Home Tools Quote Completeness Checker Quote Completeness Checker A written clinic quote should itemise everything you will be charged for — and everything you will not. Tick what is in your quote. The tool flags what is missing, ranked by risk, and gives you a printable list of questions to put back to the clinic before paying a deposit.
Reference only — not medical advice. See disclaimer .
Tick what is in the written quote A genuine clinic quote will name each line below. Verbal assurances do not count — tick only what appears in the written document.
Result 18 of 18 items missing. 10 are high risk. Do not pay a deposit until each missing item is put in writing.
Missing items
• Surgeon / lead clinician fee is named and included (high risk if missing) • Anaesthesia and anaesthetist fee included (high risk if missing) • Hospital / facility fee included (high risk if missing) • Pre-operative tests, scans, and bloods included (medium risk if missing) • Medications (peri-op and discharge) included (medium risk if missing) • Implants or materials are specified (not just "included") (high risk if missing) • Implant or device brand and model are listed (high risk if missing) • Compression garments or post-op consumables included (lower risk if missing) • At least one follow-up appointment included (medium risk if missing) • Airport and clinic transfers included (lower risk if missing) • Accommodation included or itemised (lower risk if missing) • Translator / interpreter included for consent and discharge (medium risk if missing) • Complication treatment terms in writing (who pays, where) (high risk if missing) • Written revision policy with time window (high risk if missing) • Written refund / cancellation terms (high risk if missing) • Full medical records released before you fly home (high risk if missing) • Emergency-transfer arrangement to a named hospital (high risk if missing) • Quote lists what is explicitly excluded (medium risk if missing) This checker is a reference, not legal or medical advice. Risk weightings reflect the registry’s editorial view of which missing line items most often cause patient harm or dispute — they are not insurance recommendations.