Vietnam handles more than most expats expect — especially in HCMC and Hanoi, where JCI-accredited private hospitals cover the vast majority of routine and specialist needs. Knowing when to stay and when to escalate is the key skill.
Vietnam's private hospital sector has transformed over the past decade. FV Hospital in HCMC just earned its fourth consecutive JCI accreditation with a near-perfect score. Vinmec has partnerships with Cleveland Clinic and University of Pennsylvania. For the majority of what expats and travelers need, HCMC and Hanoi deliver — without a flight to Bangkok.
Routine and general medicine, most surgical procedures, maternity care, pediatrics, gastroenterology, general oncology, orthopedics, and emergency stabilization are all handled competently at HCMC and Hanoi's private hospitals. FV Hospital specifically has proven it can operate at near-perfect JCI standards — that's not a marketing claim, it's a scored assessment.
English availability is good at the top private hospitals in both cities. FV was founded by French physicians and has staff from Vietnam, France, Germany, and beyond. Vinmec's international partnerships have shaped its clinical protocols. The gap from Thai or Malaysian private hospitals is smaller than the regional reputation suggests.
Complex cardiac surgery, advanced oncology requiring specialized equipment or high surgical volume, rare conditions, and anything requiring clinical trial access are cases where Bangkok or Singapore is the right call. Vietnam's private hospital system is excellent and rapidly improving — but it's not yet at the depth of Bangkok's JCI ecosystem, which has 60+ accredited hospitals versus Vietnam's handful.
Outside HCMC and Hanoi — in Da Nang, Hoi An, the central highlands, or rural areas — private hospital quality drops significantly. If you're based outside the two main cities, your evacuation plan matters more, not less.
The most useful framework for Vietnam isn't ranking it globally — it's knowing exactly what the system handles confidently and where the honest limits are.
GP visits, infections, dengue fever, routine surgery, appendectomy, fractures, maternity, pediatrics, dental, dermatology, gastroscopy, colonoscopy, most cancer diagnostics, chemotherapy, general orthopedics, physiotherapy, mental health (at international clinics)
Complex cardiac surgery, rare cancers, pediatric oncology, neurosurgery for complex cases, organ transplants, clinical trial access, highly specialized surgical procedures requiring very high surgeon volume
HCMC: FV Hospital is the clear flagship. Vinmec HCMC and Columbia Asia Hospital are also strong options. The city's large expat community means international medical infrastructure is well developed.
Hanoi: Vinmec Times City is the strongest hospital in the north and holds JCI accreditation. Hanoi French Hospital and Hong Ngoc International are also used by the expat community. For serious cases from Hanoi, Bangkok is often a faster flight than HCMC.
At FV, Vinmec international campuses, and major expat-focused clinics, English is available throughout. At smaller private hospitals and any public facility, English drops off sharply. Unlike Malaysia or the Philippines, Vietnam does not have a colonial English-language medical tradition — English capability is a deliberate investment by individual hospitals, not a system-wide baseline.
Pharmacies are everywhere in Vietnamese cities. Many medications available by prescription-only in the West are sold OTC. Bring generic names for any medications you take — brand names differ and pharmacists may not recognize Western trade names. Quality of generics varies; hospital pharmacies at international facilities are a safer source for critical medications.
Vietnam's international private hospital landscape is anchored by two names: FV Hospital in HCMC and Vinmec across both cities. Both are JCI-accredited. Both have invested seriously in English-language care and specialist depth. Below them, a tier of international clinics serves routine expat needs across both cities.
The benchmark for international healthcare in southern Vietnam. Founded in 2003 by a collective of French physicians, FV has earned JCI accreditation four consecutive times — in 2016, 2019, 2022, and 2025 — with the 2025 assessment achieving a near-perfect score of nearly 1,200 points out of 1,200. That result placed it among the elite healthcare providers globally by JCI's own assessment. In 2024, FV joined Thomson Medical Group, one of Southeast Asia's leading healthcare providers. Over 230 Vietnamese and expatriate doctors from France, Germany, Vietnam, and other countries. 30+ medical and surgical specialties. Strong cardiology, oncology, surgery, maternity, and gastroenterology departments.
Part of the Vinmec network — Vietnam's largest private hospital system with facilities across Hanoi, HCMC, Da Nang, Nha Trang, Ha Long, Phu Quoc, and Hai Phong. Strategic partnerships with Cleveland Clinic (USA), GE Healthcare, and University of Pennsylvania shape clinical protocols. JCI accreditation held at the Hanoi Times City campus; the HCMC campus operates to equivalent standards. Broad specialist coverage with strong pediatrics, oncology, and reproductive medicine departments.
FV's outpatient satellite clinic in central District 1 — the heart of the expat and business district. Ideal for GP consultations, minor procedures, specialist referrals, and follow-up appointments without traveling to the main hospital in District 7. Staffed to the same FV standards.
International-standard private hospital well-established among the HCMC expat community. Good for routine GP care, general medicine, and minor surgery. English-speaking throughout. Less specialist depth than FV but more accessible for routine needs and well-regarded for patient service.
The strongest hospital in northern Vietnam and the JCI-accredited flagship of the Vinmec network. Broad specialist coverage with particularly strong oncology, cardiology, and reproductive medicine. Cleveland Clinic partnership informs cardiac care protocols. The benchmark for expats based in Hanoi.
One of Hanoi's oldest international hospitals with a long-established reputation among the expat community. French-Vietnamese heritage similar to FV in HCMC. Good for general medicine, GP consultations, and routine procedures. Slightly less specialist depth than Vinmec Times City but well-regarded for patient experience.
Vietnam's cardiac capability has improved significantly. FV Hospital and Vinmec both have interventional cardiology — stenting, angioplasty, cardiac catheterization — at their flagship facilities. For cardiac surgery requiring bypass or valve replacement, Bangkok remains the standard escalation.
Diagnostic cardiology, ECG, echocardiography, stress testing, Holter monitoring, coronary angiography, angioplasty, and stenting are available at FV Hospital HCMC and Vinmec Times City Hanoi. FV's cardiology department includes interventional cardiology capability. Vinmec's Cleveland Clinic partnership has shaped its cardiac care protocols.
For cardiac emergencies requiring stabilization, both flagship hospitals have emergency departments equipped for cardiac events. Time-sensitive intervention (angioplasty for heart attack) can be performed at FV and Vinmec.
Complex cardiac surgery — coronary bypass (CABG), valve replacement, structural heart repair — is where Bangkok's volume and depth is the right call. The surgical volume at Bumrungrad and Bangkok Hospital cardiac centers far exceeds what Vietnam's private hospitals currently handle, and volume is a quality indicator for complex cardiac surgery.
Practical escalation: From HCMC, Bangkok is a 1.5-hour flight. From Hanoi, it's 2 hours. For non-emergency cardiac surgery, planning a Bangkok trip is straightforward. For cardiac emergencies that can't be handled locally, evacuate via your insurance carrier's medical transport. Have that number accessible before you need it.
| Procedure | United States 🇺🇸 | Vietnam 🇻🇳 | Thailand 🇹🇭 (escalation) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coronary Angiography (diagnostic) | $10,000–$20,000 | $1,500–$3,500 | $2,000–$4,500 | Available at FV and Vinmec |
| Angioplasty + Stent | $30,000–$60,000 | $5,000–$10,000 | $7,000–$14,000 | Available at FV and Vinmec flagship hospitals |
| Coronary Bypass (CABG) | $100,000–$200,000 | Limited availability | $12,000–$22,000 | Escalate to Bangkok for bypass surgery |
| Echocardiogram | $1,500–$3,000 | $80–$200 | $150–$350 | Widely available at private hospitals |
| Full Cardiac Health Check | $2,000–$5,000 | $150–$400 | $200–$500 | FV and Vinmec offer packaged cardiac screening |
FV Hospital Emergency (HCMC): +84 28 5411 3333 — 24 hours
Vinmec Times City Emergency (Hanoi): +84 24 3974 3556 — 24 hours
General Vietnam Emergency: 115 (ambulance) — response times vary significantly outside major cities
Save your medical evacuation insurance number alongside these. For serious cardiac events outside HCMC or Hanoi, the evacuation number matters as much as the hospital number.
Vietnam's oncology capability is solid for diagnosis and most standard-of-care treatment at FV and Vinmec. The honest caveat: for complex, rare, or high-stakes cancer treatment, Bangkok or Singapore delivers greater depth and surgical volume.
FV Hospital and Vinmec both have full diagnostic oncology capability — CT, PET-CT, MRI, biopsy, histopathology, and tumor marker testing. Getting a cancer diagnosis confirmed at FV HCMC or Vinmec Hanoi is fast, reliable, and dramatically cheaper than doing it in the West or Singapore. If you receive a diagnosis at a smaller private clinic in Vietnam, getting it confirmed at FV or Vinmec before committing to a treatment plan is worthwhile.
Chemotherapy, radiation therapy, hormonal therapy, and surgical oncology for most common cancers are available at FV and Vinmec. For standard-of-care breast, colorectal, cervical, and lung cancer treatment — Vietnam is a reasonable choice, especially combined with the cost differential. For rare cancers, pediatric oncology, complex surgical oncology requiring specialist volume, or clinical trial access — Bangkok or Singapore is the right destination.
| Service | United States 🇺🇸 | Vietnam 🇻🇳 | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Full Cancer Diagnostic Workup | $10,000–$25,000 | $1,500–$4,000 | Includes PET-CT, biopsy, pathology, specialist consult |
| Chemotherapy (per cycle) | $5,000–$15,000 | $1,000–$3,500 | Drug costs are the major variable |
| Radiation Therapy (full course) | $30,000–$80,000 | $5,000–$15,000 | IMRT available at FV and Vinmec |
| Oncology Second Opinion | $500–$2,000 | $60–$200 | Bring all previous imaging and pathology records |
| PSA / Cancer Marker Blood Test | $200–$500 | $20–$60 | Widely available at private clinics |
Vietnam has excellent dental care in HCMC and Hanoi at prices that undercut even Thailand for some procedures. The private dental clinic sector in both cities is modern, English-capable at the better clinics, and very well-priced for everything from routine care to implants.
HCMC and Hanoi have developed a strong private dental sector catering to both the large local middle class and a growing international patient base. Equipment at top clinics is modern — digital X-ray, CBCT scanning, CAD/CAM crowns, and premium implant systems. Prices are among the lowest in Southeast Asia for equivalent quality. English availability varies — the better international dental clinics in both cities have English-speaking staff throughout.
All-on-4 full-arch implants in HCMC run approximately $7,000–$11,000 per arch at reputable clinics using premium systems — making full mouth restoration roughly $14,000–$22,000. This is at the lower end of the SEA range, reflecting Vietnam's lower cost structure. The same procedure in the US runs $50,000–$60,000 full mouth.
Vietnam is less established as a dental tourism destination than Thailand or the Philippines, but for expats already based in HCMC or Hanoi, the local dental quality and pricing make it the obvious choice for both routine care and major procedures.
| Procedure | United States 🇺🇸 | HCMC / Hanoi 🇻🇳 | Savings vs US |
|---|---|---|---|
| All-on-4 (per arch) | $25,000–$30,000 | $7,000–$11,000 | Save 60–75% |
| All-on-4 (full mouth) | $50,000–$60,000 | $14,000–$22,000 | Save $28K–$46K |
| Single Tooth Implant | $3,000–$5,000 | $700–$1,400 | Save 70–85% |
| Porcelain / Zirconia Crown | $1,200–$1,800 | $180–$400 | Save 75–85% |
| Root Canal (molar) | $1,000–$1,800 | $120–$300 | Save 80–90% |
| Full Checkup + Clean | $200–$400 | $20–$60 | Save 80–90% |
Vietnam's international private hospitals work with major insurance providers — but you need the right coverage, and you need your evacuation plan sorted before you need it. Bangkok is the escalation city for serious cases; your insurance needs to reflect that.
Short-term visitors: International travel insurance with minimum $500K medical and explicit medical evacuation coverage. Check that your policy covers Vietnam and any adventure activities.
Long-term residents / expats: International health insurance — Cigna Global, BUPA Global, AXA International, or Allianz Care. These cover you in Vietnam with global evacuation options. Budget $200–$600/month depending on age and coverage level.
Critical: Ensure your policy covers medical evacuation to Bangkok specifically — not just "nearest adequate facility." FV and Vinmec are excellent for most situations, but for conditions requiring escalation, Bangkok is the destination and your policy should explicitly cover it.
FV Hospital and Vinmec have direct billing arrangements with most major international insurers. Present your insurance card at registration. For planned procedures, contact your insurer for pre-authorization before admission — this smooths billing significantly.
Emergency care is provided first; billing sorted after stabilization. You'll need your insurance details accessible. Keep your policy number somewhere other than your phone — if your phone is lost or damaged in an accident, you still need to be able to access your coverage information.
Medical tourism procedures (dental, elective) are generally out-of-pocket expenses not covered by health insurance. This is why the cost comparisons matter.
FV and Vinmec handle the majority of situations. For the subset of serious cases requiring escalation — Bangkok is the standard destination. From HCMC: 1.5-hour flight. From Hanoi: 2 hours. Medical evacuation insurance that covers Bangkok is essential.
Vinmec Da Nang is the strongest private option in the region. For serious cases, Hanoi and HCMC are both about 1 hour by flight. Bangkok is 2 hours. Know which direction is faster for your specific escalation.
Public hospitals outside major cities have significant resource limitations. Stabilization at the nearest facility followed by evacuation to HCMC, Hanoi, or Bangkok is the playbook for serious situations anywhere outside the main cities. Activate your evacuation coverage early — don't wait.
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