Nearly 9,000 die waiting for care in Spain crisis Photo Credit: Andrik Langfield / Unsplash
The State Observatory for Dependency has reported that, in the first quarter of 2026, just short of 9,000 people died while on the waiting list for long-term care in Spain. Almost half of the deaths were concentrated in the autonomous communities of Catalonia and Andalucia.
The waiting lists refer to Spain’s dependency system, which offers a variety of programmes including home-based care, emergency support, day centres and community services, residential care, personal assistants, and financial aid.
100 people pass away per day in the first quarter of 2026; Half of all deaths in Catalonia and Andalucia
The State Observatory for Dependency in Spain, which monitors and analyses the implementation of the Dependency Law to ensure quality care, revealed that, in the first three months of 2026, 8,996 people died on waiting lists. This averages to about 100 people a day, or one person every 14 minutes. Of these people, 4,628 were waiting to be assessed and 4,368 were waiting to receive their benefits.
Catalonia and Andalucia bore nearly half of the deaths, with 2,886 and 1,567 deaths, respectively.
Hundreds of thousands of people still on the waiting list
There are still 271,556 people on the waiting list, which is 13,389 more than at the end of 2025. Conversely, the Ministry of Social Rights sets the figure at 152,249 people, excluding those who have been waiting for fewer than six months, the period established by law.
The observatory estimates that of these people on the waiting lists, 118,716 are awaiting assessment and 152,840 are still waiting for benefits and services to which they are entitled. It also estimates that at this rate, it would take a whopping 86 years to fully eliminate the waiting list.
The communities with the highest percentage of people waiting to receive benefits are the Canary Islands, with 23.5 per cent; the Basque Country, with 15 per cent; Catalonia, with 13.7 per cent; and Murcia, with 13.5 per cent. Those with the lowest percentages are Castile and Leon, with 2.7 per cent; and Aragon and Galicia, with 1.5 per cent each.
Quality of care takes nosedive, according to the Observatory
Not only are the waiting lists stretching longer by the day, the quality of care is also reportedly decreasing. With regard to local services, the State Observatory for Dependency indicated that the average intensity of Home Help “is decreasing this year and barely amounts to more than an hour of daily care,” and the family financial benefit is also “decreasing and has an average amount of €259.84 per month.”
An 86-year waitlist for care
The waiting list limbo reflects a nationwide problem with Spain’s healthcare system; while the country’s healthcare is widely accessible and praised for its trustworthiness and quality of care, longer waiting times have been increasingly more common across many autonomous communities and municipalities, driving many patients to opt for private healthcare systems instead.
While trust remains high in Spain’s healthcare system, the growing dependency backlog highlights a widening gap between promise and reality. For thousands left waiting – and for those who sadly pass away before receiving the care they are entitled to – the consequences are increasingly difficult to ignore.