Seoul, South Korea·Est. 2015·Verified 2y ago
A cosmetic surgery clinic in Seoul's Gangnam district specialising in rhinoplasty and breast augmentation. The clinic does not publish pricing on its website, requiring direct consultation for quotes.
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cosmetic surgery · KR
Medical tourism visa (C-3-3) available for 90 days. Can be extended to G-1-10 visa for longer treatments.
Submuscular breast augmentation places the implant beneath the pectoralis major muscle, in contrast to subglandular placement under the breast tissue alone. The submuscular approach (which is most commonly the 'dual-plane' variant, where the upper pole of the implant is fully submuscular and the lower pole is in the subglandular plane) is preferred for patients with thin breast tissue, thin overlying skin, or a preference for a more natural-looking upper-pole transition. Compared to subglandular placement, submuscular implants have lower capsular contracture rates, better mammographic visibility, and a smoother appearance under thin tissue — at the cost of a longer recovery, more initial post-operative pain, and visible 'animation deformity' on chest contraction in some patients.
Full procedure guide →Submuscular (typically dual-plane) breast augmentation places the implant beneath pectoralis major for better mammographic visibility and lower capsular contracture rates than subglandular placement. In South Korea, the relevant providers are concentrated in Seoul; verification of the operating clinician's licence with the named regulator is the foundational due-diligence step. Confirm implant brand, model, lot, and surface texture in writing for the implant passport; ask the surgeon's animation-deformity rate and dual-plane experience.
South Korea's framework centres on the Korea Medical Dispute Mediation and Arbitration Agency (KMDMAA, branded K-MEDI), a statutory body established under the Act on Remedies for Injuries from Medical Malpractice and Mediation of Medical Disputes. K-MEDI operates a structured mediation process free of charge to patients; if both parties consent, the matter proceeds to arbitration with a binding decision. K-MEDI also operates a no-fault compensation scheme for specific maternity-related injuries, partially funded by levies on practitioners. Disciplinary oversight sits with the Ministry of Health and Welfare and the Korean Medical Association. Civil litigation under the Korean Civil Code is available, with a three-year limitation from the patient's knowledge of harm. Korean courts handle expert evidence rigorously and award damages by reference to lost-earnings and care-cost calculations; awards are typically modest by US standards but proceedings are faster than in many neighbouring jurisdictions.
Full country profile →1 clinic in our registry
Seoul, South Korea·Est. 2015·Verified 2y ago
A cosmetic surgery clinic in Seoul's Gangnam district specialising in rhinoplasty and breast augmentation. The clinic does not publish pricing on its website, requiring direct consultation for quotes.
South Korea offers a dedicated medical tourism visa (C-3-3) for stays of up to ninety days, available to patients who have confirmed medical appointments. For longer treatments, a medical stay visa (G-1-10) can be applied for. Many nationalities are also eligible for visa-free entry for shorter stays, which covers most cosmetic procedures.
South Korea uses the Korean Won (KRW). International credit cards are widely accepted at hospitals, clinics, hotels, and most retailers in Seoul. Currency exchange is available at Incheon Airport and throughout the city. Major cosmetic clinics catering to international patients often quote prices in US dollars.
Internationally oriented cosmetic surgery clinics in Gangnam typically employ English-speaking coordinators who handle patient communication from the initial enquiry through to discharge. Senior surgeons at these clinics often speak English or work with interpreters. Outside of internationally oriented facilities, Korean is the working language and English proficiency is less consistent.
The Korea Medical Dispute Mediation and Arbitration Agency (KMDMAA) provides a structured mediation process that is accessible to foreign patients. Civil litigation is also available. Practically, pursuing a dispute from abroad is difficult, which makes choosing a well-established clinic with a verifiable track record all the more important.
Most surgeons recommend a minimum stay of one to two weeks in Seoul following facial procedures such as rhinoplasty or jaw contouring. This allows for the mandatory post-operative review, suture or splint removal, and early monitoring of healing before long-haul travel. Swelling is at its most pronounced in the first week and a follow-up at seven to ten days is typically required.
Standard travel insurance policies almost universally exclude complications from elective cosmetic procedures. Specialist medical tourism insurance that explicitly covers the planned procedure and related complications must be purchased separately. Patients should confirm coverage terms in writing with the insurer before travelling.
South Korea's healthcare system is among the most advanced in the world and emergency services are well-equipped. The emergency number is 119. Most major hospitals in Seoul have emergency departments with English interpretation services available. Travel insurance with emergency medical and repatriation coverage ensures access to appropriate care without financial barriers.
Many South Korean cosmetic surgery clinics maintain extensive before-and-after galleries and can provide case-specific examples for patients with similar facial structures or concerns. The high volume of procedures performed means that surgeons typically have substantial documented outcome records. Patients should ask to see results for their specific procedure type before committing.
Internationally oriented clinics provide written post-operative instructions in English as standard, and coordinators are available to answer questions in English during the recovery period. Translation apps can assist with everyday interactions outside the clinic. Patients should request written English instructions before discharge and ensure they understand all post-operative care requirements.
Incheon International Airport, a major international hub, is a major hub with direct long-haul routes to key cities in Europe, North America, Southeast Asia, and Australasia. Travel times are approximately ten to twelve hours from major European cities and ten hours from the US West Coast. The airport is connected to Seoul by the AREX express rail service.
When the pectoralis major contracts (during exercise or arm movement), submuscular implants can visibly move or distort. This is most pronounced in fully submuscular placement and is minimised by dual-plane technique with partial muscle release. Animation deformity is largely cosmetic and rarely requires revision unless severe.
Submuscular placement has lower capsular contracture rates, better mammographic visibility for cancer screening, and a more natural upper-pole transition in patients with thin tissue. For patients with substantial natural breast tissue, subglandular placement may produce a softer, more 'natural-moving' result without animation concerns.
Most patients do not experience meaningful long-term loss of chest strength after fully submuscular or dual-plane placement. Some athletes (powerlifters, bodybuilders) may notice changes; these patients sometimes prefer subglandular placement for that reason.
Light walking from day 1. Lower-body exercise from week 2-3. Full upper-body exercise (chest, shoulders, back) from week 6-8. Specific guidance from the surgeon should be followed; over-eager return to upper-body work is one of the more common precipitants of implant displacement.
Multiple studies (and ASPS data) support a lower capsular contracture rate with submuscular placement, particularly with smooth implants. The absolute rates vary by study but typical 10-year rates are 5-10% submuscular vs 15-25% subglandular.
Identical pricing at most clinics — the implant and operative time are the same. The cost driver is the implant itself, not the pocket location.
Submuscular placement does not affect milk-producing glandular tissue and most studies show no impact on breastfeeding success rates. The incision approach (peri-areolar, infra-mammary, trans-axillary) has a larger effect on nipple sensation than pocket location does, and peri-areolar incisions carry the highest reported nipple-sensation-disturbance rate.
Yes — pocket-conversion from subglandular to submuscular (or to dual-plane) is a common revision procedure, often performed for capsular contracture or for thin tissue cover. The capsule from the original pocket is typically excised; the implant is exchanged at the same operation in most cases.