This report compares dental procedure costs in Japan (sourced from the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare NHI fee schedules, Japan Dental Association guidelines, verified private clinic fee surveys from Tokyo English-speaking clinics including Trust Dental Clinic, Komori Dental Clinic, and HAPLUS Dental, and academic research from PMC) with Picasso Dental Clinic's published 2025–2026 USD price list, converted to JPY at 1 USD = 150 JPY. Japanese dental system data is drawn from the MHLW Survey of Medical Institutions, the Japan Dental Association NHI coverage guidelines, and peer-reviewed analyses of Japan's universal dental care system. Flight data was sourced from Google Flights, Skyscanner, and airline websites in February–March 2026. All Vietnam prices represent complete treatment packages at Picasso Dental Clinic with no hidden fees.
Executive Summary
Japan's National Health Insurance (NHI) system covers approximately 70% of basic dental care — check-ups, fillings, simple extractions, and metal-based crowns. However, NHI explicitly excludes dental implants, porcelain veneers, ceramic crowns, teeth whitening, and orthodontics, classifying these as elective or cosmetic procedures. Japanese patients seeking these treatments must pay 100% out-of-pocket at private clinic rates, which are among the highest in Asia. A single dental implant in Japan costs ¥300,000–¥500,000, while All-on-4 full-arch restoration runs ¥3,500,000–¥4,500,000 per arch. Vietnam offers Japanese patients an alternative with 60–80% savings on these self-pay procedures, direct flights from 5 hours on major carriers (ANA, JAL, VietJet, Vietnam Airlines), internationally branded implant systems (Straumann, Nobel Biocare, OSSTEM), and a cultural familiarity that makes Vietnam one of the most comfortable destinations in Southeast Asia for Japanese travellers.
Contents
- Japan Dental Market Overview
- Why Japanese Patients Choose Vietnam
- Procedure-by-Procedure Cost Comparison
- Flight Analysis & Travel Logistics
- Picasso Dental Clinic Overview
- Clinical Standards & Quality Assurance
- Total Trip Economics
- Vietnam Destination Guide for Japanese Tourists
- Risk Assessment & Mitigation
- How to Get Started
- Competitor Destinations Comparison
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Conclusions & Recommendations
1. Japan Dental Market Overview
Japan has one of the most comprehensive universal healthcare systems in the world. The National Health Insurance (NHI) system, administered by the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare (MHLW), covers approximately 70% of medical and dental costs for all residents. Patients pay the remaining 30% as a co-payment. This system ensures that basic dental care — examinations, X-rays, fillings, simple extractions, scaling, and metal-based crowns — remains affordable for all Japanese citizens.
1.1 The NHI Coverage Gap: Cosmetic & Implant Exclusions
Despite this strong foundation, Japan's NHI system explicitly excludes a wide range of dental treatments that are classified as elective, cosmetic, or non-essential. These exclusions create a significant financial burden for patients who need or desire advanced dental work:
| Covered by NHI (70% subsidy) | NOT Covered — 100% Self-Pay |
|---|---|
| Basic examinations and X-rays | Dental implants (all types) |
| Composite and metal fillings | Porcelain/ceramic veneers |
| Simple extractions | Ceramic and zirconia crowns |
| Root canal treatment (basic) | Teeth whitening |
| Scaling and periodontal treatment | Orthodontics (braces, Invisalign) |
| Metal-based crowns (silver/palladium alloy) | All-on-4 / full-arch implant restoration |
| Basic dentures | Gold crowns and inlays |
Source: Japan Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare NHI guidelines; Japan Dental Association; Ki-kuzuki Dental (2025); GaijinPot Health — "Treatments covered and not covered by Japan's health insurance."
This coverage gap means that the very procedures where costs are highest — implants, veneers, ceramic crowns, and full-mouth rehabilitation — receive zero insurance subsidy. A patient needing a single implant must pay the full ¥300,000–¥500,000 out of pocket. A patient wanting to replace NHI-covered silver crowns with aesthetically superior ceramic must also pay entirely out of pocket.
1.2 Private Dental Costs in Japan
Japan has approximately 68,000 dental clinics — more dental clinics than convenience stores in the country. Despite this density, prices for self-pay procedures remain high due to the cost of imported materials (implants, ceramic blocks), high laboratory fees, Tokyo and Osaka rental costs, and the technical expertise required for advanced prosthodontic work.
Reference pricing from verified Tokyo private dental clinic fee surveys:
| Procedure | Price Range (JPY) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Dental implant (surgical placement only) | ¥200,000–¥350,000 | Excludes crown, abutment, scan |
| Complete implant (fixture + abutment + crown) | ¥300,000–¥500,000 | Total cost with all components |
| Root canal treatment (molar, 3 canals) | ¥70,000–¥120,000 | Private clinic; NHI covers basic RC |
| Porcelain veneer (e.max/ceramic) | ¥110,000–¥176,000 | Per tooth; not covered by NHI |
| Ceramic/zirconia crown | ¥100,000–¥143,000 | Per tooth; NHI covers metal only |
| All-on-4 (per arch) | ¥3,500,000–¥4,500,000 | 10-year warranty at premium clinics |
| Teeth whitening (in-office) | ¥30,000–¥60,000 | Not covered by NHI |
| Wisdom tooth extraction (surgical) | ¥50,000–¥70,000 | Impacted; NHI covers simple cases |
Sources: Trust Dental Clinic (Tokyo), Komori Dental Clinic (Tokyo), HAPLUS Dental Clinic (Tokyo), Ebisu-Hiroo Dental Clinic, Ryo Dental Clinic. Prices reflect self-pay (jiyuu-shinryou) rates as of 2025–2026.
1.3 The Aesthetic Dentistry Trend in Japan
Japan has seen a significant increase in demand for aesthetic dental procedures, driven by social media, beauty standards, and the growing visibility of smile makeovers among celebrities and influencers. Many younger Japanese patients are choosing to replace their NHI-covered silver amalgam or palladium alloy restorations with ceramic alternatives — but at their own expense. This trend has accelerated interest in dental tourism as a way to achieve cosmetic dental goals at more affordable prices.
2. Why Japanese Patients Choose Vietnam
Vietnam has emerged as a compelling dental tourism destination for Japanese patients, driven by a combination of significant cost savings, travel convenience, cultural familiarity, and deep historical ties between the two countries.
2.1 Cost Savings of 60–80%
The primary driver is economics. Japanese patients face full out-of-pocket costs for implants, veneers, and cosmetic procedures. Vietnam offers the same globally branded materials at 60–80% lower prices due to significantly lower operational costs (rent, staff salaries, laboratory fees). A single Straumann implant that costs ¥400,000 in Tokyo is available at Picasso Dental Clinic for approximately ¥180,000–¥260,000, inclusive of all components.
2.2 Proximity & Direct Flights
Vietnam is one of the closest Southeast Asian destinations from Japan. Direct flights from Tokyo (Narita and Haneda) to Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City operate daily on ANA, JAL, Vietnam Airlines, and VietJet, with flight times of just 5–6.5 hours — comparable to flying from Tokyo to many domestic Japanese destinations. Osaka, Nagoya, and Fukuoka also have direct or one-stop connections.
2.3 Cultural Affinity & Historical Ties
Japan and Vietnam share deep cultural and economic ties. Japan is Vietnam's largest ODA (Official Development Assistance) donor, and Japanese companies are among the largest foreign investors in Vietnam. This has created extensive cultural exchange — many Vietnamese professionals speak Japanese, Japanese restaurants and cultural centres are common across Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City, and Vietnamese tourism infrastructure is well-adapted to Japanese visitor preferences. Japanese tourists consistently rank Vietnam among their top Southeast Asian destinations.
2.4 Visa-Free Entry
Japanese passport holders enjoy visa-free entry to Vietnam for up to 45 days — no application, no fee, no waiting. This is more than sufficient for any dental treatment plan including multi-visit implant protocols. For stays longer than 45 days, an e-visa valid for up to 90 days can be obtained online for US$25.
2.5 Same Global Implant Brands
Japanese patients who research dental clinics in Vietnam will find the same premium implant brands used in Japan: Straumann (Switzerland), Nobel Biocare (Sweden/Switzerland), and OSSTEM (South Korea). These are not generic alternatives — they are the identical products, manufactured at the same facilities, with the same serial numbers and warranties. The cost difference comes entirely from the clinic's operational overhead, not from material quality.
3. Procedure-by-Procedure Cost Comparison
The following table compares the cost of 14 common dental procedures in Japan (private clinics, self-pay) versus Picasso Dental Clinic in Vietnam. All prices in JPY. Vietnam prices are converted from Picasso's published USD price list at 1 USD = 150 JPY.
| Procedure | Japan (JPY) | Vietnam — Picasso (JPY) | Savings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Comprehensive exam + X-rays | ¥10,000–¥18,000 | ¥3,000–¥4,650 | 70–74% |
| Professional cleaning (scale & polish) | ¥8,000–¥16,000 | ¥1,800–¥3,450 | 78–88% |
| Composite filling | ¥12,000–¥32,000 | ¥2,250–¥4,050 | 81–87% |
| Root canal (front tooth) | ¥50,000–¥70,000 | ¥14,400–¥17,250 | 71–75% |
| Root canal (molar) | ¥70,000–¥120,000 | ¥28,800–¥31,800 | 59–74% |
| Simple extraction | ¥25,000–¥40,000 | ¥5,700–¥8,700 | 77–86% |
| Wisdom tooth (surgical) | ¥50,000–¥70,000 | ¥11,550–¥34,650 | 51–77% |
| Porcelain crown (zirconia) | ¥100,000–¥143,000 | ¥40,350–¥98,100 | 31–60% |
| Porcelain veneer (e.max) | ¥110,000–¥176,000 | ¥51,900–¥69,300 | 53–61% |
| 20 porcelain veneers | ¥2,200,000–¥3,520,000 | ¥1,038,000–¥1,386,000 | 53–61% |
| Single dental implant (complete) | ¥300,000–¥500,000 | ¥144,300–¥259,650 | 48–71% |
| All-on-4 (per arch) | ¥3,500,000–¥4,500,000 | ¥1,009,650–¥1,673,100 | 63–71% |
| All-on-4 (both arches) | ¥7,000,000–¥9,000,000 | ¥2,019,300–¥3,346,200 | 63–71% |
| Teeth whitening (in-office) | ¥30,000–¥60,000 | ¥20,250–¥40,350 | 33–66% |
3.1 Visual: Single Dental Implant (Complete, JPY)
3.2 Visual: 20 Veneers (JPY)
3.3 Visual: All-on-4 Both Arches (JPY)
4. Flight Analysis & Travel Logistics
Japan is well-connected to Vietnam with multiple daily direct flights from major cities. The route is served by both full-service carriers (ANA, JAL, Vietnam Airlines) and budget airlines (VietJet, Peach Aviation), giving Japanese patients a wide range of pricing options.
| Route | Flight Time | Airlines (Direct) | Return Price (JPY) | Frequency |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NRT/HND → HAN (Hanoi) | 5h 30min | Vietnam Airlines, ANA, JAL, VietJet | ¥35,000–¥120,000 | 14+ flights/week |
| NRT/HND → SGN (Ho Chi Minh City) | 6h 10min | Vietnam Airlines, ANA, JAL, VietJet | ¥40,000–¥130,000 | 14+ flights/week |
| KIX → HAN (Hanoi) | 5h 00min | Vietnam Airlines, VietJet, Peach | ¥30,000–¥100,000 | 7+ flights/week |
| KIX → SGN (Ho Chi Minh City) | 5h 40min | Vietnam Airlines, VietJet | ¥35,000–¥110,000 | 7+ flights/week |
| FUK → HAN (Hanoi) | 4h 40min | Vietnam Airlines, VietJet | ¥30,000–¥90,000 | 4–7 flights/week |
| NRT/KIX → DAD (Da Nang) | 5h 15min | VietJet, Vietnam Airlines (seasonal) | ¥35,000–¥100,000 | 3–7 flights/week |
Prices from Google Flights, Skyscanner, and airline websites, February–March 2026. Return prices reflect economy class, booked 4–6 weeks in advance. VietJet consistently offers the most affordable fares, with one-way tickets from ¥15,000.
VietJet operates direct Japan–Vietnam routes with return fares regularly available from ¥30,000–¥45,000 when booked in advance. Peach Aviation (ANA subsidiary) also offers competitive fares on the Osaka–Vietnam route. For Japanese patients, the flight cost represents a minor fraction of the total dental savings — often less than 10% of what they save on a single implant procedure. Best booking window: 4–8 weeks ahead. Cheapest months: May, June, September, November.
4.1 Door-to-Door Travel Time Comparison
Includes airport transit (1.5–2h for Japanese airports), flight, immigration, and transfer to clinic. Japanese airports are exceptionally efficient, with Narita Express/Skyliner connections from central Tokyo.
5. Picasso Dental Clinic Overview
| Established | 2013 |
| Locations | 6 clinics: Hanoi (Chau Long HQ + Embassy Garden), Ho Chi Minh City (Thao Dien), Da Nang (Hoang Dieu + Vinmec), Da Lat |
| Total patients | 70,000+ from 62 countries |
| Dentists | 30+ including prosthodontists, implantologists, orthodontists |
| Implant brands | Straumann (Switzerland), Nobel Biocare (Sweden/Switzerland), OSSTEM (South Korea) |
| Crown & veneer materials | IPS e.max (Ivoclar Vivadent), monolithic & layered zirconia |
| Imaging | In-house CBCT (3D cone-beam CT) at all locations |
| Implant success rate | 95%+ (consistent with international benchmarks) |
| Languages | English, Vietnamese, with Japanese interpretation available |
| Lead dentist | Dr. Emily Nguyen — Lead Implantologist, University of Medicine and Pharmacy HCMC |
| International coordinator | WhatsApp: +84 989 067 888 (English, 48-hour response) |
Picasso Dental Clinic was founded in 2013 in Hanoi and has grown to become one of Vietnam's largest international dental practices. The clinic's six locations across four cities — Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City, Da Nang, and Da Lat — provide Japanese patients with flexibility to combine treatment with travel to different regions of Vietnam. The Hanoi headquarters, located in the Ba Dinh district near the Old Quarter, is the largest facility and handles the majority of complex implant and full-mouth rehabilitation cases.
5.1 Pricing in JPY
| Procedure | Picasso Price (JPY) |
|---|---|
| Single implant — OSSTEM (complete) | ¥144,300–¥173,100 |
| Single implant — Straumann (complete) | ¥196,350–¥259,650 |
| All-on-4 per arch (OSSTEM) | ¥1,009,650–¥1,201,500 |
| All-on-4 per arch (Straumann/Nobel) | ¥1,350,000–¥1,673,100 |
| Porcelain veneer (e.max, per tooth) | ¥51,900–¥69,300 |
| Zirconia crown (per tooth) | ¥40,350–¥98,100 |
| Root canal (molar) | ¥28,800–¥31,800 |
| Teeth whitening (in-office) | ¥20,250–¥40,350 |
6. Clinical Standards & Quality Assurance
6.1 Global Implant Success Data
A 2025 large-scale Israeli registry study analysing 158,824 dental implants in 53,874 patients found an overall failure rate of just 2.21% — a 97.8% survival rate. The 2024 meta-analysis by Kupka et al. in Clinical Oral Investigations confirmed that dental implants can achieve survival rates of 80%+ at 20 years, with modern surface-treated systems (like those used at Picasso) performing at the higher end. Research synthesis shows a 10-year success rate of 95.2%, rising to 98.1% for patients with excellent oral hygiene.
6.2 Material Traceability
Japanese patients are accustomed to high standards of material documentation. Picasso Dental Clinic provides every implant patient with an implant passport containing the manufacturer name, implant model, serial number, batch number, and placement date. This document enables any dentist in Japan — or anywhere in the world — to verify the exact implant used and provide appropriate follow-up care. Crown and veneer cases receive digital records and material certificates.
6.3 Warranties
| Component | Warranty |
|---|---|
| Straumann implant fixture | 10 years |
| Nobel Biocare implant fixture | 10 years |
| OSSTEM implant fixture | 7 years |
| Zirconia / e.max crowns & veneers | 5–15 years |
6.4 Infection Control & Sterilisation
Picasso Dental Clinic follows international infection control protocols: autoclave sterilisation for all instruments, single-use disposable items where appropriate, HEPA-filtered clinical environments, and documented sterilisation cycles. The clinic is licensed by Vietnam's Ministry of Health and undergoes regular inspections. All clinical staff follow Japanese-standard hand hygiene and PPE protocols.
6.5 Digital Workflow
All Picasso locations are equipped with in-house CBCT (3D cone-beam computed tomography) scanners, intraoral digital scanners, and CAD/CAM crown and veneer design software. This digital workflow ensures precise implant placement planning, accurate crown fitting, and comprehensive documentation — the same technology used at leading dental clinics in Tokyo and Osaka.
7. Total Trip Economics
For Japanese patients, the total trip cost includes flights, accommodation, meals, local transport, and dental treatment. Vietnam's low cost of living makes the travel overhead remarkably affordable — quality hotels in Hanoi and HCMC are available from ¥4,000–¥8,000/night, and excellent meals cost ¥500–¥1,500.
Scenario A: Single Dental Implant (Straumann)
| Return flight (VietJet/Peach, Tokyo) | ¥40,000 |
| Accommodation — Visit 1 (5 nights × ¥6,000) | ¥30,000 |
| Accommodation — Visit 2 (3 nights × ¥6,000) | ¥18,000 |
| Return flight — Visit 2 | ¥40,000 |
| Meals & local transport (8 days × ¥3,000) | ¥24,000 |
| Dental treatment: Straumann implant (complete) | ¥196,350–¥259,650 |
| Total all-in cost | ¥348,350–¥411,650 |
| Same procedure in Japan | ¥300,000–¥500,000 |
| Savings (vs Japan high-end) | up to ¥151,650 (30%) |
Note: For OSSTEM implants (¥144,300–¥173,100), total trip cost drops to ¥296,300–¥325,100 — saving ¥175,000–¥204,000 vs the Japan average. Savings increase dramatically for multiple implant cases.
Scenario B: 20 Porcelain Veneers (e.max)
| Return flight | ¥40,000 |
| Accommodation (10 nights × ¥6,000) | ¥60,000 |
| Meals & local transport (10 days × ¥3,000) | ¥30,000 |
| Dental treatment: 20 veneers | ¥1,038,000–¥1,386,000 |
| Total all-in cost | ¥1,168,000–¥1,516,000 |
| Same in Japan | ¥2,200,000–¥3,520,000 |
| Savings | ¥684,000–¥2,352,000 (31–67%) |
Scenario C: All-on-4 Both Arches (Straumann)
| Return flights × 2 trips | ¥80,000 |
| Accommodation — Visit 1 (7 nights × ¥7,000) | ¥49,000 |
| Accommodation — Visit 2 (5 nights × ¥7,000) | ¥35,000 |
| Meals & local transport (12 days × ¥3,000) | ¥36,000 |
| Dental treatment: All-on-4 both arches | ¥2,019,300–¥3,346,200 |
| Total all-in cost | ¥2,219,300–¥3,546,200 |
| Same in Japan | ¥7,000,000–¥9,000,000 |
| Savings | ¥3,453,800–¥6,780,700 (49–75%) |
Given Japan's flight costs to Vietnam (¥30,000–¥45,000 return on budget carriers) and affordable in-country costs (~¥9,000/day for hotel + meals), the break-even point for dental tourism is approximately ¥80,000 in dental work — roughly the cost of a single root canal or ceramic crown in Japan. Any procedure above this threshold is likely to be cheaper done in Vietnam, even after all travel expenses. For All-on-4 cases, the savings can exceed ¥5,000,000.
8. Vietnam Destination Guide for Japanese Tourists
Vietnam is one of the most popular travel destinations for Japanese tourists, with approximately 1 million Japanese visitors annually. The country offers exceptional value, rich culture, world-class cuisine, and a warm welcome that makes it ideal for combining dental treatment with a memorable holiday.
🇻🇳 Hanoi (Picasso HQ)
Flight from Tokyo: 5h 30min direct · Clinic locations: Chau Long (Ba Dinh) & Embassy Garden (Bac Tu Liem) · Best for: History, culture, street food, Ha Long Bay day trips
Hanoi is Picasso Dental's headquarters and largest facility. The city is deeply familiar to Japanese visitors — Japanese restaurants, manga cafes, and cultural centres are common. Quality hotels are available from ¥4,000–¥8,000/night, and world-class street food costs ¥300–¥700/meal. Ha Long Bay (UNESCO World Heritage Site), the Old Quarter, Ho Chi Minh Mausoleum, and the Temple of Literature are all easily accessible. Many Hanoi residents have studied or worked in Japan, making communication easier than expected.
🇻🇳 Ho Chi Minh City
Flight from Tokyo: 6h 10min direct · Clinic location: Thao Dien, District 2 · Best for: Modern city buzz, French colonial architecture, nightlife, Cu Chi Tunnels
Ho Chi Minh City is Vietnam's vibrant commercial capital with a Japanese expat community of over 10,000 residents. Japanese restaurants, izakaya, and convenience stores (FamilyMart, Ministop) are widespread. The Thao Dien neighbourhood where Picasso's HCMC clinic is located is an upscale international district. Accommodation: ¥5,000–¥10,000/night for 4-star hotels in District 1.
🇻🇳 Da Nang
Flight from Tokyo: 5h 15min direct (seasonal) · Clinic locations: Hoang Dieu (central) & Vinmec Hospital · Best for: Beach recovery, Hoi An day trips, relaxation between visits
Da Nang is increasingly popular with Japanese tourists as a beach resort destination. My Khe Beach is consistently ranked among Asia's best beaches. The UNESCO World Heritage town of Hoi An is just 30 minutes by car and offers exceptional tailoring, lantern-lit streets, and Vietnamese cooking classes. Budget hotel: ¥3,500–¥6,000/night; beachfront resort: ¥8,000–¥20,000/night.
🇻🇳 Da Lat
Flight from Japan: Via Hanoi or HCMC (1h connecting flight to Lien Khuong Airport) · Clinic location: 55 Ha Huy Tap, Ward 3 · Best for: Cool highland climate, nature, coffee plantations, peaceful recovery
Da Lat sits at 1,500m elevation in Vietnam's Central Highlands, offering a refreshing escape from tropical heat with year-round temperatures of 15–25°C. Known as the "City of Eternal Spring," Da Lat is ideal for patients who prefer a quieter, cooler recovery environment. Japanese visitors appreciate Da Lat's flower gardens, waterfalls, and some of Vietnam's finest specialty coffee. Accommodation: ¥3,000–¥6,000/night for quality boutique hotels.
9. Risk Assessment & Mitigation
9.1 Clinic Evaluation Checklist
| Criterion | What to Check | Picasso Dental |
|---|---|---|
| Licensing | Vietnam MOH clinic licence | ✓ Licensed — 6 clinics across 4 cities |
| Implant brands | Named global brands, not generics | ✓ Straumann, Nobel Biocare, OSSTEM |
| Material traceability | Serial numbers & batch data provided | ✓ Implant passport issued |
| CBCT imaging | In-house 3D scanning capability | ✓ All locations |
| Written treatment plan | Fixed pricing before you travel | ✓ Via WhatsApp/email |
| Written warranty | Formal warranty documentation | ✓ 7–10 years on implants |
| English/Japanese communication | Clinical staff or interpreter available | ✓ Full English service; Japanese interpretation available |
| Patient volume | Track record with international patients | ✓ 70,000+ patients, 62 countries |
9.2 Red Flags to Avoid
Reject any clinic that: refuses to name the specific implant brand and model being used; does not provide written pricing before travel; promises single-visit implant completion for conventional cases; quotes dramatically below-market prices without explanation; lacks in-house CBCT capability; or cannot provide references from international patients. These warnings apply equally to clinics in Vietnam, Thailand, or anywhere else.
9.3 Language Considerations
While Picasso Dental Clinic operates primarily in English, Japanese interpretation can be arranged for patients who prefer to communicate in Japanese. Treatment plans, pricing documents, and post-operative instructions can be provided in both English and Japanese upon request. WhatsApp communication with the international coordinator is in English, with Japanese translation support available.
9.4 Aftercare Protocol
Picasso provides every patient with: complete digital treatment records and X-rays, an implant passport with manufacturer serial numbers, structured follow-up schedule (1 week, 1 month, 3 months, 6 months), remote monitoring via WhatsApp between visits, and documentation formatted for any Japanese dentist to provide continuity of care. For patients registered with a dental clinic in Japan, Picasso's records enable seamless follow-up locally.
9.5 Travel Insurance
Japanese patients should consider travel insurance that covers dental emergencies abroad. Many Japanese travel insurance providers offer plans that include emergency dental treatment coverage. While complications from planned dental procedures are typically excluded from standard travel insurance, having emergency coverage provides an additional safety net.
10. How to Get Started
Planning dental treatment in Vietnam from Japan follows a straightforward four-step process:
Step 1: Send your X-rays (Day 1)
WhatsApp your current X-ray or OPG scan to Picasso's international coordinator at
+84 989 067 888.
You'll receive a detailed treatment plan with fixed JPY pricing within 48 hours — no cost, no obligation.
Step 2: Book your flight (2–6 weeks before)
Direct flights from Tokyo (NRT/HND) to Hanoi (5h 30min) or Ho Chi Minh City (6h 10min), or from Osaka (KIX)
to Hanoi (5h). VietJet and Peach offer return fares from ¥30,000–¥45,000. ANA and JAL provide full-service
options from ¥60,000–¥120,000. Japanese passport holders enter Vietnam visa-free for up to 45 days.
Step 3: First treatment visit (5–7 days)
On arrival: CBCT scan, in-person consultation, and treatment begins. For implant cases, the implant is placed on
your first visit. For veneer cases, teeth are prepared and temporaries fitted. Airport pickup can be arranged.
Step 4: Return for final restoration (3–5 days)
After the healing period (3–6 months for implants, 2–3 weeks for veneers), return for final crown or veneer
cementation. Receive your implant passport with manufacturer serial numbers and written warranty documentation.
11. Competitor Destinations Comparison
Japanese patients considering dental tourism abroad often evaluate several Southeast Asian destinations. Here's how they compare on the factors that matter most:
| Factor | Vietnam (Picasso) | Thailand | Philippines | South Korea |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single implant (JPY) | ¥144,300–¥259,650 | ¥120,000–¥525,000 | ¥90,000–¥225,000 | ¥150,000–¥375,000 |
| All-on-4 per arch (JPY) | ¥1,009,650–¥1,673,100 | ¥1,200,000–¥1,800,000 | ¥900,000–¥1,350,000 | ¥1,500,000–¥2,250,000 |
| Porcelain veneer (JPY) | ¥51,900–¥69,300 | ¥45,000–¥90,000 | ¥30,000–¥60,000 | ¥75,000–¥150,000 |
| Flight from Tokyo | 5h 30min direct | 6h 30min direct | 4h 30min direct | 2h 30min direct |
| Flight cost (return, JPY) | ¥30,000–¥80,000 | ¥35,000–¥100,000 | ¥25,000–¥70,000 | ¥20,000–¥60,000 |
| Visa for Japanese | Visa-free 45 days | Visa-free 60 days | Visa-free 30 days | Visa-free 90 days |
| Hotel (4-star, per night JPY) | ¥4,000–¥8,000 | ¥6,000–¥12,000 | ¥4,000–¥8,000 | ¥8,000–¥18,000 |
| Implant brands available | Straumann, Nobel Biocare, OSSTEM | Straumann, Nobel, Dentium | Various; variable brand selection | Straumann, Nobel, Osstem, Dentium |
| English proficiency | High (international clinics) | High (medical tourism focus) | Very high (official language) | Moderate–high |
| Cost of living | Very low | Low–moderate | Very low | Moderate–high |
Vietnam offers the best balance of cost, quality, and convenience among the leading destinations. Thailand has a more established medical tourism brand but higher prices and longer flights. The Philippines offers low costs but with more variable clinic quality. South Korea has excellent dental technology but prices closer to Japan's. Vietnam's combination of globally branded implants with full traceability, written warranties, transparent pricing, and strong cultural ties with Japan makes it the optimal choice — especially for high-value procedures like All-on-4 and multiple implant cases where absolute savings are largest.
12. Frequently Asked Questions
How much can I save on dental implants in Vietnam compared to Japan?
Japanese patients can save 48–71% on a single dental implant at Picasso Dental Clinic. A complete implant (fixture + abutment + crown) costs ¥300,000–¥500,000 in Japan versus ¥144,300–¥259,650 at Picasso. For All-on-4 full-arch restoration, savings are even more dramatic: ¥3,500,000–¥4,500,000 in Japan versus ¥1,009,650–¥1,673,100 at Picasso per arch — savings of 63–71%. These procedures are not covered by Japan's NHI, making the cost comparison entirely out-of-pocket.
How long is the flight from Japan to Vietnam?
Direct flights from Tokyo (Narita/Haneda) to Hanoi take approximately 5 hours 30 minutes, and to Ho Chi Minh City approximately 6 hours 10 minutes. From Osaka (Kansai), flights are about 30 minutes shorter. From Fukuoka, Hanoi is just 4 hours 40 minutes away. Multiple airlines operate daily services including ANA, JAL, Vietnam Airlines, and VietJet, with return fares from as low as ¥30,000 on budget carriers.
Do I need a visa to visit Vietnam from Japan?
No. Japanese passport holders enjoy visa-free entry to Vietnam for stays up to 45 days. No application, no fee, no waiting. Simply arrive at any Vietnamese international airport with your passport and receive your entry stamp. This is more than sufficient for any dental treatment plan. For longer stays, an e-visa valid for up to 90 days can be obtained online for US$25.
What implant brands does Picasso Dental Clinic use?
Picasso uses only internationally recognised implant brands: Straumann (Switzerland), Nobel Biocare (Sweden/Switzerland), and OSSTEM (South Korea). These are the same brands used at premium dental clinics in Tokyo and Osaka. Every patient receives an implant passport with manufacturer serial numbers and batch data — the same documentation standard used in Japan — for full material traceability.
Is the quality of dental care in Vietnam comparable to Japan?
At international-standard clinics like Picasso Dental, yes. The clinic uses the same implant systems, crown materials (IPS e.max, zirconia), and digital imaging technology (CBCT, intraoral scanners) as leading Japanese clinics. Picasso has treated over 70,000 patients from 62 countries since 2013, with implant success rates of 95%+ consistent with global benchmarks. The key difference is operational cost — not material or clinical quality.
Can I communicate in Japanese at the clinic?
Picasso Dental Clinic operates primarily in English, which is the working language for all international patients. Japanese interpretation can be arranged upon request. Treatment plans, pricing documents, and post-operative instructions can be provided in both English and Japanese. Many staff members have experience working with Japanese patients and understand Japanese cultural expectations for service quality.
How many visits to Vietnam are required for implant treatment?
A standard single dental implant typically requires two visits. The first visit (5–7 days) covers consultation, CBCT imaging, implant placement, and initial healing. The second visit (3–5 days) takes place 3–6 months later for final crown placement after osseointegration. Veneer cases can often be completed in a single visit of 7–10 days. Between visits, Picasso provides remote monitoring via WhatsApp.
Does Picasso Dental Clinic offer warranties?
Yes. Picasso provides written warranties: 10 years on Straumann and Nobel Biocare implant fixtures, 7 years on OSSTEM implant fixtures, and 5–15 years on zirconia and e.max crowns and veneers. Every patient also receives complete digital treatment records and an implant passport, enabling any dentist in Japan to provide follow-up care with full documentation.
What is the total cost of a dental tourism trip from Japan to Vietnam?
Total trip costs are remarkably affordable. For a single Straumann implant requiring two visits, the all-in cost including flights (¥80,000), 8 nights accommodation (¥48,000), meals and transport (¥24,000), and the implant itself comes to approximately ¥348,350–¥411,650. For All-on-4 both arches, total trip cost is ¥2,219,300–¥3,546,200 versus ¥7,000,000–¥9,000,000 in Japan — potential savings of ¥3,450,000–¥6,780,000.
Why is dental care so much cheaper in Vietnam than Japan?
The cost difference is driven entirely by operational overhead, not material quality. Vietnam's clinic rent, staff salaries, laboratory fees, and general cost of living are 70–80% lower than Japan's. The implants themselves (Straumann, Nobel Biocare) are the same products at the same wholesale price globally — but Japanese clinics must charge higher prices to cover Tokyo/Osaka rental costs, higher staff salaries, and the Japanese healthcare system's fee structure for self-pay procedures.
13. Conclusions & Recommendations
Japan's National Health Insurance system provides excellent coverage for basic dental care — but explicitly excludes the very procedures that are most expensive: dental implants, porcelain veneers, ceramic crowns, teeth whitening, and full-arch restoration. Japanese patients needing these treatments face full out-of-pocket costs at some of Asia's highest private clinic rates.
Vietnam offers a compelling alternative for these self-pay procedures, with savings of 60–80% at international-standard clinics using the same globally branded implant systems. The economics are straightforward:
Savings of 60–80% versus Japanese private clinics on all NHI-excluded procedures. Named, globally recognised implant brands (Straumann, Nobel Biocare, OSSTEM) with written warranties and full material traceability. Direct flights from 5 hours on trusted carriers including ANA, JAL, Vietnam Airlines, and VietJet with fares from ¥30,000 return. Visa-free entry for 45 days — no paperwork, no fees. And deep cultural ties between Japan and Vietnam that make the travel experience comfortable and familiar.
For a Japanese patient facing a ¥400,000 implant quote, a ¥2,800,000 veneer transformation, or an ¥8,000,000 full-arch restoration, the mathematics are clear. Even the most conservative trip-cost modelling shows savings of hundreds of thousands of yen — and in All-on-4 cases, savings exceeding ¥5,000,000.
The break-even threshold is approximately ¥80,000 in dental work — roughly the cost of a single ceramic crown in Japan. Any procedure above this threshold is likely to cost less in Vietnam, including all travel expenses. For patients considering multiple procedures, the savings compound dramatically.
Get Your Free Treatment Plan
Send your X-ray or dental records to Picasso's international team via WhatsApp. Receive a detailed treatment plan with fixed JPY pricing within 48 hours — no obligation, no hidden fees.
WhatsApp: +84 989 067 888Sources & References
[1] Japan Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare (MHLW) — Survey of Medical Institutions and Hospital Report (2025). National dental care system data and NHI coverage guidelines.
[2] Japan Dental Association (JDA) — NHI Dental Fee Schedule and coverage exclusion guidelines. Self-pay (jiyuu-shinryou) classification for implants, veneers, and cosmetic procedures.
[3] Ki-kuzuki Dental — "Understanding Dental Insurance in Japan: What Is Covered and What's Not" (2025). Detailed breakdown of NHI dental coverage and exclusions.
[4] GaijinPot Health — "Treatments covered and not covered by Japan's health insurance" (2025). Insurance coverage analysis for dental procedures in Japan.
[5] Trust Dental Clinic (Tokyo) — Fee Schedule for patients without Japanese Health Insurance (2025–2026). Comprehensive private clinic pricing data.
[6] Komori Dental Clinic (Tokyo) — Price List (2025). Implant, crown, and veneer pricing reference.
[7] HAPLUS Dental Clinic (Tokyo) — Price List (2025). All-on-4 and implant pricing with warranty information.
[8] PMC — "Comprehensive Assessment of the Universal Healthcare System in Dentistry Japan: A Retrospective Observational Study" (2022). Academic analysis of Japan's dental care system.
[9] PMC — "The Oral Healthcare System in Japan" (2018). Structural analysis of Japan's dental care delivery and insurance coverage.
[10] IMARC Group — Vietnam dental market: US $31.88M (2025) → US $79.55M (2034), CAGR 10.69%.
[11] Kupka et al. (2024) — "How far can we go? A 20-year meta-analysis of dental implant survival rates." Clin Oral Investig, 28(10):541.
[12] Large-scale Israeli HMO registry (2025) — 158,824 implants, 97.8% survival rate. MDPI.
[13] Google Flights, Skyscanner — Flight pricing data NRT/HND–HAN, NRT/HND–SGN, KIX–HAN, KIX–SGN, FUK–HAN (February–March 2026).
[14] Vietnam Airlines, VietJet, ANA, JAL — Route schedules and pricing Japan–Vietnam (2025–2026).
[15] Picasso Dental Clinic — Published price list (2025–2026) and patient records (2013–2026, n = 70,000+).
Commercial Interest Declaration: This report is published by Picasso Dental Clinic. While every effort has been made to present accurate, independently sourced data, readers should note the publisher's commercial interest when evaluating treatment recommendations. All external sources are referenced with citations above.