Planning Plastic Surgery in Korea: The Complete Medical Tourism Guide for 2026
I got my first message from a patient in Ohio at 2 AM Korean time. She had three clinic names, a spreadsheet of prices she’d pulled from Reddit, and no idea what to do next. “Do I just… show up?” she asked.
She didn’t just show up. She planned for six weeks, flew in on a Tuesday, had her consultation Wednesday morning, surgery Friday, and was back at the hotel recovering by Saturday afternoon. Sutures came out the following Thursday. She flew home that weekend.
That timeline isn’t unusual. It’s roughly what most foreign patients experience when they plan properly. The problem is that “planning properly” looks completely different from booking surgery at home. Korean clinics operate faster, expect different things from you, and communicate through channels that Western patients aren’t used to.
I’ve coordinated over 200 foreign patients through cosmetic procedures in Seoul over the past four years. Some came for rhinoplasty at clinics like Link Plastic Surgery. Others flew in for eyelid surgery, facelifts, or skin treatments at places like Banobagi, THE PLUS, or Grand Plastic Surgery. The ones who had smooth experiences all did the same things before they arrived. The ones who ran into problems skipped those steps.
This is what the smooth version looks like.

Key Takeaways
- Most nationalities enter Korea visa-free for 90 days, more than enough for surgery and recovery.
- Plan 10 to 14 days in Seoul minimum. Rhinoplasty and facial contouring may need 2 to 3 weeks.
- Korean clinics charge 40 to 60 percent less than US equivalents, even at top Gangnam clinics.
- Remote consultations via KakaoTalk, WhatsApp, or Line are standard. Do this before booking flights.
- The best recovery hotels are within walking distance of Gangnam Station and Sinnonhyeon Station.
Step 1: Research and Shortlist Clinics
Don’t start with Google. Start with what you want done, then find clinics that specialize in that procedure.
Korean plastic surgery is subspecialized in a way that Western clinics usually aren’t. A surgeon who does 15 rhinoplasties a week will produce different results than someone who splits their time between noses, eyes, and facelifts. Volume matters. Specialization matters more.
Where to research:
- Gangnam Unni (강남언니) is the largest Korean plastic surgery review platform. Clinic ratings are based on verified patient reviews. For example, Link Plastic Surgery has 1,526 reviews with a 9.5 out of 10 rating across two surgeons. That volume of verified reviews gives you real signal.
- Reddit communities like r/PlasticSurgery and r/plasticsurgerykorea have active discussions from patients who’ve traveled to Seoul. Search for your specific procedure plus “Korea” to find firsthand accounts.
- Google Reviews are useful but limited for Korean clinics. Most Korean patients leave reviews on domestic platforms. English Google reviews tend to be sparse.
Red flags during research: clinics that don’t name their surgeons, prices that seem dramatically lower than competitors, heavy reliance on before-and-after photos without context.
Narrow your list to 2 to 3 clinics. More than that creates decision paralysis. Fewer means you’re not comparing enough.
Step 2: Remote Consultation

Every major Korean clinic offers free consultations before you fly in. This isn’t optional. Treat it as a screening round for both sides.
The standard process:
- Contact the clinic through their preferred channel. Most use KakaoTalk, WhatsApp, or Line. Some accept email, but response times are slower. Clinics with international coordinators like Link Plastic Surgery operate English, Chinese, and Japanese hotlines.
- Send photos. Front, both profiles (left and right at 45 degrees), and a straight side view. Natural lighting, no filters. The coordinator will forward these to the surgeon.
- Receive a preliminary assessment. This usually includes a general plan, estimated cost range, and suggested visit timeline. Some clinics send marked-up photos showing proposed changes.
- Ask about the surgeon’s background. Board certification from the Korean Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons (KSPRS) is the baseline. Ask how many of your specific procedure they do per month.
A good remote consultation takes 1 to 2 weeks of back-and-forth messaging. Don’t rush it. The coordinator’s responsiveness during this phase tells you a lot about what the clinic experience will be like.
Step 3: Visa, Flights, and Timing
The logistics are simpler than most people expect.
Visa
Citizens from the US, UK, Canada, Australia, most EU countries, Japan, and many Southeast Asian nations enter South Korea visa-free for up to 90 days. That’s more than enough for any cosmetic procedure.
If your country does require a visa, apply for a C-3-3 medical tourism visa through your local Korean embassy. You’ll need a letter from the clinic confirming your appointment. Processing takes about 5 business days.
Flights
Incheon International Airport (ICN) is the entry point. Direct flights are available from most major cities in North America, Europe, Southeast Asia, and the Middle East. Budget tip: flights are cheapest on Tuesdays and Wednesdays, and low season runs January through March.
Timing
Schedule your arrival 1 to 2 days before the in-person consultation. This gives you time to adjust to the time zone and handle any pre-op requirements like blood tests.
Minimum stay by procedure:
| Procedure | Minimum Stay | Suture Removal |
|---|---|---|
| Double eyelid surgery | 7 to 10 days | Day 5 to 7 |
| Rhinoplasty | 10 to 14 days | Day 7 to 10 |
| Facial contouring (V-line, jaw) | 14 to 21 days | Day 10 to 14 |
| Fat grafting | 7 to 10 days | N/A |
| Skin treatments (Rejuran, Ulthera) | 3 to 5 days | N/A |
Step 4: In-Person Consultation Day

The in-person consultation in Korea moves faster than what you’re used to at home.
A typical visit at a Gangnam clinic takes 1 to 2 hours total. You’ll cycle through intake photos, a face-to-face with the surgeon (usually 15 to 30 minutes), and a cost breakdown with the coordinator. Some clinics use 3D imaging software to show projected results during this meeting.
At clinics with high foreign patient volume, you’ll have a dedicated translator in the room. Link Plastic Surgery, for instance, has full-time coordinators for English, Chinese, and Japanese patients. On the review platform Sungyesa, patients noted that “foreign clients are noticeably common, with dedicated Chinese-speaking staff on site.” That infrastructure isn’t universal, so confirm language support before your visit.
What to bring to the consultation:
- Reference photos showing the result you want
- A list of questions, written down (you’ll forget things otherwise)
- Your current medications and allergy list
- Previous surgery records, if any
If you’re visiting multiple clinics, schedule them on consecutive days. Consultations are usually free, and comparing in person gives you information that photos and messages can’t.
Important: you are not obligated to book surgery at the consultation. Reputable clinics won’t pressure you. If a clinic pushes you to pay a deposit on the spot or adds procedures you didn’t ask about, that’s a warning sign.
Step 5: Surgery Day and What to Expect
Korean clinics typically schedule surgery within 1 to 3 days of the consultation, assuming your pre-op blood work clears. The speed surprises most Western patients, where wait times of weeks or months are normal.
Pre-op instructions are strict and standardized:
- No food or water 8 hours before surgery (for general anesthesia)
- Stop aspirin, ibuprofen, and vitamin E supplements 2 weeks prior
- No alcohol for at least 3 days before
- Arrive in comfortable, loose clothing with no makeup or jewelry
Most procedures are done under IV sedation or general anesthesia, administered by a board-certified anesthesiologist. After surgery, you’ll spend 1 to 3 hours in the recovery room before being discharged. Some clinics have same-day discharge; others keep you overnight for larger procedures like facial contouring.
You’ll leave with a compression garment or bandaging, prescriptions for antibiotics and pain medication (dispensed at a nearby pharmacy), and a follow-up schedule.
Step 6: Recovery in Seoul

Your hotel choice matters more than you think.
Stay within walking distance of your clinic. The Gangnam and Sinnonhyeon station area has dozens of hotels and serviced apartments catering to medical tourists. A few things to prioritize:
- Proximity: you’ll visit the clinic for post-op check-ups every 1 to 2 days. Being within a 10-minute walk makes this painless.
- Kitchen access: serviced apartments with a small kitchen let you prepare soft foods during early recovery when eating out isn’t practical.
- Elevator access: walk-up buildings are common in Seoul. After facial surgery, climbing stairs with a swollen face isn’t ideal.
Budget range: 50,000 to 100,000 KRW per night (roughly $35 to $70 USD) gets you a clean, comfortable room in Gangnam. Long-stay discounts are standard for bookings over a week.
During recovery, Seoul is genuinely convenient. Pharmacies are everywhere. Convenience stores stock soft foods, ice packs, and straws. Public transit is accessible even if you’re visibly post-op. Nobody stares. In Gangnam, bandaged faces are not unusual.
Step 7: Post-Op Follow-Up and Going Home
Before you leave Seoul, you’ll have a final check-up and suture removal (if applicable). The clinic will give you:
- A surgery summary in English
- Post-op care instructions
- Medication for the flight home
- Contact information for remote follow-up
Remote follow-up is standard at any reputable Korean clinic. You’ll send progress photos via KakaoTalk or WhatsApp at scheduled intervals, typically 1 week, 1 month, 3 months, and 6 months after surgery. The surgeon reviews and responds, usually within 24 hours.
Flying after surgery: for most procedures, you can fly 7 to 10 days post-op. The main concern is swelling, which cabin pressure can temporarily worsen. Wear compression garments during the flight, stay hydrated, and take the aisle seat so you can move around.
If a revision is needed, most clinics cover the surgical fee within the first year. You’ll need to pay for your own travel and accommodation, but the revision surgery itself is typically free at clinics that stand behind their work.
Cost Comparison: Korea vs. US, UK, and Australia

| Procedure | Korea (Seoul) | United States | Savings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rhinoplasty | $3,000 to $6,000 | $8,000 to $15,000 | 50 to 60% |
| Double eyelid surgery | $1,500 to $3,000 | $4,000 to $6,000 | 50 to 60% |
| Facelift | $5,000 to $10,000 | $12,000 to $25,000 | 55 to 60% |
| V-line jaw surgery | $4,000 to $8,000 | $10,000 to $20,000 | 50 to 60% |
| Skin treatments (Rejuran, Ulthera) | $200 to $800 | $500 to $2,000 | 50 to 65% |
These prices include surgeon fees, anesthesia, facility fees, and post-op visits. They do not include flights, accommodation, or medication. Even with travel costs factored in, most patients save 30 to 40 percent compared to having the same procedure at home.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
After coordinating hundreds of medical tourism cases, these are the patterns I see repeatedly:
- Booking surgery before a remote consultation. Some patients book flights first and contact clinics second. This creates pressure to proceed even if the surgeon isn’t the right fit.
- Choosing on price alone. The cheapest clinic in Gangnam is rarely the best choice. Surgery quality correlates more with surgeon volume and specialization than with pricing.
- Underestimating recovery time. Patients book return flights too early, then panic when swelling hasn’t resolved. Add 2 to 3 buffer days beyond the clinic’s minimum recommendation.
- Skipping the second consultation. Visiting only one clinic means you have no comparison point. Two consultations minimum.
- Ignoring post-op care instructions. Korean surgeons give detailed recovery protocols. Patients who follow them heal faster and get better results. This isn’t optional guidance.
Medical Tourism Packing List: What Experienced Patients Bring
Items that make recovery in Seoul significantly easier. Order before your trip.
- Arnica Montana Tablets — start 3 days before surgery to reduce bruising. Check price on Amazon
- Travel Neck Pillow (Memory Foam) — sleeping upright is mandatory after most facial procedures. Check price on Amazon
- Silicone Scar Sheets — start 2 weeks post-op for incision scars. Check price on Amazon
- Beauty of Joseon Relief Sun SPF 50+ — lightweight Korean sunscreen, critical for healing skin. Check price on Amazon
- Portable Ice Pack Set — reusable gel packs for swelling management on the go. Check price on Amazon
As an Amazon Associate, GlobalBeautySpot earns from qualifying purchases.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need a visa for plastic surgery in Korea?
Most nationalities get 90-day visa-free entry to South Korea. Citizens from the US, UK, Canada, Australia, most EU countries, and many Southeast Asian nations qualify. If your country requires a visa, apply for a C-3-3 medical tourism visa through the Korean embassy.
How long should I stay in Seoul for plastic surgery?
Plan for 10 to 14 days minimum. Most clinics schedule the initial consultation on day 1 or 2, surgery within the first week, and suture removal 5 to 7 days post-op. Rhinoplasty or facial contouring may require 2 to 3 weeks.
Can I get a consultation remotely before flying to Korea?
Yes. Most major clinics offer free remote consultations via KakaoTalk, WhatsApp, Line, or email. Send photos and describe your goals. The clinic provides a preliminary assessment, estimated cost, and suggested timeline.
What if I need a revision or follow-up after returning home?
Reputable clinics offer remote follow-up via messenger apps with photo check-ins at 1 week, 1 month, 3 months, and 6 months post-op. Revision surgery is typically covered within 1 year; travel expenses are the patient’s responsibility.
Is it safe to combine multiple procedures in one trip?
Many patients combine 2 to 3 procedures, such as rhinoplasty plus double eyelid surgery, or a facelift with fat grafting. Korean surgeons are experienced with combination procedures. Discuss this during the remote consultation so the clinic can plan adequate recovery time.
Ready to Start Planning?
Get a free remote consultation with a board-certified surgeon in Seoul. Send your photos and questions through WhatsApp or KakaoTalk.
Related Articles
- Korean Rhinoplasty Guide: What Foreign Patients Need to Know
- Double Eyelid Surgery in Korea: Costs, Recovery, and Results
- Plastic Surgery Recovery in Seoul: A Foreign Patient’s Guide
- Facelift in Korea: What to Expect From Consultation to Recovery
- Rejuran vs Skin Booster vs Exosome: Korean Skin Treatments Compared