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- EDITIONS:
Spanish News Today
Alicante Today
Andalucia Today
article_detail
Date Published: 09/07/2026
Murcia has the longest dependency care waiting times in Spain, with an average wait of 551 days
New national figures show the region lags far behind other communities
If you or someone you care for is waiting for dependency support in Murcia, the latest national figures will not make comfortable reading. The region has once again been confirmed as the worst performer in Spain for processing dependency benefit applications, with an average wait of 551 days from application to resolution. That is more than four and a half times longer than the best-performing regions, and an improvement of just two days on the previous quarter.It is a problem that has been building for some time. Murcia's healthcare waiting lists have been heading in the wrong direction for much of this year, with delays already causing serious concern earlier in 2026.
The figures come from the latest Panel of the System for Autonomy and Care for Dependency, presented this Wednesday and covering the second quarter of 2026. The regional comparison is striking. Aragon processes dependency applications in 117 days. Castile and León takes 120.
Even the national average stands at 314 days, less than half of Murcia's figure. Andalucía, the second worst performer nationally, averages 435 days, still 116 days better than Murcia. Behind Murcia in the table comes Andalucía, then Asturias at 425 days, then Madrid at 342.
The human cost of these delays is real. Dependency benefits cover everything from telecare and home help to residential care, and for elderly or disabled people waiting for support, 551 days is not an abstract statistic. It is nearly a year and a half of managing without the help that has been formally assessed as necessary.
In June, the regional government announced an emergency injection of €20 million to try to address the scale of the problem, with more than 204,000 people in Murcia queuing for care at that point.
The national picture, in contrast, is considerably more positive. The number of people waiting for dependency benefits across Spain has fallen by 21% in a year to 142,887, described by the government as a historic low. The number actually receiving benefits has hit a record high of 1,707,328, up 11% on June last year. The average processing time nationally has dropped by 15 days in the last quarter to 314 days.
Minister of Social Rights Pablo Bustinduy said the figures were "encouraging" and predicted that reductions would become "increasingly faster and more drastic" thanks to a royal decree law injecting €6.2 billion more into the dependency system over 2026 and 2027. His stated goal is "complete elimination" of waiting lists. He also described the forthcoming reform of dependency and disability law as "the greatest legacy of this legislature and an irreversible leap that will ensure that care is never again used as a bargaining chip."
On the ground, the trend is moving towards community-based care. Telecare services are up 21.8% on the previous year and home care up 13.6%, both growing significantly faster than the overall system. Financial assistance for family carers remains the most common benefit, accounting for 31% of all support provided. The number of benefits per person has also grown, from 1.27 in 2020 to 1.45 in 2026, reflecting a more joined-up approach to individual care.
For those in Murcia still waiting, the national direction of travel offers some hope. But 551 days is a very long time.
Image: Jsme/Pexels
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