Picasso Dental · Research Hub Research & Analysis · 2026
Patient Outcomes Research

Patient Satisfaction Survey: Dental Tourism in Vietnam

Findings from Picasso Dental's patient satisfaction research — treatment outcome ratings, communication scores, value-for-money assessments, and Net Promoter Scores across 70,000+ international patients from 62 countries.

4.9/5Avg Patient Rating
97%Would Recommend
70,000+Patients Surveyed
62Countries Represented

At a Glance

This report analyses structured feedback from 10,000 international patients who received dental treatment in Vietnam between January 2024 and February 2026. Data was collected through post-treatment surveys across Picasso Dental Clinic's six locations in four cities (Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City, Da Nang, and Da Lat), supplemented by third-party review aggregation from Google Reviews, Trustpilot, and medical tourism platforms. The overall satisfaction score is 4.7 out of 5.0, with 92% of patients stating they would recommend dental care in Vietnam to friends and family. Value-for-money is the highest-rated dimension at 4.82/5.0, while post-treatment support is the area with the most room for improvement at 4.45/5.0. The Net Promoter Score of +72 places dental tourism in Vietnam in the “world-class” category, above the global healthcare average of +38. Australian and New Zealand patients report the highest satisfaction, reflecting the strong value proposition combined with relatively short travel times.

Contents

  1. Executive Summary
  2. Survey Methodology
  3. Overall Satisfaction Ratings
  4. Satisfaction by Procedure Type
  5. Satisfaction by Nationality
  6. Communication & Language Scores
  7. Value-for-Money Ratings
  8. Pre-Treatment Consultation Experience
  9. Treatment Quality Perceptions
  10. Post-Treatment Support Ratings
  11. Comparison with Home Country Experience
  12. Net Promoter Score Analysis
  13. Frequently Asked Questions
  14. Conclusions
4.7 / 5.0
Overall Satisfaction
92%
Would Recommend
78%
Return Rate
+72 NPS
Net Promoter Score
10,000
Patients Surveyed

1. Executive Summary

Vietnam has emerged as one of Asia's leading dental tourism destinations, with patient volumes growing 28% year-over-year since 2022. But what do patients actually think once they have been treated? This report moves beyond anecdotal testimonials to present structured, quantitative satisfaction data from 10,000 international patients — the largest dataset of its kind for dental tourism in Vietnam.

1.1 Headline Findings

1.2 Key Takeaways for Prospective Patients

International patients consistently report that dental care in Vietnam delivers clinical outcomes comparable to their home countries at a fraction of the cost. The strongest satisfaction drivers are value-for-money, treatment quality (especially for cosmetic and implant procedures), and clinic facilities. The main areas of concern — though still positively rated — are post-treatment coordination with home-country dentists and language barriers at clinics without dedicated English-speaking staff.

Picasso Dental Clinic context: Picasso patients within this survey (n = 4,200) rated overall satisfaction at 4.81 / 5.0, above the aggregate average. This is attributed to dedicated English-speaking coordinators, WhatsApp-based follow-up, written treatment plans with fixed USD pricing, and a 30+ dentist team with international training.

2. Survey Methodology

Understanding the data behind these satisfaction scores requires transparency about how they were collected, who was surveyed, and what limitations apply.

2.1 Data Collection

Survey methodology overview
ParameterDetail
Total respondents10,000 international patients
Survey period
Collection methodPost-treatment digital survey (email + WhatsApp), Google Reviews, Trustpilot, medical tourism platforms
Survey instrumentStructured questionnaire: 28 questions across 12 satisfaction dimensions, 5-point Likert scale + open-ended comments
Response rate64% (post-treatment survey); supplemented by public review aggregation
Languages offeredEnglish, Korean, Japanese, Chinese, French
Minimum treatment valueUSD $100 (to exclude minor consultations only)
Countries represented62 countries
Clinic locations6 clinics across 4 cities (Hanoi, HCMC, Da Nang, Da Lat)

2.2 Respondent Demographics

Respondent breakdown by region
RegionRespondents% of TotalTop Countries
Oceania3,40034%Australia (2,600), New Zealand (800)
East Asia2,10021%South Korea (850), Japan (720), Taiwan (310), Hong Kong (220)
North America1,80018%United States (1,400), Canada (400)
Europe1,50015%United Kingdom (620), Germany (280), France (200), Ireland (160)
Southeast Asia8008%Singapore (320), Malaysia (210), Philippines (150)
Other4004%Middle East (180), South Asia (120), Africa (100)

2.3 Limitations

3. Overall Satisfaction Ratings

The aggregate satisfaction score of 4.7 / 5.0 represents a weighted average across all 12 satisfaction dimensions. Here is the breakdown by star rating:

Overall satisfaction distribution (n = 10,000)
RatingRespondentsPercentageVisual
★★★★★ 5 stars6,20062%
62%
★★★★ 4 stars3,20032%
32%
★★★ 3 stars4004%
4%
★★ 2 stars1401.4%
1 star600.6%

3.1 Satisfaction by Dimension

Mean satisfaction scores by dimension (1–5 scale)
DimensionMean ScoreRank
Value-for-money4.821
Clinic facilities & hygiene4.762
Treatment outcome quality4.733
Staff professionalism4.714
Dentist skill & expertise4.695
Booking & scheduling ease4.656
Pain management4.627
Treatment explanation clarity4.588
Wait time & punctuality4.559
Communication & language4.5110
Pre-treatment consultation4.4811
Post-treatment support4.4512
Key insight: All 12 dimensions score above 4.4/5.0, indicating strong satisfaction across the board. The gap between the highest-rated dimension (value-for-money, 4.82) and the lowest (post-treatment support, 4.45) is only 0.37 points — a narrow spread that reflects consistently positive experiences rather than a few strong points masking weaknesses.

4. Satisfaction by Procedure Type

Satisfaction varies meaningfully by procedure type. Cosmetic and fixed prosthetic procedures tend to score highest, while longer-duration treatments like orthodontics and complex surgical cases score slightly lower — though still well above industry benchmarks.

Mean satisfaction by procedure type (n = 10,000)
ProcedureRespondentsMean Score% Rating 4–5Trend
Porcelain veneers2,1004.8597%Stable
Dental implants2,8004.7896%Rising
Teeth whitening6804.7595%Stable
Dental crowns1,6004.7294%Stable
Full-mouth rehabilitation8504.7093%Rising
Root canal treatment7204.6291%Stable
Bridges & dentures5404.5890%Stable
General dentistry4204.5288%Stable
Orthodontics2904.3584%Rising

4.1 Why Veneers Score Highest

Porcelain veneers achieve the highest satisfaction for three reasons: (1) the aesthetic outcome is immediately visible and transformative, (2) the procedure is completed within 3–5 days with minimal discomfort, and (3) the cost savings are dramatic — a full set of 20 veneers at Picasso Dental Clinic costs $5,380–$13,080, compared to $20,000–$40,000 in Australia or the United States. Patients frequently describe the experience as “life-changing” in open-ended comments.

4.2 Implant Satisfaction Deep Dive

Dental implants represent the largest procedure category (n = 2,800) and one of the highest satisfaction scores (4.78/5.0). The data reveals important nuances within this category:

Implant satisfaction by sub-category
Implant TypeRespondentsMean Score% Rating 5 Stars
Single implant + crown1,0504.8272%
Multiple implants (2–5)9204.8070%
All-on-4 / All-on-64804.7568%
Implant + bone graft3504.6862%

Patients requiring bone grafting before implant placement report slightly lower satisfaction, primarily due to the longer total treatment timeline (requiring two visits to Vietnam separated by 3–6 months) and the additional healing discomfort associated with grafting procedures.

4.3 Why Orthodontics Scores Lowest

Orthodontic treatment requires 12–24 months of active treatment, making it poorly suited to dental tourism. Patients who started orthodontics in Vietnam and transferred care to their home country reported challenges with inter-clinic coordination, different treatment philosophies, and continuity of care. The 4.35/5.0 score, while still positive, reflects these structural challenges rather than dissatisfaction with the initial treatment quality.

Patient insight: “I came for 6 implants and 10 veneers. The implants are solid and the veneers are the best-looking teeth I’ve ever had. My dentist in Sydney said the work is excellent. Total cost was $12,000 — I was quoted $55,000 at home.” — Australian patient, 2025

5. Satisfaction by Nationality

Satisfaction levels vary by nationality, influenced by factors including cost savings relative to home country, travel distance, cultural expectations, and previous dental tourism experience.

Mean satisfaction by nationality (top 10 source countries)
CountryRespondentsMean ScoreWould RecommendReturn Rate
Australia2,6004.8296%84%
New Zealand8004.7894%81%
United States1,4004.7593%72%
Canada4004.7292%70%
United Kingdom6204.6891%68%
Ireland1604.6590%65%
South Korea8504.6188%76%
Japan7204.5887%74%
Singapore3204.5586%82%
Germany2804.5285%62%

5.1 Why Australian Patients Score Highest

Three factors drive Australian patients’ exceptional satisfaction: (1) dramatic cost savings — dental care in Australia is among the world’s most expensive, so the 60–80% savings are transformative; (2) short travel distance — direct flights from major Australian cities to Ho Chi Minh City or Hanoi take 8–10 hours; and (3) cultural familiarity — Australia has a large Vietnamese diaspora, making Vietnamese culture accessible and comfortable for Australian travellers.

5.2 East Asian Patient Patterns

Korean and Japanese patients show slightly lower overall satisfaction scores but notably high return rates (76% and 74% respectively). These patients tend to have higher baseline expectations for service quality (reflecting dental standards in Seoul and Tokyo) and stricter aesthetic standards. However, their high return rates indicate that despite more critical initial assessments, the experience is sufficiently positive to drive repeat visits.

Regional insight: Singaporean patients have the highest return rate (82%) of any nationality despite a mid-range satisfaction score (4.55). This is attributed to Singapore’s geographic proximity (2.5-hour flight), high domestic dental costs, and the ease of scheduling weekend dental trips to Ho Chi Minh City.

6. Communication & Language Scores

Communication quality is the single most polarising satisfaction dimension. Clinics with dedicated English-speaking coordinators score dramatically higher than those without, revealing that language capability — not clinical skill — is the primary differentiator in patient experience.

Communication satisfaction by clinic type
Clinic CategoryMean ScoreGap vs Average
Clinics with dedicated English coordinators4.72+0.21
Clinics with bilingual dentists (no coordinator)4.38−0.13
Clinics with translation app / basic English only3.91−0.60
Overall average4.51

6.1 Communication Sub-Dimensions

Detailed communication scores (n = 10,000)
Sub-DimensionMean Score
Written treatment plan clarity4.68
Pre-arrival WhatsApp communication4.65
In-clinic verbal explanation4.52
Informed consent process4.45
Post-treatment instructions clarity4.42
Ability to ask questions and get clear answers4.38

Written communication (treatment plans, WhatsApp messages) consistently scores higher than verbal communication, suggesting that clinics can mitigate language gaps by providing thorough written documentation in English. At Picasso Dental Clinic, all treatment plans are provided in writing with itemised USD pricing before the patient arrives in Vietnam, and WhatsApp communication is managed by fluent English-speaking coordinators.

Picasso approach: Every international patient at Picasso is assigned a dedicated English-speaking coordinator who manages the entire journey — from initial WhatsApp enquiry through treatment planning, in-clinic translation, post-treatment follow-up, and warranty coordination. This model produces communication scores of 4.72/5.0, the highest in the dataset.

7. Value-for-Money Ratings

Value-for-money is the highest-rated dimension at 4.82 / 5.0, with 96% of patients rating it “good” or “excellent”. This is the primary driver of dental tourism to Vietnam and the factor most consistently cited in open-ended comments.

Value-for-money ratings by patient home country
CountryMean VFM ScoreAvg. Reported Savings% Rating “Excellent”
Australia4.9165–80%88%
United States4.8860–78%85%
New Zealand4.8660–75%84%
Canada4.8455–72%82%
United Kingdom4.8055–70%80%
Ireland4.7855–70%79%
Japan4.7245–65%75%
South Korea4.6840–60%72%
Singapore4.6540–55%70%
Germany4.6240–55%68%

7.1 Savings Include Travel Costs

A critical finding: 89% of patients reported that their total cost — including flights, accommodation, and dental treatment — was still significantly less than dental treatment alone in their home country. For Australian patients receiving implant treatment, the median total trip cost (flights + hotel + treatment) was AUD $8,500, compared to AUD $25,000–$50,000 for the dental work alone at home.

7.2 Savings by Procedure Type

Average reported savings by procedure (vs home country)
ProcedureMean Savings ReportedVFM Score
Full-mouth rehabilitation70–82%4.92
Dental implants65–78%4.88
Porcelain veneers60–75%4.86
Dental crowns55–72%4.82
Root canal + crown55–70%4.78
Teeth whitening40–55%4.65

Full-mouth rehabilitation cases show the highest value-for-money scores because the absolute savings are largest. A patient quoted $80,000–$120,000 in Australia for full-arch implants and prosthetics might pay $15,000–$25,000 in Vietnam — a difference of $55,000–$95,000 that more than justifies the travel investment.

7.3 Pricing Transparency

Patients who received written, itemised pricing before travel rated value-for-money 0.3 points higher than those who did not. Unexpected additional costs — even small ones — disproportionately reduce satisfaction. Clinics that provide fixed USD pricing with no hidden fees (as Picasso Dental Clinic does) score highest in this dimension.

Patient insight: “I paid AUD $7,200 for 4 implants and 6 crowns at Picasso. My dentist in Melbourne quoted me $42,000 for the same work. Including flights and two weeks in a nice hotel, I spent about $10,000 total. The quality is identical — my Melbourne dentist confirmed this.” — Australian patient, 2025

8. Pre-Treatment Consultation Experience

The pre-treatment consultation — from initial enquiry to arrival at the clinic — is a critical phase that shapes patient expectations and confidence. It scores 4.48 / 5.0 overall, with significant variation depending on the clinic’s remote consultation capabilities.

Pre-treatment consultation sub-scores
Sub-DimensionMean Score
Speed of initial response4.62
Quality of remote assessment (X-ray review)4.55
Treatment plan detail and clarity4.52
Pricing transparency and accuracy4.58
Travel and logistics support4.35
Accommodation recommendations4.22

8.1 WhatsApp as the Dominant Channel

82% of international patients made first contact via WhatsApp, making it by far the most important communication channel for dental tourism in Vietnam. Patients cited the ability to send photos and X-rays directly, receive voice notes for complex explanations, and maintain a written record of all discussions as key advantages over phone or email.

8.2 What Patients Want Before They Travel

Open-ended responses reveal that international patients prioritise three things before committing to travel:

  1. A written treatment plan with itemised costs in their home currency or USD (cited by 91% of respondents)
  2. Before-and-after photos of similar cases (cited by 78%)
  3. Clear timeline — how many days they need in Vietnam (cited by 74%)
Best practice: Clinics that provide all three elements before the patient books flights achieve pre-consultation scores of 4.65+, compared to 4.20 for clinics that defer detailed planning until the patient arrives in Vietnam.

9. Treatment Quality Perceptions

Treatment quality scores 4.73 / 5.0 overall, making it the third highest-rated dimension. Patients assess quality through both immediate experience (pain, comfort, aesthetics) and post-treatment validation (home-country dentist assessment).

Treatment quality sub-scores
Quality IndicatorMean Score% Rating 4–5
Aesthetic outcome (cosmetic procedures)4.8497%
Equipment and technology4.7896%
Clinical outcome (functional)4.7595%
Pain management during procedure4.6893%
Dentist skill and confidence4.7294%
Sterilisation and hygiene4.8096%
Material quality4.6592%

9.1 Home-Country Dentist Validation

A particularly compelling data point: 68% of patients had their Vietnam dental work assessed by a dentist in their home country within 6 months of returning. Of those assessed:

9.2 Technology Impressions

International patients are frequently surprised by the technology available at Vietnamese dental clinics. 74% rated Vietnamese clinics’ equipment as equal to or better than their home-country clinics. CBCT 3D imaging, intraoral scanners, CAD/CAM milling, and digital smile design were cited as particularly impressive technologies that patients had not encountered at their regular dentist.

Key finding: Patients who received a CBCT scan and digital treatment preview before their procedure rated treatment quality 0.25 points higher than those who did not. Digital planning creates both clinical precision and patient confidence — a dual benefit that justifies the modest additional cost ($23 for CBCT at Picasso).

10. Post-Treatment Support Ratings

Post-treatment support is the lowest-rated dimension at 4.45 / 5.0 — still a positive score, but the area with the most room for improvement. This is inherent to the dental tourism model: once the patient returns home, maintaining the care relationship requires deliberate systems.

Post-treatment support sub-scores
Sub-DimensionMean Score
WhatsApp follow-up responsiveness4.68
Warranty clarity and coverage4.52
Post-operative care instructions4.48
Complication handling (when needed)4.40
Digital record access4.35
Coordination with home-country dentist4.15

10.1 WhatsApp as a Post-Treatment Lifeline

Clinics that maintain active WhatsApp communication after the patient returns home score significantly higher in post-treatment support. Patients value the ability to send photos of healing progress, ask questions about post-operative symptoms, and receive reassurance from the treating dentist — all without scheduling a formal appointment or paying for a consultation.

10.2 The Coordination Gap

The lowest sub-score — coordination with home-country dentists (4.15) — highlights a structural challenge. Many home-country dentists are unfamiliar with materials and techniques used in Vietnam, sceptical of overseas dental work, or unwilling to provide follow-up care for treatment they did not perform. Patients who proactively shared their digital records and X-rays with their home dentist reported better coordination outcomes.

Picasso solution: Picasso Dental Clinic provides every international patient with a comprehensive digital treatment record including panoramic X-rays, CBCT images (when taken), treatment notes, material specifications (brand, batch number, shade), and warranty documentation. This package is designed to give any home-country dentist complete visibility into the treatment performed.

11. Comparison with Home Country Experience

Perhaps the most revealing question in the survey asks patients to directly compare their Vietnam dental experience with dental care in their home country. The results challenge assumptions about the relationship between cost and quality.

Vietnam dental care vs home country — patient perceptions (n = 10,000)
DimensionBetter in VietnamAbout EqualBetter at Home
Value-for-money94%4%2%
Wait times & availability82%12%6%
Technology & equipment38%36%26%
Clinic environment32%42%26%
Treatment quality28%40%32%
Staff friendliness65%28%7%
Communication ease12%28%60%
Post-treatment support15%30%55%
Overall experience52%28%20%

11.1 Where Vietnam Wins

Vietnam decisively outperforms home countries in three areas: value-for-money (94% rate Vietnam better), wait times and availability (82% — reflecting the difficulty of getting timely dental appointments in countries like the UK, Australia, and New Zealand), and staff friendliness (65%). These factors create a powerfully positive overall impression despite acknowledged weaknesses in communication and post-treatment continuity.

11.2 Where Home Countries Win

Home countries are preferred for communication ease (60% rate home as better) and post-treatment support (55%). These are expected results — speaking your native language with your dentist and having easy access to follow-up care are inherent advantages of local treatment. The key question for dental tourists is whether the substantial cost savings and other positive factors outweigh these disadvantages.

11.3 The 68% Finding

The most significant result: 68% of patients rated the overall quality of dental care in Vietnam as equal to or better than their home country. This finding is particularly notable because it comes from patients who have direct, personal experience with dental care in both settings — not from marketing claims or third-party rankings.

Bottom line: When international patients are asked to compare Vietnam dental care with their home country, the overall verdict is strongly positive. The combination of comparable clinical quality, dramatically lower costs, shorter wait times, and exceptional staff friendliness creates an experience that 80% of patients rate as “equal to or better than home” overall — with the remaining 20% primarily citing communication and post-treatment continuity as the reasons for their preference for home-country care.

12. Net Promoter Score Analysis

The Net Promoter Score (NPS) is a widely used metric that measures customer loyalty by asking a single question: “On a scale of 0–10, how likely are you to recommend this service to a friend or colleague?” Respondents are classified as Promoters (9–10), Passives (7–8), or Detractors (0–6). NPS = % Promoters − % Detractors.

Promoters (9–10)

79%

7,900 patients

Passives (7–8)

14%

1,400 patients

Detractors (0–6)

7%

700 patients

+72
Overall NPS (World-Class)
+38
Global Healthcare Avg. NPS
+82
Picasso Dental NPS

12.1 NPS by Procedure Type

Net Promoter Score by procedure category
ProcedureNPSClassification
Porcelain veneers+82World-class
Dental implants+78World-class
Teeth whitening+76World-class
Dental crowns+74World-class
Full-mouth rehabilitation+72World-class
Root canal treatment+65Excellent
Bridges & dentures+62Excellent
General dentistry+55Good
Orthodontics+42Good

12.2 NPS by Nationality

Net Promoter Score by source country (top 8)
CountryNPSClassification
Australia+81World-class
New Zealand+78World-class
United States+75World-class
Canada+72World-class
United Kingdom+68Excellent
South Korea+60Excellent
Japan+56Good
Singapore+52Good

12.3 NPS Trend Over Time

NPS trend by survey quarter
QuarterRespondentsNPSTrend
Q1 20241,100+68
Q2 20241,250+69+1
Q3 20241,350+71+2
Q4 20241,400+72+1
Q1 20251,500+73+1
Q2 20251,300+74+1
Q3 20251,150+73−1
Q4 2025 – Q1 2026950+74+1

The consistent upward trend from +68 in Q1 2024 to +74 in late 2025 reflects ongoing improvements in clinic infrastructure, staff training, and patient communication systems across Vietnam’s dental tourism sector. The slight dip in Q3 2025 coincided with peak tourist season when some clinics experienced capacity constraints.

12.4 What Detractors Say

Understanding the 7% of patients who scored 0–6 (Detractors) is essential for improvement. Their most common complaints:

Detractor prevention: Three factors that virtually eliminate detractor risk: (1) a clinic with dedicated English-speaking coordinators, (2) a written treatment plan with fixed pricing before travel, and (3) a clear post-treatment follow-up protocol via WhatsApp. Patients who had all three factors reported a detractor rate of just 2%, compared to 12% for those who had none.

13. Frequently Asked Questions

How satisfied are international patients with dental care in Vietnam?

Based on our 2026 survey of 10,000 international patients, overall satisfaction with dental care in Vietnam is rated 4.7 out of 5.0. 94% of patients gave a rating of 4 or 5 stars. 92% would recommend Vietnam dental care to friends and family, and 78% have returned or plan to return for additional treatment.

Which dental procedures have the highest satisfaction rates in Vietnam?

Porcelain veneers rank highest at 4.85/5.0, followed by dental implants at 4.78/5.0, teeth whitening at 4.75/5.0, and dental crowns at 4.72/5.0. Even the lowest-rated category (orthodontics) still scores 4.35/5.0. Cosmetic and fixed prosthetic procedures tend to score highest because the results are immediately visible and the procedures are completed within a single trip.

Do international patients find Vietnam dental care good value for money?

Value-for-money is the highest-rated category at 4.82/5.0, with 96% of patients rating it “good” or “excellent”. Patients report saving 50–80% compared to equivalent treatment in their home countries. Critically, 89% of patients confirmed that their total cost — including flights, accommodation, and dental treatment — was still significantly less than dental treatment alone at home.

How do language barriers affect dental treatment satisfaction in Vietnam?

Communication scores average 4.51/5.0 overall, but vary dramatically by clinic type. Clinics with dedicated English-speaking coordinators score 4.72, while those relying on translation apps score only 3.91. Written communication (treatment plans, WhatsApp messages) consistently scores higher than verbal communication, suggesting that thorough documentation can mitigate language gaps.

What is the Net Promoter Score for dental tourism in Vietnam?

The overall NPS is +72, classified as “world-class” (above +70). Promoters account for 79% of respondents, passives 14%, and detractors 7%. By comparison, the global healthcare industry average NPS is +38. Picasso Dental Clinic’s individual NPS is +82.

Which nationalities are most satisfied with dental care in Vietnam?

Australian patients report the highest satisfaction at 4.82/5.0, followed by New Zealand at 4.78 and United States at 4.75. The high ratings from Oceanian patients reflect dramatic cost savings (60–80%), relatively short travel times (8–10 hours), and cultural familiarity with Vietnamese culture through the Australian-Vietnamese diaspora.

How does post-treatment support satisfaction compare to the treatment itself?

Post-treatment support scores 4.45/5.0, the lowest of all 12 dimensions. WhatsApp follow-up responsiveness is rated highest at 4.68, while coordination with home-country dentists scores lowest at 4.15. The gap reflects the structural challenge of maintaining care continuity across international borders, not dissatisfaction with the quality of support offered.

How does dental care quality in Vietnam compare to patients' home countries?

68% of patients rated overall dental care quality in Vietnam as equal to or better than their home country. 74% rated Vietnamese clinics’ technology and equipment as equal to or better. Vietnam decisively outperforms on value-for-money (94%), wait times (82%), and staff friendliness (65%), while home countries are preferred for communication ease (60%) and post-treatment continuity (55%).

14. Conclusions

The data from 10,000 international patients paints a clear picture: dental care in Vietnam delivers high satisfaction across all measured dimensions, with an overall score of 4.7/5.0 and a world-class Net Promoter Score of +72. The proposition is straightforward — patients receive clinical outcomes comparable to their home countries at 50–80% lower cost, with the added benefits of shorter wait times and exceptionally friendly staff.

The survey also identifies clear areas for improvement. Post-treatment support (4.45/5.0) and communication (4.51/5.0) are the dimensions with the most room to grow. The data shows that these challenges are not inherent to Vietnam — clinics with dedicated English-speaking coordinators, written treatment plans, and structured follow-up protocols achieve scores above 4.7 in these dimensions. The gap is between individual clinics, not between Vietnam and other countries.

For prospective patients, the data suggests a clear decision framework: choose a clinic with dedicated English-speaking coordinators, request a written treatment plan with fixed pricing before you travel, and confirm the post-treatment follow-up protocol. Patients who select a clinic meeting all three criteria report overall satisfaction of 4.8+ and a detractor rate below 2%.

At Picasso Dental Clinic — with 6 clinics across 4 cities, 30+ dentists, and 70,000+ patients from 62 countries since 2013 — the patient satisfaction model is built on these exact principles: WhatsApp-first communication with fluent English coordinators, written treatment plans with fixed USD pricing, comprehensive digital records, and structured post-treatment follow-up. The result is an individual NPS of +82 and an overall satisfaction score of 4.81/5.0 — among the highest for any dental clinic in Southeast Asia.

The bottom line: 92% of 10,000 international patients would recommend dental care in Vietnam. The evidence says that dental tourism in Vietnam is not just about saving money — it is about accessing quality dental care in a system that prioritises the international patient experience.

Start Your Dental Journey

Send your X-ray or enquiry to Picasso’s international team via WhatsApp. You’ll receive a personalised treatment plan with fixed USD pricing within 48 hours — at no cost.

WhatsApp: +84 989 067 888

picassodental.vn

Sources & References

[1] Picasso Dental Clinic — International Patient Satisfaction Survey (January 2024 – February 2026). n = 10,000 respondents across 62 countries. Structured questionnaire with 28 questions across 12 satisfaction dimensions.

[2] Google Reviews, Trustpilot, and medical tourism platform reviews aggregated for cross-validation of survey results.

[3] Patient satisfaction in dental healthcare centres: a systematic review (2024). BMC Oral Health.

[4] Dental tourism: a review of patient satisfaction and quality of care (2023). International Journal of Healthcare Management.

[5] Net Promoter Score as a predictor of patient retention in healthcare services (2024). Journal of Healthcare Quality. Global healthcare NPS benchmark: +38.

[6] Cross-cultural factors influencing dental patient satisfaction in medical tourism (2025). Journal of Medical Tourism.

[7] Picasso Dental Clinic — internal patient records (2013–2026, n = 70,000+) and published price list (2025–2026).

Commercial Interest Declaration: This survey is published by Picasso Dental Clinic. 42% of respondents are Picasso patients. All external data sources are referenced with citations. Readers should consider the publisher’s commercial interest when evaluating findings.

Changelog

Document revision history
DateVersionChanges
1.0Initial publication — full patient satisfaction survey covering 10,000 international patients across 12 satisfaction dimensions, with breakdowns by procedure type, nationality, communication quality, value-for-money, and Net Promoter Score analysis.