Key Saudi darurat numbers: 997 for ambulance/medical darurat, 911 for general darurat, 999 for police, 998 for civil defense/fire, and 937 for Ministry of Health hotline (non-darurat health advice). All Haji medical services are provided FREE. Medical stations are located throughout all Haji sites. Services are available in multiple languages.
Save these numbers in your phone before arriving in Arab Saudi: 997 — Saudi Red Crescent (ambulance and darurat medical services, this is the PRIMARY number for health emergencies); 911 — Unified Emergency Number (connects to appropriate service — police, fire, medical); 999 — Police (Shurta) for security emergencies, lost persons, theft; 998 — Civil Defense (fire, rescue, building collapse, crowd incidents); 937 — Ministry of Health Hotline (non-darurat health advice, physician consultation, hospital direction); 938 — Haji Safety and Security; and your embassy or consulate darurat number. Program all these numbers into your phone. Write them on a card you carry in your pocket in case your phone dies. Most operators speak Arabic and English; translation services for other languages are usually available.
Arab Saudi deploys a massive medical infrastructure during Haji: over 25 hospitals and 150+ health centers serve the Haji area; field medical stations are positioned every 500-1000 meters along all major ibadah haji routes; mobile medical teams patrol tent camps and gathering areas; helicopter darurat services are on standby for critical evacuations; specialized panas stroke treatment centers with ice-water immersion equipment operate at Arafah and Mina; pharmacies at medical stations provide essential medications free of charge; and dental darurat services are available at major health centers. Medical staff come from across Arab Saudi and internationally, with many speaking multiple languages. Female medical staff are available for women jamaah haji who prefer them.
When calling darurat services, provide: your location as specifically as possible (camp number, street name, nearby landmark, GPS coordinates if available — IhramOS can help with this); the nature of the darurat (chest pain, someone unconscious, difficulty breathing, etc.); the number of people affected; the person's approximate age and gender; any relevant medical conditions (diabetic, heart patient, pregnant); and your phone number so they can call back. Stay on the line until the operator tells you to hang up. If calling from a crowd, try to move to a quieter spot so you can be heard. If you cannot speak Arabic or English, try to find someone nearby who can translate or use a translation app. Many darurat operators can also communicate via text message if phone communication is difficult.
For non-darurat health concerns, several services are available: call 937 (Ministry of Health Hotline) for medical advice — physicians are available 24/7 to help you decide if you need to visit a medical station; walk-in medical stations at Haji sites can handle minor injuries, prescription refills, blood pressure checks, blood sugar monitoring, and general health consultations — no appointment needed; Seha virtual health app provides telemedicine consultations in multiple languages; pharmacies at medical stations and in Mekkah/Madinah can provide over-the-counter medications and advice; and your Haji group operator should have a designated medical coordinator who can assist with health needs. All medical services for Haji jamaah haji at government facilities are FREE, including medications, procedures, and hospital admissions.