What it really costs abroad, the risks nobody puts in the brochure, who it suits and who it does not, and the questions that keep you safe. We never name a clinic.
FUE hair transplant abroad commonly costs from about £1,950 for 2,000 to 4,000 grafts, often a half to a fifth of UK pricing for similar work. At a properly accredited clinic where a licensed doctor performs the surgery, outcomes can match home. The danger is the cheap, high volume end, where unlicensed technicians do the work and results, and safety, suffer.
Costs below are indicative ranges, reviewed June 2026, and vary by graft count, technique, and what a package includes. They are not a quote and not a promise of a result.
Follicular unit excision, or FUE, moves hair from the back and sides of the scalp, where hair is genetically resistant to balding, to thinning or bald areas. Individual follicular units are extracted one at a time with a small punch, then placed into tiny incisions in the recipient area. There is no long strip scar, recovery is quicker than older strip methods, and the donor area heals as small dots. DHI and sapphire FUE are variations on the same idea, differing in the tools used to make and fill the incisions.
Who it tends to suit. People with stable, patterned hair loss and a healthy donor area, who have realistic expectations about density and are old enough that the pattern of loss is reasonably settled.
Who it tends not to suit. People with very diffuse thinning or a limited donor area, those with active scalp conditions, anyone expecting the density of a full teenage head of hair, and people still in the early, fast moving stage of loss, where a transplant alone may not keep pace. A transplant does not stop ongoing native hair loss, so many people also need medication to hold what they have.
Abroad, a transplant often runs a half to a fifth of UK pricing for comparable work, largely because of lower labour and facility costs and a competitive market, not lower quality by default. Price is driven by the number of grafts, the technique, how much of the work a licensed surgeon does, and what a package includes.
Indicative ranges, reviewed June 2026. Not a quote. A headline price that looks far below the rest of the market is often a sign that a licensed doctor is not doing the surgery.
Always confirm in writing what the price covers and what is extra, and what currency you are billed in. US pricing is typically higher again, often several thousand dollars upward.
FUE is generally considered safe. Large clinical series put overall complication rates at roughly 1.2% to 4.7%, with serious events uncommon. That said, the risks are real and worth understanding before you commit.
Swelling, redness, scabbing, itching, temporary numbness, and folliculitis. Shock loss, a temporary shedding of transplanted and sometimes nearby hairs, is normal in the first weeks before regrowth.
Infection is uncommon at a clean, accredited clinic. Skin necrosis, where tissue dies, is rare, reported in roughly 0.1% to 0.5% of cases, but serious and needs prompt medical treatment.
An unnatural hairline, patchy or thin growth, and a permanently overharvested donor area are the outcomes people regret most. These trace overwhelmingly to inexperienced or technician led work, not to the procedure itself.
No honest clinic can promise a specific density. Results take up to 12 months, some people need a second session, and a transplant does not stop ongoing native loss, so further thinning around the graft is possible without maintenance.
The single biggest danger is so called ghost surgery, where a named surgeon advertises but unlicensed technicians do the operation. The ISHRS reports that more than 80% of complication complaints involve technicians rather than physicians, and that the large majority of botched results come from facilities with no qualified surgeon present. In Turkey a licensed doctor is legally required to perform the incisions and extractions, yet some clinics break this rule. If something goes wrong once you are home, revision and follow up are far harder to arrange.
A safe clinic answers all six in writing without flinching. Vague answers, pressure to book quickly, and prices far below the market are the warning signs that matter most. We do not name clinics, so use these to judge any you are sent.
Swelling and scabbing settle. Sleep propped up, follow the washing instructions, and avoid sun, sweat, and alcohol. The transplanted hairs then shed, which is normal.
New growth begins. It is patchy and thin at first. Good clinics check in remotely and review photos through this stage.
The result becomes visible and density builds. This is when most people feel the change is real.
The final result settles by around a year, sometimes up to 18 months. A second session is sometimes needed for full density.
Once you are home, a complication or a disappointing result is hard to manage remotely. Local doctors are often reluctant to take on another clinic's work, so agree before you travel exactly how follow up, revisions, and any guarantee will be handled.
Standard travel insurance rarely covers elective cosmetic procedures or their complications. Read the policy closely and consider dedicated medical complications cover before you book.
Send one brief and we route it to vetted clinics that meet the standards above. They return tailored plans and all in prices. You choose, with no pressure.
Free and no obligation. Accredited clinics only. We never sell your details.
At an accredited clinic where a licensed doctor performs the surgery, outcomes can match home. The risk concentrates at the cheap, high volume end where unlicensed technicians do the work. This guide exists to help you tell the two apart.
Mostly lower labour and facility costs and a competitive market, not lower quality by default. A price far below the rest of the market, though, is often a sign that a surgeon is not doing the operation.
The transplanted hair sheds first, new growth starts at three to four months, and the result settles by around 12 months, sometimes up to 18. No clinic can honestly promise a specific density.
It is when a named surgeon advertises but unlicensed technicians perform the operation. It is the leading cause of poor results and is illegal in Turkey, where a doctor must do the incisions. Always confirm which steps the surgeon performs.
Revision and follow up are harder to arrange from another country, and standard travel insurance rarely covers elective procedures. Agree the aftercare, guarantee, and revision terms in writing before you travel.
How medical travel works there, the accreditations to check, and the realistic trade offs.
The indicative price ranges, what drives them, and why abroad differs from home.
The six questions that separate a safe clinic from a risky one, and the red flags.
Related procedure guides for DHI hair transplant, sapphire FUE, and beard transplant are in production. In the meantime you can Get Matched or browse all procedures.
One short, honest dispatch a week. A cost reality, a safety question, and one thing to ask before you book anything.