly, for its high-quality preventive medicine and diagnostics. This elegant capital offers a range of sophisticated healthcare services, focusing on preventive care that emphasizes early detection and holistic treatment approaches.

Vienna’s medical facilities are world-class, featuring state-of-the-art technology and staffed by highly trained medical professionals. The city’s healthcare system is recognized for its efficiency and patient-centric approach, ensuring a comfortable and reassuring experience.

Beyond its medical offerings, Vienna is enchanted with its imperial history, vibrant cultural scene, and cozy coffee houses, making it an ideal destination for those seeking top-tier medical services in a serene and culturally rich setting. In Vienna, the pursuit of health is complemented by the opportunity to immerse oneself in a city steeped in history and renowned for its contributions to art and science.

Services: High-quality preventive medicine and diagnostics.

Insider’s Tip: Enjoy the city’s classical music scene and historical ambiance during your stay.

How To Get There: Vienna International Airport.

<p><span>Traveling for health and medical treatments combines the necessity of healthcare with the pleasure of experiencing new cultures and environments. Each of these destinations offers unique medical specialties.</span></p> <p><span>More Articles Like This…</span></p> <p><span>Barcelona: Discover the Top 10 Beach Clubs</span></p> <p><span>2024 Global City Travel Guide – Your Passport to the World’s Top Destination Cities</span></p> <p><span>Exploring Khao Yai 2024 – A Hidden Gem of Thailand</span></p> <p><span>The post Top Destinations for Health and Medical Tourism in 2024 republished on</span> <span>Passing Thru</span><span> with permission from</span> <span>The Green Voyage</span><span>.</span></p> <p>Featured Image Credit: Shutterstock / ArtFamily.</p> <p><span>For transparency, this content was partly developed with AI assistance and carefully curated by an experienced editor to be informative and ensure accuracy.</span></p>

The Bottom Line

Traveling for health and medical treatments combines the necessity of healthcare with the pleasure of experiencing new cultures and environments. Each of these destinations offers unique medical specialties.

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The post Top Destinations for Health and Medical Tourism in 2024 republished on Passing Thru with permission from The Green Voyage .

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IMAGES

  1. Hospital de Sant Pau Barcelona: A Masterpiece of Modernist Architecture

    tourist hospital barcelona

  2. Barcelona tourist hospital

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  3. The Hospital de Sant Pau, what to visit in Barcelona

    tourist hospital barcelona

  4. Hospital Sant Pau XII

    tourist hospital barcelona

  5. Check out the awe-inspiring Hospital De Sant Pau, Barcelona

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  6. Sant Pau Hospital, the Fairytale Like Hospital in Barcelona

    tourist hospital barcelona

COMMENTS

  1. Recinte Modernista Sant Pau Barcelona

    El Recinte de Sant Pau de Barcelona és una joia Modernista i Patrimoni Mundial des del 1997. Escull entre visita lliure, guiada o de grup. ... Self-guided visit. ... La Fundació Hospital de Santa Creu i Sant Pau tractarà les dades per enviar-li el nostre newsletter i comunicacions. Donar-se d'alta a la nostra plataforma implica, alhora ...

  2. Hospital de Sant Pau: When Health Care Goes Art Nouveau

    Hospital de Sant Pau Recinte Modernista. This vast former hospital, aka the Recinte Modernista de Sant Pau (full name Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau) is actually Europe's biggest modernist complex.. It was built between 1901-1930 and later declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1997.. As mentioned, it was the masterpiece of local Catalan architect Lluís Domènech i Montaner - the ...

  3. Guide To Hospital de Sant Pau I Tickets

    Add some local flavor to your Barcelona trip with a visit to majestic Hospital de Sant Pau. Quick Jumplinks to Navigate the Guide. A Brief History Of Recinte Modernista De Sant Pau; ... All the way back in 1401, Hospital de Sant Pau was the main hospital in Barcelona. This continued till the end of the nineteenth century post which the hospital ...

  4. Hospital Sant Pau in Barcelona

    The Hospital de la Santa Creu was founded in 1401. At the beginning of the 15th century, a comprehensive hospital complex was built to bring the six existing hospitals in Barcelona all under one roof. The origin of the hospital is in the district of El Raval, the hospital building in its original location is a splendid example of gothic civil ...

  5. Sant Pau Hospital Barcelona

    All tickets to visit Sant Pau Hospital Barcelona at the best prices . The Sant Pau Modernist Site is an architectural complex in the Modernist style, created in 1902 by the architect Lluís Domènech i Montaner. It is of particular interest to lovers of architecture and design. The site is made up of 27 buildings - only 19 of which are from the ...

  6. Sant Pau Recinte Modernista

    Discover Sant Pau Recinte Modernista in Barcelona, Spain: The largest Art Nouveau complex in the world is a Barcelona hospital with a 600-year-long history.

  7. Hospital de Sant Pau in Barcelona

    Below you will find the address, contact telephone, nearest metro, parking, access for people with a disability and link to the official website of Hospital de Sant Pau. Hospital de Sant Pau. Sant Quintí, 89. 08025 Barcelona, España. Tel: +34 93 511 7876.

  8. Hospital of Sant Pau: Barcelona's unknown modernism

    A bit of history of the Sant Pau modernist complex. The history of the Sant Pau hospital goes back more than 600 years, when in the year 1401 six of the hospitals that existed at the time in Barcelona were merged. The Hospital de la Santa Creu was born, which was installed in one of the most important Catalan Gothic buildings in the heart of the Raval neighbourhood.

  9. Discover Barcelona's Beautiful Sant Paul Hospital, FREE Guided Tour

    Access & Admission. Although the Hospital is a little out of the way from the main tourist area, it is still easily accessible. The Blue Line Metro stops at Sant Pau/Dos de Maig station which is located 5-minutes walk away from the entrance. The #47 bus route also stops at the station.

  10. Hospital de Santa Creu i de Sant Pau

    The Hospital de Santa Creu i de Sant Pau is one of the most exceptional Catalan Art Nouveau complexes in Barcelona. Moreover, in 2014, it was completely renovated and transformed into a research and cultural center. In our opinion, it's definitely worthwhile visiting. To skip the lines, we recommend booking online:

  11. Hospital de Sant Pau

    RI-51-0004278. The former Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau ( Catalan pronunciation: [uspiˈtal də lə ˈsantə ˈkɾɛw i ˈsam ˈpaw], English: Hospital of the Holy Cross and Saint Paul) in the neighborhood of El Guinardó, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain, is a complex built between 1901 and 1930. It is one of the most prominent works of the ...

  12. Oh my guide! Barcelona

    Discover this incredible Unesco Art Nouveau site just a few steps from Sagrada Familia with an expert guide. Santa Creu i Sant Pau old Hospital is the most famous and ambitious project designed by the Catalan architect Lluís Domènech i Montaner thanks to the benefactor Pau Gil who made an important charity donation to the city.. Sant Pau is an emsemble of breathtaking pavilions decorated ...

  13. Hospital de Sant Pau: Prices and Tickets 2024!

    The Hospital de Sant Pau is a wonderland. Explore the floral decoration and enjoy the modernist building! ... Carrer de Sant Antoni Maria Claret, 167, Barcelona. Metro: L5 (blue line): Sant Pau/Dos de Maig. Address. Guided Tours. Public tours: Weekends: Spanish: 11.00 a.m. EUR 20. ... One of the pavilions you can visit hasn't been restored ...

  14. Is the Barcelona Sant Pau Hospital museum worth it?

    In the meantime, in 1997 the Hospital de Sant Pau (Recinte Modernista) together with another work by Domenech i Muntaner, the Palau de la Musica Catalana, were declared Human Heritage by UNESCO and the restoration of the pavilions started. The new Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau moved to the new headquarters in 2003.

  15. Old Hospital de Sant Pau in Barcelona

    Tickets, from 16 € ( Tip: Book Hospital de Sant Pau tickets online) Tickets 65+ and 12 - 29 years 11.20 €. 0 - 12 years: free entry. Book tickets online. Opening hours. Tuesday to Friday: 10:00am to 2:30pm. Weekends and public holidays: 10:00am to 5:00pm. The hospital is closed on Mondays and December 25th. Website.

  16. Guided visit

    Guided visit. Tours currently only available in Catalan and Spanish. A guided visit is the best way to really discover the Art Nouveau Site. With the help of Sant Pau's guides, you'll discover all the artistic details hidden in the former Hospital and the anecdotes that have marked the institution's evolution in its more than 600 years of history

  17. Hospital Sant Pau

    The Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau came into being in 1401 with the merging of six hospitals. By the late nineteenth century, to accommodate the rapidly growing population of the city of Barcelona, a new building was commissioned. Thanks to the bequest of the Catalan banker Pau Gil, the first stone of the new hospital designed by Lluís ...

  18. Come inside Barcelona's most beautiful hospital

    Barcelona, Catalonia. Barcelona's Hospital Sant Pau is not only one of the city's most beautiful examples of Catalan modernist architecture, it's also a story of a time when a hospital stay was very different for patients. Take a look inside the renovated hospital, now a museum. Even standing at the bottom of the stairs in front of the ...

  19. Hospital de Sant Pau, Barcelona

    Hospital de Sant Pau: Our most recommended tours and activities. 1. Barcelona: 24 or 48-Hour Hop-On Hop-Off Bus Tour. See the best of Barcelona on a double-decker hop-on hop-off bus tour. Get access to two routes with one ticket for a complete sightseeing experience. Each route has an approximate duration of 2 hours.

  20. Barcelona's hospitals

    Hospital del Mar: is located on the seafront of Barcelona and apart from being one of the best hospitals in the city, is a popular university Medical Research Institute, which has done an excellent job for over 20 years. Hospital de Bellvitge: is located in this town near Barcelona (Bellvitge), and is a public hospital and university where you ...

  21. Driven by your health

    21st International Vasculitis Workshop. CCIB - Barcelona International Convention Centre. Plaça de Willy Brandt, 11-14, 08019 Barcelona. Thursday, April 11 2024. From 16:00h to 17:00h.

  22. Barcelona's best hospitals

    In addition, in 2019, Teknon Medical Centre was awarded by the International Medical Travel Journey as the Best International Hospital in the world, according to the International Medical Travel Journey. And this year, it is part of the specific ranking of the best centres by country of the World's Best Hospitals 2022, occupying 19th place in ...

  23. La Barcelona que el turista no ve (IV): El trasplante arquitectónico

    La Barcelona que el turista no ve (IV): El trasplante arquitectónico del Hospital de Sant Pau ... El Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau es una de las joyas del modernismo barcelonés. En la ...

  24. International Traveler Service

    Agosto - Mayo - Lun-Vie 8:30h - 15:00h. C/ Casanovas 150 bajos. 08036. Barcelona. Receive the latest news from our institution directly to your email. If you travel to a country that is considered to be a health risk, consult the International Passenger Care Service at the Hospital Clínic de Barcelona.

  25. 'Unimaginable' situation in Gaza hospital: Aid groups

    Travel Adventures Conscious Travel Explore ... The hospital has expanded to 1,000 beds from its original capacity of 200 to accommodate patients from Nasser Hospital, the main hospital in Khan ...

  26. Top Destinations for Health and Medical Tourism in 2024

    Health and medical tourism has become increasingly popular in recent years, with many people traveling abroad for high-quality medical treatments, wellness retreats, and alternative therapies ...