Chapter 07 · Topic 07.1 · Provincial regimes
RAMQ vs Florida: out-of-country coverage for Quebec snowbirds
A Quebec snowbird in Florida keeps the provincial Medicare card (carte verte) on the condition of respecting the 183-day rule. But what RAMQ actually reimburses when you fall ill in Florida is tiny compared to actual American medical costs. Understanding this gap is essential to avoid a financial catastrophe.
Direct answer · 60-second summary
The 60-second version
To remain eligible for Quebec public health insurance (RAMQ), you must not be absent from Quebec 183 days or more in a calendar year (Section 5 of the Health Insurance Act, RLRQ c. A-29). Stays of 21 days or less do not count. Departure and return days do not count. When you receive emergency care in the United States, RAMQ reimburses only at Quebec rates, which are a tiny fraction of actual U.S. cost: hospitalization is reimbursed at roughly CA$100 per day; outpatient/ER care up to CA$50 per visit; physician fees at the Quebec fee schedule. A 3-day Florida hospital stay for a heart attack can cost USD 100,000 to 200,000, of which RAMQ will reimburse approximately CA$300. Private travel insurance is therefore essentially mandatory for any Florida stay, regardless of length.
Acronyms used in this guide
- RAMQ: Régie de l'assurance maladie du Québec, the public agency administering Quebec's Medicare program.
- RLRQ: Recueil des lois et règlements du Québec (consolidated Quebec statutes).
- HIA: Health Insurance Act (Quebec, RLRQ c. A-29).
- NAM: Numéro d'assurance maladie, the 12-character ID printed on the green RAMQ card.
- ER: Emergency Room of an American hospital.
- UC: Urgent Care, walk-in clinic for non-critical issues (cheaper than ER).
- EOB: Explanation of Benefits, document from the insurer or hospital itemizing the bill.
Who is covered by RAMQ and when you lose coverage
RAMQ covers any person who simultaneously meets four conditions in Section 5 HIA: (1) is a Canadian citizen or permanent resident; (2) is domiciled in Quebec; (3) is physically present in Quebec at least 183 days per calendar year, except for specific exceptions; (4) is registered with RAMQ and holds a valid Medicare card. Those four conditions also frame the exit: a Quebecer who settles in Florida permanently no longer meets them, and the clean way out is the formal cancellation of the provincial health card rather than a silent lapse.
The physical-presence requirement is the most delicate for snowbirds. It is calculated on the calendar year (January 1 through December 31), not on a 12-month rolling window. RAMQ counts every day spent outside Quebec, with three exceptions: stays of 21 consecutive days or fewer are excluded entirely from the count; the departure day (when you cross the border) does not count; the return day does not count.
If you exceed 183 days of absence in a calendar year (without an applicable exception), your eligibility is suspended starting on the 184th day. You remain ineligible until your next period of presence of at least 183 days in a subsequent calendar year. During suspension, RAMQ refuses reimbursement of any care you receive anywhere, including in Quebec.
RAMQ also recognizes a so-called "7 absences over 30 years" exception (Section 5.1 HIA): over a rolling 30-year period, you may be absent from Quebec more than 183 days in a calendar year on 7 occasions without losing coverage. RAMQ tracks the count automatically. This exception is valuable for snowbirds who occasionally extend a stay beyond six months (e.g., for a family event or a Florida real estate project).
How RAMQ counts your absence days
The counting rule is precise. RAMQ uses these brackets:
Short stay (≤ 21 consecutive days): zero days counted. Three weeks of Christmas vacation does not eat your quota.
Long stay (≥ 22 consecutive days): every day counts, except the departure and return days. A stay from November 1 to March 30 (150 physical days) counts as 148.
Multiple long stays: days from each stay add up. Three months in Florida + one month in Arizona + a 30-day cruise = roughly 150 cumulative days against the 183 threshold.
You can view your year-to-date absence count on the Mon dossier RAMQ portal. The tool incorporates entries and exits that RAMQ detects (extended-stay declarations, data shared with the Canada Border Services Agency via the Entry/Exit Initiative). If a discrepancy exists, you can adjust manually with proof (passport stamps, accommodation invoices).
Verified fact: RAMQ's published rules count absences per calendar year: you must not be absent from Quebec 183 days or more in a calendar year, and trips of 21 consecutive days or less are not counted at all. The running tally is visible in the Mon dossier portal. Source: RAMQ, Tally your absences from Quebec for your eligibility, consulted June 9, 2026.
What RAMQ actually reimburses outside Canada
RAMQ covers only care provided as a result of a sudden illness or an accident, and only if the condition arose during the foreign stay (or was a stable preexisting condition that flared unexpectedly). Planned care (elective surgery, dental treatment, eyeglasses), cosmetic care, assisted reproduction, and care for a foreseeable condition before departure are never reimbursed.
For eligible care, reimbursement is capped at Quebec rates published in the RAMQ billing manual. Orders of magnitude published by RAMQ itself and by Quebec's Public Protector (Protecteur du citoyen):
| Type of care | RAMQ ceiling (Quebec rate) | Typical Florida cost | Out-of-pocket gap |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hospitalization per day (room, nursing, hospital meds) | ~CA$100/day | USD 3,000 to 12,000/day | 97 % to 99 % |
| Outpatient (ER, UC, no admission) | up to CA$50/visit | USD 800 to 4,000 | 94 % to 99 % |
| Physician fees (consultation, procedure) | Quebec fee schedule | 2 to 5× Quebec rate | 50 % to 80 % |
| Outpatient pharmacy meds | CA$0 (not covered abroad) | variable | 100 % |
| Ambulance transport (foreign) | CA$0 (not covered) | USD 500 to 5,000 | 100 % |
| Air medical evacuation back to Canada | CA$0 | USD 15,000 to 70,000 | 100 % |
The most-cited concrete example comes from the Quebec Public Protector: a Quebecer hospitalized 3 days in Florida following a heart attack received a hospital bill of USD 200,000 (excluding physician fees). RAMQ reimbursed approximately CA$300. The difference, about CA$270,000 at exchange rate, was entirely the patient's burden, or that of his private travel insurance.
Verified fact: the ceilings in the table are the amounts RAMQ itself publishes for emergency care outside Canada: a maximum of CA$100 per day of hospitalization, a fixed CA$50 per day for outpatient hospital care, physician fees reimbursed up to the Quebec rates in effect regardless of the amount billed, and no reimbursement for ambulance transport, which is not an insured service outside Canada. Nursing fees billed separately are not reimbursed either. Source: RAMQ, Is healthcare received outside Canada covered?, consulted June 9, 2026.
Typical range: the Florida cost column reflects billed charges compiled from hospital pricing data and patient reports, 2023 to 2025. They are unregulated list prices, not quotes; an individual bill can sit well outside these bands.
How to claim a RAMQ refund: Form 2901
The form is 2901, Demande de remboursement : services de santé reçus hors du Québec, available on ramq.gouv.qc.ca. It exists in fillable PDF and paper form. Steps:
- Keep all original documents from the very first medical contact: itemized hospital or clinic invoice, payment receipt, prescription, medical reports, ambulance and pharmacy invoices. RAMQ requires originals or certified true copies.
- Translation if required. RAMQ accepts French or English documents. Florida bills are in English; no problem.
- Complete Form 2901. Sections: beneficiary identification, NAM, dates and places of care, nature of care, amounts paid in foreign currency.
- Attach proof of absence (boarding pass, exact stay dates) so RAMQ can apply or rule out exceptions.
- File within 12 months of the date of care, by mail to: RAMQ, Direction des services à la clientèle, Case postale 6600, Québec (Québec), G1K 7T3.
- Processing time: RAMQ states 60 to 120 days depending on complexity. Reimbursement is paid by direct deposit or cheque, in Canadian dollars converted at the date-of-care exchange rate.
If you have private travel insurance, your insurer typically requires that you first apply to RAMQ and forward the decision (Form 2901 + RAMQ response letter). The insurer then pays the gap per policy terms. This is the coordination of benefits rule.
You live in another province?
This article covers only the Quebec regime (RAMQ). Each province and territory administers its own public health insurance with different presence rules and out-of-country reimbursement schedules. If you live elsewhere in Canada, see the dedicated article for your regime:
A worked example: three hospital nights in Fort Lauderdale, February 2027
Suppose the second RAMQ scenario happens to Jean, 71, four months into his winter. Chest pain at the condo, 911, three nights in a Fort Lauderdale hospital with a catheterization, discharged stable. The hospital's itemized bill comes to USD 142,000; the cardiologist, the ER physician, and the radiologist bill another USD 9,500 separately, as is standard in Florida. Typical range: these amounts sit inside the published bands for a three-day cardiac admission, 2023 to 2025 data; any individual file can land higher or lower.
Converted at an illustrative 1.35 CAD per USD (check the Bank of Canada rate for your own dates), the combined bill is about CA$204,525.
RAMQ's side of the ledger: hospitalization is capped at CA$100 per day, so three days pay CA$300. The ambulance is not an insured service: CA$0. The physician fees are reimbursed at Quebec rates for the same acts; for a consultation, daily visits, and the procedure fees, the Quebec schedule amounts come to several hundred dollars. Call the total RAMQ contribution roughly CA$1,000. Typical range: the exact physician reimbursement depends on the specific fee codes; the hospital and ambulance amounts are fixed by the published rules.
Without private coverage, Jean's exposure is roughly CA$203,500, more than 99 percent of the bill, for an uncomplicated three-night cardiac stay. With a snowbird policy, the insurer pays the hospital directly, requires the RAMQ claim first, and Jean's cost is his deductible. The arithmetic is the entire case for the group and individual snowbird policies compared in this chapter.
Quebec vs Florida: understanding the cost gap
The cost gap between care in Quebec and care in Florida is not marginal, it is on the order of 1 to 100 for hospital acts. Several reasons:
Funding model. In Quebec, hospitals are tax-funded and the cost of a stay is invisible to the resident patient. In Florida, the hospital bills every act (room, nursing, drugs, equipment, separate physician fees) at rates negotiated with private payers and Medicare. An uninsured patient pays the "chargemaster" rate, typically 2 to 4 times the negotiated rate.
Physician fees. In Quebec, physicians are paid fee-for-service per a RAMQ-published schedule. A typical consultation is billed around CA$35. In Florida, the same consultation by an ER physician bills USD 250 to 600 (4× to 12× higher).
Hospital drugs. Drug costs in Canadian hospitals are negotiated provincially through the pan-Canadian Pharmaceutical Alliance. Florida hospitals apply substantial markups. A USD 10 Tylenol pill on the bill is no urban legend.
Related fees. In Florida, you frequently receive separate bills from the radiologist, anesthesiologist, ER physician, and hospitalist, even if all worked "inside" the hospital. This is the balance billing system, partially regulated by the federal No Surprises Act of 2022 but still active for patients without U.S. insurance.
Opinion: a Quebec snowbird relying on RAMQ alone for Florida care faces, in case of a serious incident, a personal debt that may exceed their net worth.
Practical pre-departure preparation
Before each Florida season, the Quebec snowbird should run through this checklist. Each item is labeled Mandatory (legal or regulatory requirement; failure causes loss of coverage, refusal of reimbursement, or other legal consequence) or Recommended (best practice without legal obligation, but strongly reduces financial risk).
- MANDATORY: Maintain a valid RAMQ card. An expired card is null: RAMQ refuses any reimbursement of care during the expiration period (HIA s. 9). Renew via Mon dossier RAMQ before departure if the date falls during the stay.
- MANDATORY: Comply with the presence rule. Do not exceed 183 days of absence per calendar year, except for an applicable exception (HIA ss. 5 and 5.1). Unjustified excess triggers automatic suspension of coverage, even within Quebec.
- RECOMMENDED: Buy private travel insurance covering the entire trip. No Quebec law requires this insurance, but the gap between Florida cost and RAMQ reimbursement makes it practically necessary. Coverage should include: emergency medical (limit ≥ CA$5M), air medical evacuation, repatriation of remains, early return, stable preexisting condition per your diagnoses.
- MANDATORY (per insurance contract): Disclose any preexisting condition accurately to the broker at policy issue. A false declaration or omission, even unintentional, is a legal ground for retroactive policy cancellation upon claim, under article 2408 of the Civil Code of Quebec. Stability period required varies by insurer (typically 90, 180, or 365 days without treatment change).
- RECOMMENDED: Keep the insurer's emergency phone number in multiple places (wallet, phone, paper notebook). If admitted to a Florida ER, the insurer must be called per policy terms. Most require notification within 24 or 48 hours; otherwise coverage may be reduced.
- RECOMMENDED: Plan a USD credit card buffer. Many hospitals require an admission deposit refunded after billing. USD 10,000 to 20,000 of available capacity avoids needing an emergency wire from Canada.
- RECOMMENDED: Document departure and return with boarding pass, passport stamp, or U.S. electronic I-94 record. If RAMQ asks you to prove your days of presence (random or targeted audit), these documents settle it.
What to do if hospitalized in Florida
- Call 911 for life-threatening emergencies. Paramedics transport you to the nearest ER, sometimes without choice of hospital.
- Present your private travel insurance card at admission (or have a relative present it). The RAMQ card is not recognized by U.S. hospitals as payment.
- Notify the private insurer within 24 hours. Practically all policies require advance notice to activate coverage without penalty.
- Request an itemized bill from the hospital, not just the total. RAMQ and the insurer want to see each line item.
- Keep all documents until full reimbursement: every invoice, every receipt, every medical report. Some insurers ask for follow-up documentation up to 18 months after the event.
- Ask for transfer to a Quebec hospital if condition is stable and the U.S. stay is prolonged. Air medical evacuation drastically reduces total cost and shortens the U.S. stay. It is typically covered by private insurance.
- Upon return, file the RAMQ refund via Form 2901 within 12 months, then forward the RAMQ decision to the private insurer for benefits coordination.
Common mistakes Quebec snowbirds make
The same handful of errors fills RAMQ refusal files and insurance disputes every spring.
Counting 183 days on a rolling window. The rule runs per calendar year, January 1 to December 31. A November to April season splits across two years, which is exactly why the classic snowbird calendar works.
Ignoring the 21-day rule in your favour. Trips of 21 consecutive days or less are not counted at all. A three-week January getaway costs zero days of quota; do not log it as 21.
Assuming a quick trip home resets anything. It does not reset the counter; days from each stay of 22 days or more add up across the year. What a short return does is simply stop the meter while you are in Quebec.
Expecting RAMQ to cover the ambulance or the flight home. Both are CA$0 outside Canada. A medical repatriation runs in the tens of thousands of US dollars; see the guide to medical evacuation and repatriation.
Claiming planned care. RAMQ reimburses sudden illness and accidents that arise during the stay. Care you travelled to receive, or could reasonably have scheduled in Quebec, is excluded.
Missing the 12-month window for Form 2901. The claim must be filed within 12 months of the date of care, with the itemized bill, not the summary; the same itemized bill is your lever in any billing dispute with the hospital.
Forgetting prescriptions. Drugs dispensed outside Canada are not covered, by RAMQ or by the public drug plan. Plan refills with the Florida pharmacy guide or your insurer.
Frequently asked questions
Can I split my winter across two calendar years?
Yes, and it is the standard pattern. A departure on November 1 and a return on March 31 places part of the absence in each calendar year, leaving both years under 183 days. The counter resets every January 1.
Do my three-week trips really cost zero days?
Yes. Any trip of 21 consecutive days or less is simply not counted as an absence. The moment a stay reaches 22 days, all of its days count except the departure and return days.
Is the CA$100 hospital ceiling per admission or per day?
Per day of hospitalization, in Canadian funds. Three days pay a maximum of CA$300 regardless of what the hospital billed. The outpatient amount is a fixed CA$50 per day when you are treated without being admitted.
What is the 7 absences over 30 years exception?
Quebec law allows a resident to exceed the 183-day rule in up to 7 calendar years over a rolling 30-year period, under conditions, by notifying RAMQ. It is a deliberate, declared exception, not a forgiveness mechanism after the fact; the rules are on the RAMQ absence pages.
Does RAMQ cover a prescription refill at a Florida pharmacy?
No. Neither RAMQ nor the public prescription drug plan reimburses drugs dispensed outside Canada. The cost is yours or your private insurer's, depending on the policy.
How long do I have to file Form 2901?
Twelve months from the date of care. File with original itemized invoices, proof of payment, and proof of your travel dates, and expect RAMQ's stated 60 to 120 day processing time.
Does private travel insurance replace RAMQ?
No, it stacks on top. Insurers require you to claim the RAMQ portion first and then cover the balance, which is why keeping the card valid is a condition of most policies.
Every figure, rate, threshold, and deadline in this guide is drawn from a verifiable primary source listed at the bottom of the page. The article is updated whenever the underlying rules change, with a fresh review date stamped at the top.
Sources and references
Public sources verified as of 2026-06-09.
- RAMQ: Absence du Québec. ramq.gouv.qc.ca/absence-quebec
- RAMQ: Know which services are covered outside Quebec. ramq.gouv.qc.ca/services-covered
- RAMQ: Refund request (Form 2901). ramq.gouv.qc.ca/form-2901
- Health Insurance Act, RLRQ c. A-29. legisquebec.gouv.qc.ca/A-29
- Quebec Public Protector: Healthcare outside Quebec: must we pay?. protecteurducitoyen.qc.ca
- Quebec.ca: Stays outside Quebec. quebec.ca/stays-outside
- RAMQ: Exceptions to the Presence in Québec rule. ramq.gouv.qc.ca/exceptions
- RAMQ: Is healthcare received outside Canada covered? ramq.gouv.qc.ca
Disclaimer
This guide is for educational purpose only. Figures, rates, ceilings and rules are drawn from public sources at the date shown and may change.
For any concrete decision about RAMQ eligibility or travel insurance choice, consult a Quebec-licensed travel insurance broker, RAMQ directly (1-800-561-9749), or a health-law attorney.