How Much Does Surgery Cost in China? Full 2026 Price Breakdown
One of the most common questions international patients ask when considering treatment in China is straightforward: how much will it actually cost?
It is a fair question, and unfortunately, it is one that the medical tourism industry does not always answer transparently. Vague claims of "up to 80% savings" are common, but patients need real numbers to make real decisions. This article provides a comprehensive, honest price breakdown for medical procedures in China as of 2026, covering everything from a basic outpatient consultation to complex cancer treatment protocols.
All prices listed are approximate ranges in US dollars, based on costs at Grade 3, Tier A hospitals (China's top-rated institutions — see our guide to the top 10 hospitals for international patients). Actual prices may vary depending on the specific hospital, the complexity of your case, the materials or implants used, and your length of stay. Where relevant, US and UK comparison prices are included to illustrate the savings.
Understanding China's Healthcare Pricing Structure
Before diving into specific numbers, it helps to understand how pricing works in Chinese hospitals.
What Is Typically Included
At most Chinese hospitals, quoted procedure prices generally include:
- The surgical or treatment fee itself (surgeon, operating room, equipment)
- Standard anesthesia
- Basic post-operative care and monitoring
- Standard medications administered during the hospital stay
- Routine follow-up consultations during the inpatient period
What Is Usually Separate
The following costs are typically billed separately:
- Pre-operative diagnostic tests (blood work, imaging, ECG, etc.)
- Specialized implants or prosthetics (joint implants, dental implants, stents, lenses)
- Extended hospital stays beyond the standard recovery period
- Specialized medications, particularly imported or biologic drugs
- Post-discharge follow-up consultations
- Rehabilitation and physical therapy sessions
How Pricing Compares to the West
One of the reasons China's healthcare costs are so much lower than Western countries is structural. Chinese hospitals benefit from lower labor costs, government subsidies for public hospitals, domestic manufacturing of many medical devices and implants, and economies of scale driven by enormous patient volumes. Critically, these cost advantages do not come at the expense of quality: the same surgical techniques, equipment, and treatment protocols used at top Chinese hospitals are identical to those employed at leading Western institutions.
Outpatient Consultations and Diagnostics
| Service | China (USD) | USA (USD) | UK (USD) |
|---|---|---|---|
| General outpatient consultation | $4-15 | $200-500 | $80-250 |
| Specialist consultation | $8-30 | $300-800 | $150-400 |
| VIP/International dept. consultation | $30-80 | N/A | N/A |
| Blood panel (comprehensive) | $15-50 | $200-1,000 | $100-400 |
| CT scan | $40-120 | $500-3,000 | $300-1,000 |
| MRI scan | $80-200 | $1,000-5,000 | $500-2,000 |
| PET-CT scan | $400-800 | $3,000-10,000 | $1,500-4,000 |
| Comprehensive health checkup package | $300-800 | $2,000-5,000 | $1,000-3,000 |
The difference in consultation and diagnostic pricing is striking. A PET-CT scan, which is critical for cancer staging and costs several thousand dollars in the West, can be obtained for under $800 at a top Chinese hospital. This makes China an excellent destination even just for diagnostic workups and second opinions.
Dental Procedures
| Procedure | China (USD) | USA (USD) | UK (USD) | Savings vs. USA |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dental cleaning | $15-40 | $100-300 | $80-200 | 85-90% |
| Tooth extraction (simple) | $10-30 | $150-400 | $100-250 | 90-95% |
| Tooth extraction (surgical) | $30-80 | $250-600 | $200-400 | 85-90% |
| Composite filling | $20-60 | $150-400 | $100-250 | 85% |
| Root canal treatment | $50-150 | $700-1,500 | $500-1,000 | 90% |
| Porcelain crown | $150-400 | $1,000-2,500 | $800-1,500 | 80-85% |
| Single dental implant (including crown) | $800-2,000 | $3,000-6,000 | $2,500-4,000 | 65-75% |
| All-on-4 implant restoration (per arch) | $5,000-10,000 | $20,000-30,000 | $15,000-25,000 | 65-75% |
| Full set porcelain veneers (20 teeth) | $3,000-7,000 | $20,000-50,000 | $15,000-30,000 | 80-85% |
| Invisalign/clear aligner treatment | $2,000-4,000 | $4,000-8,000 | $3,000-6,000 | 50% |
| Dental bridge (3-unit) | $400-1,000 | $2,500-5,000 | $1,500-3,500 | 80% |
Dental procedures offer some of the most dramatic savings. A patient needing multiple implants and crowns who might face a bill of $30,000 to $50,000 in the United States could receive equivalent treatment at a top Chinese dental hospital for $8,000 to $15,000. West China Hospital's stomatology department and the dental departments at major Beijing and Shanghai hospitals use the same implant systems (Straumann, Nobel Biocare, Osstem) available worldwide.
Eye Surgery (Ophthalmology)
| Procedure | China (USD) | USA (USD) | UK (USD) | Savings vs. USA |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| LASIK (per eye) | $1,200-1,700 | $2,000-4,000 | $1,500-3,000 | 40-60% |
| SMILE (per eye) | $1,300-1,800 | $2,500-4,500 | $2,000-3,500 | 50-60% |
| ICL implant (per eye) | $2,000-3,500 | $4,000-6,500 | $3,500-5,500 | 45-50% |
| Cataract surgery with IOL (per eye) | $800-1,500 | $3,500-7,000 | $3,000-5,000 | 75-80% |
| Vitrectomy | $1,500-3,500 | $5,000-15,000 | $4,000-10,000 | 70-75% |
| Pterygium removal | $300-700 | $1,500-4,000 | $1,000-3,000 | 80% |
| Glaucoma surgery | $1,000-2,500 | $4,000-10,000 | $3,000-7,000 | 70-75% |
LASIK and SMILE procedures in China use the same Carl Zeiss VisuMax or Alcon platforms found in top Western eye clinics. Chinese ophthalmologists perform extraordinarily high volumes of refractive surgery, with leading surgeons completing thousands of procedures per year. The LASIK price range of $1,200 to $1,700 per eye typically includes pre-operative testing, the procedure itself, and standard follow-up visits.
Cardiac Surgery and Interventions
| Procedure | China (USD) | USA (USD) | UK (USD) | Savings vs. USA |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coronary angiography | $500-1,200 | $5,000-15,000 | $3,000-8,000 | 90% |
| Angioplasty with single stent | $4,000-8,000 | $30,000-50,000 | $10,000-20,000 | 85% |
| Coronary artery bypass (CABG) | $8,000-25,000 | $70,000-150,000 | $30,000-50,000 | 85% |
| Heart valve replacement (mechanical) | $10,000-25,000 | $80,000-170,000 | $35,000-60,000 | 85% |
| TAVR (transcatheter valve) | $25,000-45,000 | $100,000-200,000 | $50,000-80,000 | 70-75% |
| Pacemaker implantation | $5,000-12,000 | $25,000-50,000 | $15,000-25,000 | 75-80% |
| ICD implantation | $10,000-20,000 | $40,000-80,000 | $25,000-40,000 | 75% |
| Atrial septal defect (ASD) closure | $5,000-10,000 | $25,000-50,000 | $15,000-30,000 | 80% |
Cardiac surgery represents one of the areas of greatest savings. A coronary bypass that costs $100,000 or more in the United States can be performed at Fuwai Hospital or Zhongshan Hospital for $15,000 to $25,000. These hospitals are among the highest-volume cardiac surgery centers in the world, and their outcomes data is comparable to the best Western institutions. The price difference for a heart valve replacement alone could fund the entire trip several times over.
Orthopedic Surgery
| Procedure | China (USD) | USA (USD) | UK (USD) | Savings vs. USA |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total knee replacement (unilateral) | $5,000-12,000 | $30,000-60,000 | $15,000-25,000 | 80% |
| Total knee replacement (bilateral) | $9,000-20,000 | $55,000-100,000 | $28,000-45,000 | 80% |
| Total hip replacement | $6,000-15,000 | $30,000-65,000 | $15,000-28,000 | 75-80% |
| ACL reconstruction | $3,000-8,000 | $20,000-40,000 | $8,000-15,000 | 80% |
| Rotator cuff repair | $3,000-7,000 | $15,000-35,000 | $8,000-15,000 | 80% |
| Spinal fusion (single level) | $8,000-18,000 | $50,000-100,000 | $25,000-45,000 | 80% |
| Spinal disc replacement | $10,000-22,000 | $40,000-80,000 | $20,000-40,000 | 70-75% |
| Arthroscopic knee surgery | $2,000-5,000 | $10,000-25,000 | $5,000-12,000 | 80% |
| Meniscus repair | $2,000-4,500 | $10,000-20,000 | $5,000-10,000 | 80% |
Orthopedic prices in China include the use of internationally recognized implant systems. For total knee replacement, hospitals typically use implants from manufacturers like Zimmer Biomet, Smith & Nephew, or DePuy Synthes. Patients should discuss implant options with their surgeon, as domestically manufactured implants (which have improved significantly in quality) cost less than imported alternatives.
Cancer Treatment
| Treatment | China (USD) | USA (USD) | Savings vs. USA |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cancer diagnostic workup (comprehensive) | $500-2,000 | $5,000-15,000 | 85-90% |
| Tumor removal surgery (varies by type) | $3,000-15,000 | $20,000-80,000 | 80% |
| Chemotherapy (per cycle, standard) | $500-3,000 | $5,000-15,000 | 80% |
| Targeted therapy (per month) | $800-3,000 | $5,000-15,000 | 80% |
| Immunotherapy (per cycle) | $1,500-5,000 | $10,000-30,000 | 80% |
| Radiation therapy (full course, IMRT) | $3,000-10,000 | $20,000-60,000 | 80% |
| Proton beam therapy (full course) | $20,000-40,000 | $50,000-120,000 | 60-65% |
| CAR-T cell therapy | $50,000-80,000 | $400,000-500,000 | 85% |
| TCM integrative oncology (3-month program) | $2,000-5,000 | N/A | N/A |
Cancer treatment is where the financial impact is often greatest, because treatment is prolonged and cumulative costs are enormous. A patient undergoing a year of immunotherapy in the US might pay $200,000 or more; the same treatment in China could cost $20,000 to $60,000.
CAR-T cell therapy deserves special attention. This revolutionary treatment for certain blood cancers costs $373,000 to $475,000 per infusion in the United States. China has developed its own approved CAR-T products at a fraction of the cost, ranging from $50,000 to $80,000. For patients for whom CAR-T is medically indicated, this represents a potentially life-saving option that is financially out of reach in many Western countries.
China is also the only major medical tourism destination offering TCM integrative oncology programs, where Traditional Chinese Medicine is used alongside conventional cancer treatment to manage side effects, support immune function, and improve quality of life.
Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM)
| Treatment | China (USD) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| TCM consultation (initial, senior practitioner) | $10-30 | Includes pulse and tongue diagnosis |
| Acupuncture session | $10-30 | Per session, typically 30-60 minutes |
| Herbal medicine prescription (2 weeks) | $30-100 | Customized herbal formula |
| Cupping therapy session | $8-20 | Per session |
| Tui na therapeutic massage | $15-40 | Per session, 30-60 minutes |
| Moxibustion session | $8-20 | Per session |
| Comprehensive TCM treatment course (2 weeks) | $500-1,500 | Daily treatments, multiple modalities |
| Integrative TCM oncology program (1 month) | $1,000-3,000 | Combined TCM and Western medicine |
TCM treatments in China are remarkably affordable. A comprehensive two-week course of daily acupuncture, herbal medicine, and other modalities at a top-tier TCM hospital might cost $500 to $1,500, a fraction of what a single acupuncture session costs at a private practice in many Western cities. The quality difference is also significant: practitioners at institutions like Guang'anmen Hospital have typically completed seven or more years of specialized TCM education and decades of clinical experience.
Reproductive Medicine and Fertility
| Procedure | China (USD) | USA (USD) | UK (USD) | Savings vs. USA |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IVF cycle (standard) | $3,000-6,000 | $12,000-25,000 | $6,000-12,000 | 75% |
| IVF with ICSI | $4,000-7,000 | $15,000-30,000 | $8,000-15,000 | 75% |
| Egg freezing (per cycle) | $2,000-4,000 | $8,000-15,000 | $5,000-8,000 | 70% |
| Hysteroscopy (diagnostic) | $300-800 | $3,000-8,000 | $2,000-5,000 | 90% |
| Laparoscopic fertility surgery | $2,000-5,000 | $10,000-25,000 | $5,000-15,000 | 80% |
Fertility treatment costs in China are significantly lower than in the West, and China's major reproductive medicine centers (including those at Tongji Hospital, PUMCH, and Zhongshan Hospital) have very high case volumes and strong success rates.
What Affects the Final Price?
Several factors can cause your actual costs to fall above or below the ranges listed:
Hospital Tier and Location
Hospitals in Beijing and Shanghai tend to be 20-30% more expensive than equally ranked hospitals in cities like Wuhan, Chengdu, or Guangzhou. Choosing a top hospital in a second-tier city can offer the same quality at a lower cost.
International vs. General Department
Many hospitals offer both general and international/VIP departments. International departments provide English-language support, private rooms, and more personalized service, but typically charge 2-3 times the general department rate. Even at the higher VIP pricing, costs remain dramatically below Western levels.
Implant and Material Choices
For procedures involving implants (dental, orthopedic, cardiac), the choice between domestic Chinese-manufactured and imported implants can significantly affect the total cost. Domestic implants have improved greatly in quality and are substantially cheaper. Your surgeon can advise on the best option for your specific case.
Length of Stay
The quoted surgical price typically assumes a standard recovery period. Complications or slower-than-expected recovery can extend the hospital stay and increase costs. Having adequate travel insurance or a contingency budget is advisable.
Medication Costs
Standard medications are generally included, but specialized drugs (particularly imported biologics, targeted therapies, or certain immunotherapy agents) are billed separately and can be a significant portion of the total cost for cancer patients.
Getting an Accurate Quote
Given the variables involved, the best way to understand what your specific treatment will cost is to obtain a personalized quote from the hospital or a medical tourism facilitator. OrientHealthLink provides detailed, transparent cost estimates for international patients, breaking down each component of the expected bill so there are no surprises. This includes the procedure fee, hospital stay, estimated medication costs, diagnostic tests, and professional service fees.
To get an accurate estimate, you will typically need to provide:
- A description of your condition and the treatment you are seeking
- Relevant medical records, imaging, and test results
- Your preferred hospital or city (or let the facilitator recommend the best option)
- Any preferences regarding VIP vs. general department services
Payment Methods and Insurance
Most Chinese hospitals accept:
- Cash (Chinese yuan, exchanged on-site or at banks)
- International credit cards (Visa, Mastercard) at international/VIP departments
- Bank wire transfer (for pre-payment or deposit)
- WeChat Pay and Alipay (if you can set up a Chinese-linked account)
International health insurance coverage for treatment in China varies by provider. Many global insurance plans will cover medically necessary treatment at accredited hospitals in China. You should contact your insurance provider before traveling to understand your coverage. Chinese hospitals provide detailed medical reports and itemized invoices suitable for insurance reimbursement claims.
Is It Worth It? Calculating the True Value
When evaluating the total cost of a medical trip to China, factor in:
- Round-trip airfare: $500-1,500 depending on origin and class
- Accommodation: $30-150 per night depending on city and hotel class
- Food and daily expenses: $20-50 per day
- Medical translation/facilitation services: Varies by provider
- Travel insurance: $50-200 for comprehensive coverage
Even after adding these costs, patients typically save 50-80% compared to having the same procedure performed in the United States. For major procedures like cardiac surgery, joint replacement, or cancer treatment, the savings often amount to tens of thousands of dollars, making the trip not just worthwhile but financially transformative.
Conclusion
China offers international patients an extraordinary combination of world-class medical quality and affordability. From routine dental work to the most advanced cancer therapies available anywhere in the world, the cost savings are substantial and consistent. To see how China's pricing stacks up against other popular destinations, read our China vs Thailand vs Turkey cost comparison. The key is doing your research, choosing the right hospital for your specific needs, and working with a trusted partner who can provide accurate pricing and seamless coordination.
About OrientHealthLink
OrientHealthLink is committed to transparent pricing for international patients seeking treatment in China. We provide detailed, itemized cost estimates before you travel, covering every aspect of your treatment so you can plan with confidence. From initial consultation to post-treatment follow-up, our team coordinates every detail of your medical journey. For a step-by-step overview of what to expect, see our patient's guide to seeking treatment in China. Request a personalized cost estimate for your treatment at OrientHealthLink.com.
