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hair transplant · IN
Medical visa (M visa) available for up to 60 days, extendable. Requires letter from Indian hospital. Medical attendant visa available for companions.
Follicular Unit Extraction (FUE) involves harvesting individual hair follicles from a donor area (typically the back of the head) and transplanting them to areas of thinning or baldness. Results take 9-12 months to fully develop. The procedure is performed under local anaesthesia.
Full procedure guide →Hair transplantation is a long-duration outpatient procedure under local anaesthesia, with technique (FUE vs DHI vs FUT), graft survival, and donor-area management determining the long-term result. India's hair-transplant sector is concentrated in Mumbai, Delhi, and Bangalore; India regulates physicians through the National Medical Commission (which superseded the Medical Council of India in 2020); NABH operates the leading hospital accreditation programme and consumer commissions hear most clinical-negligence claims. Verify that the lead surgeon (not just the technicians) is registered with the named regulator and that graft counts and extraction technique are documented in writing.
Source: National Medical Commission
India's framework is unusual in giving consumer-protection forums a primary role in clinical negligence claims. Following the Supreme Court's 1995 decision in Indian Medical Association v VP Shantha, medical services fall within the Consumer Protection Act, which means patients can bring claims before consumer commissions at district, state, and national levels — typically with lower court fees, faster timelines, and simpler procedures than ordinary civil courts. The Consumer Protection Act 2019 has expanded jurisdiction and introduced product-liability principles. Disciplinary oversight sits with the National Medical Commission (NMC), which superseded the Medical Council of India in 2020, and with state medical councils. NABH operates the leading national hospital accreditation programme and publishes inspection-pass status. Civil litigation under tort principles remains available but is rarely the first route for foreign patients given the timelines involved. International patients should retain documentation in English where possible; Indian courts and consumer commissions accept English-language filings.
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The M-category medical visa requires a letter from the treating Indian hospital confirming the appointment and nature of treatment, along with a standard visa application. It can be obtained for stays of up to sixty days, extendable within India, and includes a companion (attendant) visa for an accompanying family member or carer. Applications are made through the Indian embassy or high commission in the patient's home country.
India uses the Indian Rupee (INR). Major international hospitals in Delhi and Mumbai accept payment by international credit card and can provide cost estimates in US dollars or other currencies. Currency exchange facilities are available at international airports. Bringing a small amount of cash in US dollars or euros provides a useful backup.
English is an official language of India and the working language of the medical profession throughout the country. At JCI and NABH-accredited hospitals catering to international patients, all clinical communication — consultations, discharge summaries, operative notes — is conducted in English as standard. This is one of India's significant practical advantages as a medical tourism destination.
India's the registry-listed private hospitals have twenty-four-hour emergency departments equipped to manage complex medical emergencies. Travel insurance with medical emergency and repatriation coverage is essential, as uninsured emergency care at private hospitals can be expensive. The national emergency number in India is 112, and most major hospitals have dedicated emergency helplines.
The Consumer Protection Act 2019 covers medical negligence, and patients can file complaints with the District, State, or National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission. This system is more accessible than traditional civil litigation and has a track record of awarding compensation. The National Medical Commission also handles professional misconduct complaints.
Indian hospitals at the international standard routinely prepare comprehensive discharge packages including operative notes, imaging, pathology reports, and post-operative instructions in English. Before discharge, confirm that all documents have been provided and share them with your GP or relevant specialist at home. The international patient department can liaise directly with home-country physicians if needed.
The major medical tourism cities — Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai, and Hyderabad — are navigable and generally safe for international patients when using established transport and accommodation. The hospitals themselves provide comprehensive support including airport pickup, accommodation assistance, and security within the hospital campus. Standard urban precautions apply in the wider city.
Delhi experiences extreme heat in summer (April to June, exceeding 40°C) and a cool winter (November to February). Mumbai is hot and humid year-round with a heavy monsoon season from June to September. For elective procedures requiring outdoor activity during recovery, the October to March window in northern India is generally the most comfortable. Patients recovering in air-conditioned hospital accommodation are less affected by seasonal variation.
NABH — the National Accreditation Board for Hospitals and Healthcare Providers — is India's domestic hospital accreditation body and operates to standards broadly comparable with JCI, though the two are separate schemes. NABH accreditation is widespread across the Indian private hospital sector and provides a meaningful quality signal for domestic and international patients alike.
Yes. The Indian medical visa includes provision for a companion (attendant) visa for one accompanying family member or carer, which allows them to stay for the duration of the patient's treatment. This is a practical and valued feature for patients undergoing complex or lengthy procedures who require support during their stay.
Transplanted hairs typically shed within two to four weeks of the procedure before regrowing — a normal phase that can be alarming but does not indicate failure. Meaningful new growth is usually visible from three to four months, with the full, final result assessable at nine to twelve months.
When performed by an experienced surgeon with careful hairline design and natural graft angulation, FUE results are generally undetectable. The small circular extraction sites in the donor area heal as tiny white dots that are invisible when hair is kept at a normal length.
Yes — one of the advantages of FUE over older strip techniques is that the donor area can be shaved without revealing a linear scar. The small dot scars from individual punch extractions are not visible at normal shaved lengths for most patients.
The number of grafts required depends on the extent of hair loss and the density goal. A receding hairline may require 1,000 to 2,000 grafts, whilst advanced crown and frontal thinning can require 3,000 to 5,000 grafts or more. An in-person or photo-based assessment is needed for an accurate estimate.
The transplanted follicles are taken from the donor area at the back of the scalp, which is genetically resistant to the hormone DHT responsible for male pattern baldness. These follicles retain their resistance after transplantation, meaning the transplanted hair is permanent. Native hair in other areas may continue to thin over time.
Good candidates have stable hair loss, sufficient donor density at the back and sides of the scalp, and realistic expectations. Patients with diffuse thinning across the entire scalp, active autoimmune conditions causing hair loss, or insufficient donor supply may not achieve satisfactory results.
The procedure is performed under local anaesthesia, and the injections used to numb the scalp are the most uncomfortable part for most patients. The extraction and implantation stages themselves are not painful, though the scalp may feel tender for several days afterwards.
Yes, women can undergo hair transplant surgery, though the pattern of female hair loss differs from male pattern baldness and requires careful assessment. Women with localised thinning or a receding frontal hairline are generally better candidates than those with diffuse thinning across the whole scalp.