Medical Tourism in China: Dental, Cosmetic Surgery & Health Checks (2026)
Last Updated: April 2026 | Reading Time: 11 min
Quick Summary: China is one of the world’s top medical tourism destinations — not for exotic treatments, but for high quality at dramatically lower prices. Dental implants cost 70% less than in the US. Full body health checks run $100–300. Cosmetic surgery is performed at internationally trained surgeons at a fraction of Western prices. This guide covers what’s worth coming to China for, what to expect, and how to plan your trip.
Why China for Medical Tourism?
The Core Value Proposition
China’s appeal for medical tourists isn’t experimental medicine — it’s proven treatments at drastically lower prices, performed by qualified doctors, many of whom trained abroad.
| Factor | China | USA | UK | Australia |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dental implant (single) | $420–1,400 | $3,000–5,000 | $2,500–4,500 | $3,000–6,000 |
| Full health check | $100–300 | $500–3,000+ | £200–800 | $300–1,500 |
| Rhinoplasty | $2,000–5,000 | $8,000–15,000 | £5,000–10,000 | $8,000–15,000 |
| Braces (full treatment) | $1,400–4,200 | $3,000–8,000 | £2,500–6,000 | $4,000–8,000 |
| IVF cycle | $2,800–7,000 | $12,000–25,000 | £5,000–10,000 | $8,000–15,000 |
Quality is the question everyone asks. The honest answer: at top-tier hospitals and specialized private clinics, quality is genuinely excellent. Chinese surgeons trained at world-class institutions, use international equipment, and operate under competitive market pressure that drives standards up. The key is knowing which hospitals to choose.
Most Popular Procedures for Medical Tourists
1. Dental Work
The #1 reason foreigners come to China for medical treatment.
The price difference is staggering, the quality at good clinics is excellent, and procedures can usually be completed in 1–2 weeks.
What’s Worth Doing in China
| Procedure | China Cost | US Cost | Time Required |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dental implant (single, full) | ¥3,000–10,000 ($420–1,400) | $3,000–5,000 | 2 visits over 3–6 months* |
| Crown (porcelain-fused) | ¥1,500–4,000 ($210–560) | $1,000–2,000 | 2 visits, 1–2 weeks |
| Root canal (per tooth) | ¥800–2,500 ($112–350) | $700–1,500 | 1–3 visits |
| Full-mouth braces (metal) | ¥8,000–20,000 ($1,120–2,800) | $4,000–8,000 | 18–24 months |
| Invisalign (full) | ¥20,000–50,000 ($2,800–7,000) | $5,000–8,000 | 12–18 months |
| Veneers (per tooth) | ¥2,000–6,000 ($280–840) | $1,000–2,500 | 2 visits, 1–2 weeks |
| Teeth whitening (professional) | ¥500–2,000 ($70–280) | $500–1,500 | 1 visit |
| Full-mouth dental restoration | ¥30,000–80,000 ($4,200–11,200) | $30,000–100,000+ | Multiple visits |
*Implants require bone integration time — plan for a longer trip or two separate visits.
Best Dental Clinic Chains in China
- Arrail Dental (瑞尔齿科) — premium chain, internationally trained dentists, English-speaking staff, cities including Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Wuhan
- Bybo Dental (拜博口腔) — wide network, good mid-range option
- Aier Dental (爱尔口腔) — value option, good for straightforward work
- University hospital dental departments — often excellent quality at public hospital prices (Wuhan University Stomatology Hospital is highly regarded)
Planning a Dental Trip to China
For simple procedures (cleaning, filling, whitening):
- Any single visit works — book a day
- Allow 2–3 hours for the appointment
For complex work (implants, crowns, braces):
- First visit: consultation, X-rays, treatment plan
- Implants: initial placement, then return 3–6 months later for crown fitting
- Crowns/veneers: preparation + temporary crown, return 1–2 weeks later for permanent fitting
- Build dental trip into a longer China visit for best value
2. Full Body Health Checks
One of the highest-value medical tourism activities in China — fast, comprehensive, and cheap.
Chinese health check centers (体检中心, tǐjiǎn zhōngxīn) offer comprehensive packages that would cost many times more in Western countries. Results are typically ready in 1–3 days.
Standard Packages
| Package | What’s Included | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Basic | Blood panel, urine, BP, vision, hearing, ECG | ¥300–600 ($42–84) |
| Standard | Basic + chest X-ray, abdominal ultrasound, tumor markers | ¥800–1,500 ($112–210) |
| Comprehensive | Standard + CT scan, MRI (brain/chest), cardiac echo, colonoscopy | ¥2,000–5,000 ($280–700) |
| Executive | Full comprehensive + specialist consultations, full cancer screening | ¥5,000–15,000 ($700–2,100) |
Best Health Check Centers
Meinian Health (美年大健康) — largest health check chain in China, 1,000+ centers nationwide, reasonable prices, online booking available
iKang (爱康国宾) — premium option, more English-friendly, available in major cities
Hospital-based centers — Wuhan Union Hospital, Tongji Hospital offer health check departments with world-class equipment; higher cost but highest reliability
What to Expect
- Book online via the health check center’s app or website
- Arrive fasting (8–12 hours, no food or water except small sips)
- Registration — takes 15–30 minutes, bring passport
- Rotate through stations — blood draw, urine sample, ECG, ultrasound, X-ray, etc.
- Total time: 2–4 hours for comprehensive packages
- Results: Ready same day or within 1–3 days (delivered by app)
- Consultation — most packages include a brief doctor consultation to explain results
3. Cosmetic Surgery
China is one of Asia’s major cosmetic surgery hubs. Prices are significantly lower than the West; quality at reputable hospitals is excellent.
Popular Procedures and Prices
| Procedure | China Cost | USA Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rhinoplasty (nose job) | ¥15,000–40,000 ($2,100–5,600) | $8,000–15,000 | Cartilage or implant |
| Double eyelid surgery | ¥3,000–15,000 ($420–2,100) | $3,000–8,000 | Most popular in China |
| Facelift | ¥20,000–60,000 ($2,800–8,400) | $10,000–25,000 | |
| Liposuction (area) | ¥8,000–25,000 ($1,120–3,500) | $3,000–8,000 per area | |
| Breast augmentation | ¥20,000–50,000 ($2,800–7,000) | $6,000–12,000 | |
| Fat grafting | ¥10,000–30,000 ($1,400–4,200) | $5,000–15,000 | |
| Botox (per area) | ¥800–2,500 ($112–350) | $300–600 per area | |
| Fillers (per syringe) | ¥1,500–4,000 ($210–560) | $600–1,200 |
Most Reputable Cosmetic Surgery Hospitals
- Hanfei Medical (韩妃医学美容) — well-regarded private chain
- Soyoung (新氧) — major platform connecting patients to verified surgeons; app-based with reviews
- University hospital plastic surgery departments — highest safety standards, often lower prices, longer wait times
Important: Avoid unlicensed clinics and dramatically underpriced offers. Stick to hospitals with verifiable qualifications. The Soyoung app has user reviews and verified certifications for individual surgeons.
Recovery Considerations for Medical Tourists
- Most procedures require 7–14 days before flying
- Swelling and bruising can persist for 2–4 weeks
- Follow-up appointments may be needed
- Plan your trip to allow adequate recovery before any important events
4. Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM)
For foreigners interested in TCM — acupuncture, cupping, herbal medicine, tuina massage — China is obviously the definitive source.
Popular TCM Treatments
| Treatment | Cost per Session | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Acupuncture | ¥100–500 ($14–70) | Widely available |
| Cupping (拔罐) | ¥50–200 ($7–28) | Often combined with acupuncture |
| Tuina massage (推拿) | ¥100–400 ($14–56)/hour | Therapeutic, not spa |
| Herbal medicine consultation | ¥100–300 ($14–42) + herbs | Customized prescription |
| Moxibustion | ¥80–250 ($11–35) | Heat therapy |
Where to Get TCM Treatment
- TCM hospitals (中医院) — dedicated hospitals with qualified practitioners; most authentic and regulated
- Hospital TCM departments — many public hospitals have TCM departments alongside Western medicine
- Private TCM clinics — more accessible, English available at some; quality varies
In Wuhan: Hubei Province Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine (湖北省中医院) is one of the best in central China.
5. Fertility Treatment (IVF)
China’s IVF success rates at top hospitals are competitive with global standards, at a fraction of Western prices.
| IVF Service | China Cost | USA Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Standard IVF cycle | ¥20,000–50,000 ($2,800–7,000) | $12,000–25,000 |
| Frozen embryo transfer | ¥5,000–15,000 ($700–2,100) | $3,000–6,000 |
| Egg freezing | ¥15,000–30,000 ($2,100–4,200) | $10,000–20,000 |
Important legal note: China’s fertility regulations differ from Western countries. Surrogacy is banned in China. IVF is generally available to married couples only at public hospitals. Private fertility clinics have different rules. Confirm legal requirements with your specific hospital before planning a trip.
How to Plan Your Medical Tourism Trip
Step 1: Research and Choose Your Hospital
- For dental and health checks: mid-tier private chains (Arrail, Meinian) offer good value
- For surgery: stick to Grade 3A public hospital departments or well-reviewed private hospitals
- Use platforms like Soyoung (cosmetic) or hospital official websites to verify credentials
Step 2: Make Contact Before Traveling
Email or WeChat the hospital’s international department before you book flights. Confirm:
- They can treat your specific condition
- Availability and waiting times
- Rough cost estimate
- English communication availability
Step 3: Get a Translation of Your Medical Records
If you have existing medical history relevant to your treatment, have it translated into Chinese. Many hospitals have translation services, but bringing translated records speeds up your appointment.
Step 4: Plan Your Timeline
| Procedure Type | Minimum Trip Length |
|---|---|
| Dental cleaning / health check | 1–2 days |
| Crowns, root canals | 1–2 weeks |
| Implants (phase 1) | 1 week + return trip |
| Minor cosmetic procedures | 2 weeks |
| Major surgery | 3–4 weeks minimum |
Step 5: Arrange Travel Insurance
Ensure your travel insurance covers:
- Medical complications arising from planned procedures
- Extended stay if recovery takes longer than expected
- Evacuation if needed
Most standard travel insurance excludes planned elective procedures. Look for policies that specifically cover medical tourism.
Safety and Quality Considerations
Red Flags to Avoid
- Unusually low prices (50%+ below typical ranges) — corner-cutting on materials or staff
- No verifiable license — check China’s national hospital registration system
- Pressure to decide immediately — reputable hospitals don’t pressure patients
- No consultation before pricing — any good hospital does a proper assessment first
- Clinics in non-medical settings (shopping malls, beauty salons) for surgical procedures
How to Verify a Hospital’s Credentials
- Check China’s National Health Commission hospital database
- Look for 三甲 (Grade 3A) certification for hospitals
- For cosmetic surgeons, verify on the Soyoung platform (有资质认证)
- Ask for the surgeon’s qualifications directly — reputable doctors will share them
Communication
Most top-tier hospitals have English-speaking staff in their international departments. For specialist appointments in Chinese-only departments:
- Bring a Chinese-speaking companion
- Hire a medical interpreter (¥200–500 per appointment)
- Use a translation app for written communication
City Recommendations for Medical Tourism
| City | Strengths | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Beijing | Top hospitals, international infrastructure | Complex procedures, cancer treatment |
| Shanghai | Best international clinics, English availability | Expats, cosmetic surgery, IVF |
| Guangzhou | Major medical hub, lower costs | Comprehensive procedures, dental |
| Shenzhen | Modern private clinics, near Hong Kong | Hong Kong residents, dental, health checks |
| Wuhan | Top-tier hospitals (Union, Tongji), lowest costs | Medical tourists on budget, serious conditions |
| Chengdu | Growing medical tourism scene | TCM, dental |
For budget-conscious medical tourists: Wuhan offers the combination of world-class hospitals (Union and Tongji rank top 10 in China) with significantly lower costs than Beijing or Shanghai. See our Wuhan hospitals guide.
FAQ
Is it safe to have surgery in China?
At reputable Grade 3A hospitals and verified private clinics, yes. China’s top hospitals maintain high standards. The risks are higher at unlicensed clinics or providers offering dramatically below-market prices. Do your research, verify credentials, and don’t choose based on price alone.
Will my home insurance cover treatment complications?
Usually not for planned elective procedures. Most health insurance excludes planned overseas treatment. Travel insurance may cover complications if you disclose your planned treatment upfront. Check your policy carefully.
Can I get English-language medical records for my home doctor?
Yes, at most international departments. Ask specifically for an English-language discharge summary or treatment report. Most major hospitals can provide this.
How do I pay for treatment?
Upfront payment is standard. WeChat Pay and Alipay work at most hospitals. International credit cards are accepted at international departments of major hospitals. Keep all receipts (发票) for insurance reimbursement.
What if something goes wrong?
Medical complications happen everywhere. China has a medical malpractice system, though navigating it as a foreigner is difficult. For serious procedures, ensure you have:
- Comprehensive travel/medical insurance
- A local contact who can assist if needed
- Clear communication with your doctor about risks beforehand
Related Guides
- Healthcare Costs for Foreigners in China — Complete price breakdown
- Best Hospitals for Foreigners in Wuhan — Top hospitals with addresses
- Expat Medical Insurance 2026 — Insurance options
- How to Pay in China — Payment setup for hospital visits
Last Updated: April 8, 2026 | Prices in USD based on April 2026 exchange rate (¥7.1 = $1).