The 30-Day Countdown to Your Medical Trip to China: A Week-by-Week Checklist for US Patients
Most US patients decide to get treatment in China roughly 8 to 12 weeks before they actually fly. The first four to eight weeks are about paperwork, quotes, and deciding which hospital. But the final 30 days are where trips get made or broken.
This is where people forget to renew a prescription, discover their passport expires next month, or realize on day 25 that their bank has a $10,000 daily transfer limit. None of these are fatal, but any of them can add stress you don't need before major treatment.
Below is the exact week-by-week countdown we walk our patients through in the final 30 days. Print it, share it with your travel companion, and check items off as you go.
Week 4 (Days 30-22): Confirm, Insure, and Lock the Money
The final month starts with confirmation, not preparation. If your surgery date, hospital, and surgeon are not confirmed in writing at this point, everything else is premature.
Day 30: Written confirmation of everything
By day 30 you should have a written email or PDF from the hospital's international patient department containing:
- Your admission date and surgery date
- Your primary surgeon's name and department
- The exact procedure name (matching your US records)
- The all-in quote with a validity date
- The deposit amount and refund policy
If any of these five items is missing, request them in writing before you do anything else. Verbal confirmation on WeChat is not a booking.
Day 28: Travel medical insurance
Standard US health insurance almost never covers surgery abroad, but travel medical insurance is a different product — it covers emergency evacuation, complications, and unrelated illness during your trip. Policies for a 3-week trip typically cost $80 to $250 depending on age and coverage limits. Look for a plan with at least $250,000 in emergency coverage and specific coverage for pre-planned procedures (many policies exclude them, so read the fine print).
If you want a rough number for the treatment side of your budget, you can estimate your total costs here before you buy travel insurance so the two numbers line up.
Day 25: Move the money into position
Most Chinese hospitals require a deposit 2 to 4 weeks before surgery, then final payment on admission. Two things surprise US patients here:
- Your bank's outgoing international wire limit may be lower than the deposit — some banks cap wires at $10,000 to $25,000 per day without prior arrangement.
- Wires from US banks to Chinese hospital accounts sometimes take 3 to 5 business days to clear, and are occasionally returned by intermediary banks for missing SWIFT details.
Call your bank on day 25, raise your daily wire limit in writing, and send a small test wire ($200-$500) first. If it clears cleanly, send the real deposit. If it bounces, you have 20 days to fix it — not 3.
Day 22: Passport and visa reality check
China requires at least 6 months of passport validity beyond your departure date. If yours expires within 8 months, renew it now. The M visa (medical) or L visa (tourist, which most medical travelers still use for stays under 30 days) generally takes 4 to 10 business days at a Chinese consulate. Don't send your passport out for visa processing until your surgery date is locked — if the hospital reschedules while your passport is in DC, you will not be happy.
Week 3 (Days 21-15): Records, Meds, and Medical Prep
Day 21: Compile the medical dossier
Your Chinese surgeon needs your actual imaging (not just written reports), lab results from the last 3 months, and a current medication list. Ask your US doctor's office for:
- DICOM files of any relevant CTs, MRIs, or X-rays (on a USB drive or via a portal like Ambra)
- Written radiology and pathology reports
- Your problem list and medication list
- Any consult notes from the specialist recommending or evaluating surgery
Upload everything to your coordinator's secure file share by day 18 at the latest. Chinese surgeons will re-review before surgery, and they occasionally spot something that changes the surgical plan — you want that conversation happening while you're still home.
Day 18: Prescription refills and med planning
You need enough of every daily medication to cover your entire trip plus 7 extra days. If you take a controlled substance (opioid pain meds, ADHD stimulants, benzodiazepines), talk to your prescriber early — China has strict rules on bringing controlled substances into the country, and some are outright banned even with a US prescription. Common categories to double-check: Adderall, Vyvanse, most opioids, and some sleep medications.
For anything questionable, ask your prescriber for a therapeutic equivalent that isn't restricted, or plan to have your Chinese hospital prescribe locally during your stay.
Day 15: Pre-op labs and clearances
If your Chinese surgeon has asked for updated bloodwork, EKG, chest X-ray, or specialist clearances (cardiology, endocrinology), day 15 is the deadline to have them done and results uploaded. Results from later than day 10 sometimes don't reach the surgical team in time and can trigger a delay on admission day. If your primary care doctor or specialist is booked out, use urgent care or a walk-in lab like Quest Diagnostics for the routine items.
Week 2 (Days 14-8): Logistics and the Real World
Day 14: Book flights and lodging
By day 14, your surgery date should be truly locked. This is when you book flights — not sooner. If you booked earlier and the hospital rescheduled, you already learned this lesson.
Book flights that arrive at least 48 hours before your admission date. Jet lag from a US-to-China flight (typically 12 to 15 hours) is real, and you don't want your first hospital appointment to happen while you're operating on 3 hours of sleep. Book the return flight for at least 7 days after the earliest possible discharge date your surgeon quoted, and add a change-fee-friendly fare — surgical recovery timelines slip.
For lodging, most patients stay in a hotel or serviced apartment within 15 minutes of the hospital. Your coordinator should have a list of vetted options at every price point. If you're doing this without a coordinator, look for properties with English-speaking front desk, an elevator, and a location on the same side of the city as your hospital — Chinese megacities are large, and a 45-minute taxi twice a day gets old fast.
Day 12: The companion conversation
If you're bringing a companion (recommended for any inpatient procedure), have the honest conversation about what you actually need them to do. Some patients want a full advocate — someone who tracks meds, asks the surgeon questions, and manages logistics. Others want emotional support and privacy. Both are valid. Sort this out before you land.
Day 10: Notify your US care team
Email your US primary care doctor and any specialist involved in your care with your travel dates, hospital name, and surgeon's name. Tell them you'd like a follow-up appointment within 2 weeks of your return. Some doctors are curious and supportive; others are dismissive. Either way, having a follow-up scheduled protects your continuity of care and gets any post-op medications refilled quickly.
Day 8: Financial buffer
Beyond your locked-in medical costs, plan for $200 to $400 per day in incidentals during your stay (food, taxis, over-the-counter meds, unexpected small tests). For a 21-day trip, that's an extra $4,000 to $8,000 in accessible funds. Split this across a US credit card that doesn't charge foreign transaction fees (Chase Sapphire, Capital One Venture, Amex Platinum) and a debit card for ATM withdrawals. Notify both banks of your travel dates so they don't freeze the cards on day 2.
Week 1 (Days 7-1): The Home Stretch
Day 7: Communication setup
Set up your phone for China now, not at the airport. Options:
- An eSIM from Airalo or Nomad ($20 to $40 for 3 weeks of data), activated the moment you land
- An international roaming plan from your US carrier (Verizon TravelPass, T-Mobile Magenta, AT&T International Day Pass) — simpler but pricier
- Download WeChat and set it up with a US phone number before you leave; most Chinese hospitals and coordinators communicate via WeChat
Also install a working VPN before you fly — Google, Gmail, WhatsApp, Instagram, and most Western social platforms are blocked inside China. ExpressVPN, Astrill, and LetsVPN are commonly used. Test it on your home Wi-Fi first.
Day 5: The pre-op medical list
Your surgeon will have a specific pre-op medication protocol — usually stopping blood thinners (aspirin, ibuprofen, fish oil, some supplements) 5 to 7 days before surgery, and staying on other medications. Print this list and stick it on your fridge. This is where healthy adults trip up because "just an Advil" the day before surgery isn't nothing.
Day 3: The packing list
Pack light. Chinese hospitals provide gowns, meals, and toiletries during inpatient stays. What to bring:
- Comfortable loose-fitting clothes for post-op (button-front shirts if you're getting anything shoulder-level or above)
- Slip-on shoes
- A universal power adapter (China uses Type A and Type I plugs, 220V)
- Any specific brand-name medication you rely on (some US brands aren't stocked in China)
- Photocopies of your passport, visa, insurance cards, and hospital confirmation, stored separately from the originals
- A small stash of USD cash for the airport ($200-$400 is usually enough)
Day 2: Confirm airport pickup
Message your coordinator with your final flight number, arrival time, and terminal 48 hours before departure. If the hospital or coordinator is arranging pickup, confirm the driver's name, phone number, and where they'll be waiting (usually just outside customs, holding a sign with your name).
Day 1: The final admin day
Set an out-of-office. Forward important mail. Water the plants. Confirm someone is checking your mail and, if applicable, taking care of pets. Charge every device. Get to bed early.
Common Late-Stage Slip-Ups (and How to Avoid Them)
The prescription that got left in the medicine cabinet
People pack the meds they think about (blood pressure, thyroid, birth control) and forget the ones they take automatically (allergy meds, reflux, sleep aid). Do a physical inventory of every prescription and every daily supplement three days before departure.
The wire that didn't clear
If you're paying part of the balance on arrival, don't leave it until day 30-plus. Chinese hospitals typically want the balance settled before you're released from the hospital, and payments from US banks to Chinese hospital accounts sometimes take 5+ business days to appear. Send the final wire 10 days before admission with a receipt confirmation from the hospital's finance office.
The companion who couldn't get in
Companions need their own visa, their own passport with 6 months validity, and — for some inpatient wards — their own hospital-issued visitor pass. Coordinate this ahead. Some ICU and post-surgical wards limit visitor hours strictly.
The forgotten follow-up
The single most common regret we hear from patients is "I wish I'd scheduled my US follow-up before I left." Post-surgical patients don't want to make phone calls while jet-lagged and healing. Schedule the appointment 4 to 6 weeks out before you fly.
Where OrientHealthLink Fits In
You can absolutely do this countdown yourself if you're organized, have flexible time, and are comfortable coordinating internationally. Many patients do. The reason most of them still use a coordinator is not the checklist itself — it's the compressed timeline. A good coordinator has done this hundreds of times and knows which day 22 problems become day 5 disasters if not caught early.
OrientHealthLink handles the timeline actively. We check in on days 30, 21, 14, 7, and 2. We chase your medical records so your Chinese surgeon isn't reviewing them on the morning of surgery. We escalate wire problems to the hospital's finance office. We confirm airport pickup with the driver by name, not just email confirmation. You don't need us to have a smooth trip — you need someone actively watching this timeline. If it's not us, make sure it's someone.
If you're earlier in the process and haven't locked in a hospital yet, our 7-step booking guide covers the first 8 weeks before this countdown begins. And if you want a sense of what actually happens on the ground once you land, read our detailed first 72 hours in China walkthrough.
The 30-Day Countdown at a Glance
| Day | Task | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| 30 | Written confirmation of date, surgeon, cost | Everything else depends on this |
| 28 | Travel medical insurance | Covers emergencies, not the surgery |
| 25 | Raise wire limits, test wire | Bank issues take days to fix |
| 22 | Passport validity check, visa | 6 months minimum required |
| 21 | Upload full medical dossier | Surgeon needs time to review |
| 18 | Prescription refills, check restrictions | Some meds banned in China |
| 15 | Pre-op labs and clearances | Results must reach team on time |
| 14 | Book flights and lodging | Only after date is locked |
| 12 | Align with companion | Set expectations early |
| 10 | Notify US care team | Schedule follow-up now |
| 8 | Financial buffer, notify banks | Prevent card freezes |
| 7 | eSIM, WeChat, VPN setup | Communication continuity |
| 5 | Print pre-op medication protocol | Avoid last-minute mistakes |
| 3 | Pack, photocopy documents | Redundancy matters |
| 2 | Confirm airport pickup | Landing tired is not the time |
| 1 | Out-of-office, rest, charge devices | Start rested |
If you're staring at this list and thinking "I don't have 30 days" — that's fine. Almost every item on this list can be compressed into 10 to 14 days for urgent cases. The order matters more than the exact spacing. Confirmation before flights, records before pre-op labs, money before deposits.
And if you want a coordinator watching the countdown for you, that's what we do. Get a free assessment and we'll tell you honestly whether your timeline is realistic or whether you need to push the date by a week.
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