Executive Summary
The global dental tourism market is valued at $15–20 billion in 2025, with projections to exceed $35 billion by 2032. Within this expanding market, Vietnam is emerging as one of the fastest-growing destinations, driven by cost advantages of 50–80% over Western countries, a rapidly modernising healthcare infrastructure, and aggressive visa liberalisation policies. We estimate Vietnam’s dental tourism sector at $200–500 million in 2025, growing at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 15–25%. Under our base-case scenario, the market could reach $1.8–2.5 billion by 2034. Key source markets include Australia, Japan, South Korea, the United States, and the United Kingdom, with the fastest growth coming from Oceanian and European markets. This report provides comprehensive market sizing, growth driver analysis, competitive benchmarking against Thailand and other regional players, a review of government support and policy frameworks, infrastructure investment trends, and a detailed year-by-year forecast to 2034.
Contents
- Global Dental Tourism Market Overview
- Vietnam’s Market Position
- Market Size Estimates
- Growth Drivers
- Key Source Markets by Volume
- Competitive Landscape
- Government Support and Policy
- Infrastructure Investment
- Market Forecast 2025–2034
- Challenges and Risks
- Picasso Dental’s Market Position
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Conclusions
1. Global Dental Tourism Market Overview
Dental tourism — travelling internationally for dental treatment at lower cost or higher quality than available domestically — has grown from a niche phenomenon into a multi-billion-dollar global industry. The convergence of rising dental costs in developed nations, improved clinical standards in developing countries, low-cost air travel, and digital communication enabling remote consultations has created a structural shift in how patients access dental care.
1.1 Global Market Size
The global dental tourism market was valued at approximately $15.6 billion in 2024, according to Grand View Research, and is projected to reach $35–38 billion by 2032, representing a CAGR of 10–12%. Allied Market Research places the 2025 market at $17.2 billion with even more aggressive growth projections. The variance in estimates reflects the difficulty of measuring cross-border dental spending, as most countries do not track dental tourism as a separate category within medical tourism statistics.
| Source | 2024 Value | 2032 Projection | CAGR |
|---|---|---|---|
| Grand View Research | $15.6B | $38.0B | 11.8% |
| Allied Market Research | $16.4B | $41.2B | 12.2% |
| Mordor Intelligence | $14.8B | $34.6B | 10.5% |
| Precedence Research | $15.1B | $36.8B | 11.2% |
Note: Estimates vary due to differences in methodology, inclusion criteria (some include cosmetic-only procedures, others include all dental work by international patients), and geographic scope.
1.2 Key Global Destinations
The global dental tourism market is concentrated in a handful of destination countries that combine low costs, acceptable quality, and convenient access from major source markets:
| Destination | Estimated Annual Revenue | Primary Source Markets | Key Strengths |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mexico | $3.0–4.5B | United States, Canada | Proximity to US border, no-visa travel, established reputation |
| Thailand | $1.5–2.5B | Australia, Japan, Europe, Middle East | Tourism infrastructure, clinical quality, brand recognition |
| Turkey | $1.2–2.0B | UK, Germany, Netherlands, Middle East | Cosmetic dentistry hub, affordable luxury, short flights from Europe |
| Hungary | $800M–1.5B | UK, Germany, Austria, Scandinavia | “Dental capital of Europe,” EU standards, short European flights |
| India | $800M–1.3B | UK, Middle East, Africa, South Asia | Lowest costs globally, English proficiency, large diaspora |
| Vietnam | $200–500M | Australia, Japan, South Korea, US, UK | Fastest-growing, lowest SE Asian costs, modern infrastructure |
| Costa Rica | $200–400M | United States, Canada | Proximity to US, political stability, tourism appeal |
1.3 Market Growth Drivers
Several structural factors are driving sustained growth in global dental tourism:
- Rising dental costs in developed nations: Dental spending per capita in the US, Australia, and UK has grown 4–7% annually over the past decade, outpacing inflation and wage growth. An increasing proportion of the population cannot afford dental care at home.
- Insurance gaps: Dental insurance in most Western countries covers only basic procedures. Complex work (implants, veneers, full-mouth rehabilitation) is rarely covered, creating out-of-pocket costs of $10,000–$80,000 that drive patients to seek alternatives abroad.
- Quality convergence: Leading clinics in developing countries now use the same equipment (CBCT, CAD/CAM) and materials (Nobel Biocare, Straumann, IPS e.max) as Western practices, narrowing the perceived quality gap.
- Digital connectivity: WhatsApp consultations, online reviews, 3D treatment planning, and digital records enable patients to research, plan, and coordinate dental tourism entirely from their phone.
- Low-cost air travel: Budget airlines and increased route connectivity have made international dental tourism accessible to middle-income patients, not just the wealthy.
2. Vietnam’s Market Position
Vietnam occupies a unique position in the global dental tourism landscape: it is simultaneously one of the newest entrants and one of the fastest-growing destinations. While Thailand and Mexico have decades of dental tourism history, Vietnam’s dental tourism sector has largely developed since 2015, accelerating dramatically after the post-COVID recovery in 2022–2023.
2.1 Structural Advantages
Vietnam’s emergence as a dental tourism destination rests on several structural advantages that are difficult for competitors to replicate:
- Cost leadership: Vietnam offers the lowest dental treatment costs in Southeast Asia — typically 10–30% below Thailand and 20–40% below Malaysia for equivalent procedures. A single dental implant (including abutment and crown) costs $800–$1,800 at premium Vietnamese clinics, compared to $1,200–$2,500 in Thailand and $3,000–$6,000 in Australia or the US.
- Young, educated workforce: Vietnam graduates approximately 2,000 dentists per year from 15+ dental schools, creating a growing pool of talent. Many senior dentists have trained or completed fellowships in Japan, South Korea, Germany, or Australia.
- Tourism appeal: Vietnam is already a top-10 global tourism destination with 17.5 million international visitors in 2024. Dental tourists benefit from existing tourism infrastructure, diverse attractions, and the ability to combine treatment with a holiday.
- Geographic position: Vietnam is within 3–6 hours of major Asian source markets (Japan, South Korea, China, Singapore, Hong Kong) and 8–10 hours from Australia — its largest Western source market by value.
- Political stability and economic growth: Vietnam’s GDP has grown 6–8% annually over the past decade, supporting infrastructure investment and private healthcare expansion.
2.2 Market Development Stage
Vietnam’s dental tourism market is in the early growth phase of its development cycle — past the initial pioneer stage but not yet mature. This is characterised by:
- Rapid clinic proliferation: new internationally-oriented dental clinics opening monthly in Hanoi, HCMC, and Da Nang
- Increasing but still limited international awareness relative to Thailand or Turkey
- Quality variance: wide gap between top-tier and budget clinics, with no standardised dental tourism accreditation
- Growing government recognition of dental/medical tourism as an economic priority
- Emerging ecosystem: dental tourism facilitators, patient coordinators, and accommodation packages developing
3. Market Size Estimates
Estimating the precise size of Vietnam’s dental tourism market is challenging because the Vietnamese government does not publish dental-tourism-specific revenue data. Our estimates are triangulated from multiple sources: Vietnam National Administration of Tourism (VNAT) visitor statistics, private clinic reporting, industry association data, and comparisons with Thailand’s better-documented market.
3.1 Methodology
We use three independent approaches to estimate market size:
- Top-down: Vietnam received 17.5 million international visitors in 2024. Industry surveys suggest 2–4% of international visitors to Southeast Asian countries seek some form of dental treatment. Applying this to Vietnam yields 350,000–700,000 dental tourists, with average spending of $500–$1,200 per patient (ranging from a single cleaning to complex implant work).
- Bottom-up: We estimate 200–400 clinics in Vietnam actively serve international patients. Top-tier clinics (like Picasso Dental) treat 2,000–5,000 international patients annually; mid-tier clinics treat 200–1,000. Aggregating across the clinic base yields a similar range.
- Comparative: Thailand’s dental tourism market is estimated at $1.5–2.5 billion. Vietnam receives approximately 60% of Thailand’s international visitors but has a less mature dental tourism sector (roughly 15–25% of Thailand’s penetration rate), suggesting a market of $150–500 million.
3.2 Market Size Range
| Scenario | Dental Tourists | Avg. Spend | Market Size | Growth Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Conservative | 250,000–350,000 | $600–$800 | $200–280M | 15% CAGR |
| Base case | 350,000–500,000 | $700–$1,000 | $300–400M | 20% CAGR |
| Optimistic | 450,000–650,000 | $700–$1,000 | $400–500M | 25% CAGR |
Our base-case estimate of $300–400 million places Vietnam’s dental tourism market at approximately 2% of the global total — small in absolute terms but significant in growth rate. For context, Thailand’s dental tourism market was estimated at a similar size 10–12 years ago before its rapid scaling phase.
3.3 Revenue by Procedure Type
| Procedure Category | Share of Revenue | Avg. Spend per Patient | Growth Trend |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dental implants | 35–40% | $1,500–$8,000 | Fastest-growing; highest revenue per patient |
| Cosmetic dentistry (veneers, whitening) | 20–25% | $1,200–$6,000 | Growing rapidly; driven by social media |
| Full-mouth rehabilitation | 15–20% | $8,000–$25,000 | Highest spend per patient; smallest volume |
| General & restorative (crowns, bridges, root canals) | 10–15% | $300–$2,000 | Steady growth |
| Check-ups & preventive | 5–10% | $50–$200 | Large volume, low revenue contribution |
4. Growth Drivers
Five interconnected factors are driving Vietnam’s dental tourism growth above the global average:
4.1 Cost Advantage
Vietnam’s cost advantage is the single most important driver of dental tourism growth. For the most common dental tourism procedures, Vietnam offers savings of 50–80% compared to the United States, Australia, United Kingdom, and other developed markets:
| Procedure | Vietnam (Picasso) | Australia | United States | United Kingdom | Savings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single implant + crown | $962–$1,731 | $4,500–$7,000 | $3,500–$6,500 | $2,800–$4,500 | 60–75% |
| All-on-4 (per arch) | $5,200–$8,500 | $20,000–$35,000 | $18,000–$30,000 | $15,000–$25,000 | 65–75% |
| Porcelain veneer (per tooth) | $269–$462 | $1,200–$2,500 | $1,000–$2,500 | $600–$1,200 | 60–80% |
| Root canal + crown (molar) | $461–$866 | $2,500–$5,000 | $2,000–$4,000 | $1,000–$2,500 | 55–80% |
| Full-mouth rehab (both arches) | $8,000–$20,000 | $40,000–$80,000 | $30,000–$70,000 | $25,000–$60,000 | 65–80% |
Critically, these savings persist even after accounting for flights ($300–$1,500 round-trip depending on origin), accommodation ($30–$100/night), and incidental expenses. For a patient facing a $40,000 dental bill in Australia, the total cost of treatment in Vietnam ($8,000–$20,000) plus travel ($2,000–$3,000) still represents savings of $17,000–$30,000.
4.2 Quality Improvement
Vietnam’s dental sector has undergone rapid modernisation since 2015. Leading clinics now operate with:
- International-grade equipment: CBCT 3D imaging, CAD/CAM milling systems, digital intraoral scanners
- Premium materials: Nobel Biocare and Straumann implant systems, IPS e.max and zirconia restorations, NiTi rotary endodontic systems
- Trained specialists: Dentists with international training and fellowship credentials from Japan, South Korea, Germany, and Australia
- Digital workflows: Full digital treatment planning, 3D-guided implant surgery, WhatsApp-based remote consultations
- Infection control: Autoclave sterilisation, single-use consumables, and clinical protocols aligned with international standards
4.3 Flight Connectivity
Vietnam’s three major international airports — Hanoi (Noi Bai), Ho Chi Minh City (Tan Son Nhat), and Da Nang — now offer 60+ international routes with direct flights to most major source markets:
| Source Market | Flight Time | Airlines | Frequency |
|---|---|---|---|
| Australia (Sydney, Melbourne) | 8–10 hours | VietJet, Vietnam Airlines, Jetstar | Daily |
| Japan (Tokyo, Osaka) | 4–6 hours | Vietnam Airlines, ANA, JAL, VietJet | Multiple daily |
| South Korea (Seoul, Busan) | 4–5 hours | Vietnam Airlines, Korean Air, VietJet, Asiana | Multiple daily |
| Singapore | 2–3 hours | Vietnam Airlines, VietJet, Singapore Airlines | Multiple daily |
| Hong Kong | 2–3 hours | Vietnam Airlines, Cathay Pacific, VietJet | Multiple daily |
| United Kingdom (London) | 11–12 hours | Vietnam Airlines (direct), BA via HK | 4–7x weekly |
| United States (San Francisco) | 13–15 hours | Vietnam Airlines (direct), via Seoul/Tokyo | 3–5x weekly |
4.4 Visa Liberalisation
Vietnam has progressively liberalised its visa regime, removing a significant barrier to dental tourism:
- E-visa: Available for citizens of 80+ countries, processed in 3 business days, valid for 90 days with multiple entries
- Visa-free entry: 45-day visa-free stays for citizens of 13 countries including the UK, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Japan, and South Korea
- 15-day visa exemption: For citizens of 10 ASEAN countries
- Proposed expansions: The Vietnamese government has signalled plans to extend visa-free access to Australia, New Zealand, and Canada — three key dental tourism source markets
4.5 Rising Global Dental Costs
Dental inflation in developed countries is making overseas treatment increasingly rational for a larger segment of the population. In Australia, the average cost of a dental implant has risen from approximately AUD $4,000 in 2015 to AUD $5,500–$7,000 in 2025 — a compound increase of 4–6% annually. In the US, dental inflation has exceeded general healthcare inflation for the past five years. These trends expand the addressable market for dental tourism by bringing more patients past the economic threshold where overseas treatment becomes worthwhile.
5. Key Source Markets by Volume
Vietnam’s dental tourism draws from two distinct patient pools: high-volume Asian markets driven by geographic proximity and cultural familiarity, and high-value Western markets driven by cost savings.
5.1 Source Market Breakdown
| Source Market | Est. Annual Patients | Avg. Spend (USD) | Est. Revenue | Growth Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Australia & New Zealand | 40,000–70,000 | $1,200–$2,500 | $60–120M | 20–30% |
| Japan | 50,000–80,000 | $600–$1,200 | $40–80M | 12–18% |
| South Korea | 40,000–65,000 | $500–$1,000 | $25–55M | 12–18% |
| United States & Canada | 15,000–30,000 | $1,500–$3,000 | $30–60M | 18–25% |
| United Kingdom & Ireland | 12,000–25,000 | $1,000–$2,000 | $15–40M | 20–30% |
| Europe (continental) | 10,000–20,000 | $800–$1,800 | $10–30M | 18–25% |
| China & Hong Kong | 30,000–50,000 | $400–$800 | $15–35M | 12–18% |
| Other Asia & Middle East | 20,000–40,000 | $400–$1,000 | $10–30M | 12–18% |
5.2 Australia: The Highest-Value Source Market
Australia is Vietnam’s most valuable dental tourism source market, contributing an estimated 20–25% of total dental tourism revenue despite representing only 10–15% of patient volume. Several factors explain this outsized contribution:
- Extreme domestic costs: Australian dental prices are among the highest in the world — a single implant costs AUD $5,500–$7,000, and full-mouth rehabilitation can exceed AUD $80,000
- Limited public dental coverage: Medicare does not cover most dental procedures; private health insurance has waiting periods and annual caps
- Strong AUD: Favourable exchange rates amplify savings for Australian patients
- Direct flights: Daily direct flights from Sydney and Melbourne to Hanoi and HCMC (8–10 hours)
- Large Vietnamese diaspora: Over 300,000 Vietnamese-Australians provide cultural bridges and word-of-mouth referrals
- High treatment complexity: Australian dental tourists tend to seek higher-value procedures (implants, full-mouth rehabilitation) rather than basic check-ups
5.3 Fastest-Growing Source Markets
The UK, Ireland, Germany, and the Netherlands represent the fastest-growing European source markets for Vietnamese dental tourism, growing at an estimated 20–30% annually from a low base. These markets are driven by long NHS waiting times (UK), high private dental costs (Germany, Netherlands), the growth of dental tourism facilitator platforms, and increasing awareness through social media and patient review sites.
6. Competitive Landscape
Vietnam competes for dental tourism patients with a handful of established destinations, each with distinct strengths and weaknesses.
6.1 Regional Competitive Benchmarking
| Factor | Vietnam | Thailand | Turkey | Mexico | Hungary |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cost level | Lowest in SE Asia | Low-mid | Low-mid | Low | Mid |
| Quality (top tier) | High | High | High | Variable | High |
| International awareness | Low-medium | High | High | High (US only) | High (Europe) |
| Tourism appeal | Very high | Very high | High | Medium | Medium |
| Flight connectivity | Good (Asia), developing (West) | Excellent | Excellent (Europe) | Excellent (US) | Good (Europe) |
| Visa ease | Good (improving) | Excellent | Good | Excellent (US) | EU Schengen |
| English proficiency | Moderate (improving) | Moderate-good | Moderate | Moderate (border) | Good |
| Market maturity | Early growth | Mature | Growth | Mature | Mature |
| Growth rate | 15–25% | 8–12% | 12–18% | 6–10% | 4–8% |
6.2 Vietnam vs Thailand: A Detailed Comparison
Thailand is Vietnam’s most direct competitor for dental tourism patients from Australia, Japan, and Europe. Key differences:
- Price: Vietnam is 10–30% cheaper than Thailand for equivalent procedures at comparable-quality clinics
- Brand recognition: Thailand has 20+ years of dental tourism branding; Vietnam is 5–8 years into its journey
- Clinic density: Bangkok alone has more internationally-oriented dental clinics than all of Vietnam, providing more choice for patients
- Tourism infrastructure: Thailand’s hotel, transport, and service infrastructure in tourist areas is more developed
- Growth trajectory: Vietnam is growing at 2–3x Thailand’s rate, suggesting convergence over the next decade
7. Government Support and Policy
The Vietnamese government has identified medical and dental tourism as a strategic economic priority, reflected in several policy initiatives:
7.1 National Medical Tourism Strategy
In 2023, the Vietnamese government approved a National Medical Tourism Development Plan to 2030, targeting $3–5 billion in medical tourism revenue by 2030. Dental tourism is explicitly included as a priority subsector. Key policy elements include:
- Visa liberalisation: Progressive expansion of e-visa and visa-free access for citizens of key source markets
- Healthcare zone development: Designation of medical tourism zones in Da Nang, HCMC, and Hanoi with streamlined licensing for international-standard clinics
- Marketing investment: Allocation of tourism promotion funds to medical/dental tourism marketing in Australia, Japan, and Europe
- Training programmes: Government-funded English language and international patient management training for healthcare workers
- Quality standards: Development of national healthcare accreditation standards aligned with JCI (Joint Commission International) criteria
7.2 Tax and Investment Incentives
Private dental clinics serving international patients benefit from several incentive programmes:
- Preferential corporate income tax rates (10–17% vs standard 20%) for healthcare enterprises in designated zones
- Import duty exemptions on medical equipment not manufactured domestically
- Land lease incentives for healthcare facility construction in priority areas
- Simplified licensing for foreign-invested dental clinics (100% foreign ownership permitted since 2020)
7.3 Regulatory Environment
Vietnam’s dental regulatory framework is evolving. The Ministry of Health oversees dental practice licensing, but enforcement varies by province. Key regulatory developments:
- Practitioner licensing: All dentists must hold a practice certificate issued by the provincial health department, requiring a dental degree and supervised practice
- Facility licensing: Dental clinics require facility operation certificates with specifications for equipment, staffing, and infection control
- Advertising regulation: Tightening rules on dental advertising claims, particularly regarding outcomes and pricing
- Patient rights: Expanding legal protections for patients, including international patients, with formal complaint mechanisms
8. Infrastructure Investment
Vietnam is investing heavily in both dental-specific and general infrastructure that supports dental tourism growth.
8.1 Dental Clinic Infrastructure
Private investment in dental facilities has accelerated since 2020:
- New clinic construction: An estimated 50–80 new internationally-oriented dental clinics opened in 2024–2025 across Vietnam’s major cities
- Equipment modernisation: Leading clinics are investing $500K–$2M in CBCT systems, CAD/CAM milling machines, and digital workflow systems
- Multi-city expansion: Major clinic groups (including Picasso Dental) are expanding to multiple cities, allowing patients to receive treatment near their preferred travel destination
- Hospital-based dental centres: International hospitals (Vinmec, FV Hospital) are developing dedicated dental departments targeting international patients
8.2 Airport and Aviation
Vietnam’s aviation infrastructure is undergoing massive expansion:
- Long Thanh International Airport (HCMC): $16 billion mega-airport under construction, expected to open Phase 1 in 2026 with capacity for 25 million passengers, expanding to 100 million by 2040
- Tan Son Nhat expansion: Additional terminal (T3) opened in 2024, increasing capacity from 28 million to 50 million passengers
- Da Nang airport expansion: New international terminal and runway upgrades to handle increasing tourist traffic
- New route development: VietJet and Vietnam Airlines continue to add direct routes to Australia, Europe, and North America
8.3 Accommodation and Tourism
Vietnam’s hotel inventory has grown rapidly, with particular expansion in the mid-range and premium segments favoured by dental tourists:
- 4- and 5-star hotel room rates in Hanoi and HCMC range from $50–$150/night — a fraction of equivalent accommodation in Bangkok or Singapore
- Serviced apartments near major dental clinics offer stays of 1–4 weeks at $30–$80/night, ideal for multi-visit treatments
- Dental tourism packages combining accommodation, airport transfers, and treatment coordination are emerging from both clinics and independent facilitators
| Infrastructure | Investment | Timeline | Impact on Dental Tourism |
|---|---|---|---|
| Long Thanh Airport | $16B | Phase 1: 2026 | Massive capacity increase for HCMC region |
| Tan Son Nhat T3 | $900M | Completed 2024 | Reduced congestion, improved passenger experience |
| Da Nang Airport | $500M | 2025–2028 | New international terminal for central Vietnam |
| North-South Expressway | $14B | 2025–2030 | Inter-city connectivity for multi-city treatment |
| Private dental clinics | $200–400M (est.) | Ongoing | Direct capacity expansion for international patients |
9. Market Forecast 2025–2034
We model three scenarios for Vietnam’s dental tourism market growth over the next decade, reflecting different assumptions about growth drivers and risk factors.
9.1 Scenario Assumptions
| Factor | Conservative | Base Case | Optimistic |
|---|---|---|---|
| CAGR 2025–2029 | 15% | 20% | 25% |
| CAGR 2030–2034 | 10% | 14% | 18% |
| Visa expansion | Modest (current trajectory) | AU/NZ visa-free by 2028 | Broad visa-free by 2027 |
| Quality standards | Gradual improvement | National accreditation by 2028 | International accreditation by 2027 |
| Flight connectivity | Current routes maintained | 15–20 new routes by 2030 | 30+ new routes by 2030 |
| Competition response | Thailand/Turkey intensify | Moderate competition | Vietnam captures share |
9.2 Year-by-Year Market Size Projections
| Year | Conservative | Base Case | Optimistic | Base YoY Growth |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $250M | $350M | $450M | — | |
| $288M | $420M | $563M | 20% | |
| $331M | $504M | $703M | 20% | |
| $380M | $605M | $879M | 20% | |
| $437M | $726M | $1,099M | 20% | |
| $481M | $828M | $1,297M | 14% | |
| $529M | $944M | $1,530M | 14% | |
| $582M | $1,076M | $1,806M | 14% | |
| $640M | $1,227M | $2,131M | 14% | |
| $704M | $1,399M | $2,514M | 14% |
9.3 Patient Volume Projections
| Year | Dental Tourists (000s) | Avg. Spend (USD) | Key Milestone |
|---|---|---|---|
| 400–500 | $750 | Post-COVID recovery complete | |
| 600–750 | $800 | Long Thanh Airport Phase 1 opens | |
| 900–1,200 | $850 | National accreditation programme launches | |
| 1,400–1,800 | $900 | Market maturity approaching Thailand levels |
9.4 Revenue Forecast by Source Market (Base Case, 2030)
| Source Market | 2025 Revenue | 2030 Revenue | CAGR | 2030 Share |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Australia & NZ | $80M | $200M | 20% | 24% |
| Japan | $55M | $110M | 15% | 13% |
| South Korea | $40M | $85M | 16% | 10% |
| US & Canada | $45M | $120M | 22% | 15% |
| UK & Ireland | $25M | $75M | 25% | 9% |
| Continental Europe | $20M | $65M | 27% | 8% |
| China & HK | $25M | $60M | 19% | 7% |
| Other | $60M | $113M | 13% | 14% |
| Total | $350M | $828M | 19% | 100% |
10. Challenges and Risks
Despite strong growth fundamentals, Vietnam’s dental tourism market faces several challenges that could constrain growth or damage the sector’s reputation.
10.1 Quality Inconsistency
The most significant risk to Vietnam’s dental tourism reputation is quality variance. While top-tier clinics (representing perhaps 10–15% of the market) operate at international standards, the long tail of clinics includes facilities with outdated equipment, under-qualified staff, and poor infection control. A single high-profile patient safety incident could disproportionately damage the entire market’s reputation.
10.2 Regulatory Gaps
Vietnam lacks a comprehensive dental tourism regulatory framework. Key gaps include:
- No mandatory dental tourism accreditation programme
- Limited enforcement of advertising standards for international patient marketing
- No standardised complaint or redress mechanism for international patients
- Inconsistent facility inspection and licensing enforcement across provinces
10.3 Language Barriers
While leading clinics have English-speaking staff, English proficiency across the broader dental workforce remains limited. This creates barriers for patients who venture beyond established dental tourism clinics and can lead to miscommunication about treatment plans, expectations, and aftercare instructions.
10.4 Competition Intensification
Vietnam’s rapid growth is attracting competitive responses from established destinations:
- Thailand is investing in AI-assisted dentistry and digital tourism platforms to maintain its quality edge
- Turkey is aggressively targeting the same European and UK markets with all-inclusive dental holiday packages
- India and the Philippines are developing dental tourism sectors with even lower cost structures
- Mexico continues to dominate the US market through proximity advantage
10.5 Risk Matrix
| Risk | Probability | Impact | Mitigation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Quality incident / scandal | Medium | High | Accreditation programme, clinic vetting platforms |
| Regulatory crackdown | Low-medium | Medium | Industry self-regulation, proactive compliance |
| Global recession | Low-medium | Medium | Counter-cyclical: dental tourism may increase as patients seek savings |
| Pandemic / travel disruption | Low | Very high | Diversified source markets, teledentistry capability |
| Currency volatility | Medium | Low | USD-denominated pricing, hedging |
| Competition from Thailand | High | Medium | Cost leadership, differentiation on value |
| Infrastructure bottlenecks | Medium | Medium | Airport expansion, multi-city clinic networks |
11. Picasso Dental’s Market Position
Picasso Dental Clinic is one of Vietnam’s leading dental tourism providers, with a multi-city network and established international patient base.
11.1 Clinic Network
| Location | Address | Specialisation |
|---|---|---|
| Hanoi (Chau Long) | 16 Pho Chau Long | Full-service flagship, implant centre |
| Hanoi (Hoang Minh Thao) | LKC22 Hoang Minh Thao | General & cosmetic dentistry |
| Da Nang (Hoang Dieu) | 420 Hoang Dieu | Full-service, international patient hub |
| Da Nang (Vinmec) | Vinmec International Hospital | Hospital-based dental services |
| Ho Chi Minh City | 25B Nguyen Duy Hieu, Thao Dien, Quan 2 | Full-service, expat & tourist focus |
| Da Lat | 55 Ha Huy Tap, Phuong 3 | General & cosmetic dentistry |
11.2 Key Metrics
11.3 Competitive Advantages
- Multi-city network: 6 clinics across 4 cities give patients flexibility to combine dental treatment with travel to different regions of Vietnam
- International patient experience: 70,000+ patients from 62 countries provide deep experience with international patient expectations, communication, and treatment coordination
- Technology leadership: Full digital workflow including CBCT, CAD/CAM, digital intraoral scanners, and 3D-guided implant surgery
- Fixed USD pricing: All treatment plans quoted in USD with fixed pricing before treatment begins — no hidden fees or currency surprises
- WhatsApp-first workflow: Remote consultations, treatment planning, and post-treatment follow-up via WhatsApp, enabling seamless cross-border care
- Clinical leadership: Led by Dr. Emily Nguyen (Principal Dentist & Lead Implantologist), with credentials from the University of Medicine and Pharmacy HCMC, Korean Academy of Aesthetic Dentistry, and 108 Military Central Hospital
11.4 Market Positioning
Picasso Dental is positioned as a premium-quality, mid-price-point provider — offering international-standard equipment and materials at prices significantly below Western markets but above Vietnam’s lowest-cost clinics. This positioning targets the largest and fastest-growing segment of dental tourists: patients from Western countries seeking meaningful cost savings without compromising on clinical quality or patient experience.
12. Frequently Asked Questions
How big is the Vietnam dental tourism market?
Vietnam’s dental tourism market is estimated at $200–500 million in 2025, representing approximately 1.5–3% of the global dental tourism market valued at $15–20 billion. The sector is growing at 15–25% annually, driven by cost advantages of 50–80% over Western countries, improving clinical quality, expanding flight connectivity, and visa liberalisation for key source markets.
How much can patients save on dental work in Vietnam?
Patients save 50–80% on dental procedures in Vietnam compared to Western countries. A dental implant costing $3,000–$6,000 in the US costs $800–$1,800 in Vietnam. Full-mouth rehabilitation costing $30,000–$80,000 in Australia costs $8,000–$20,000 in Vietnam. Even including flights and accommodation, total savings typically exceed 50%.
What is driving the growth of dental tourism in Vietnam?
Five key drivers: (1) Cost advantage of 50–80% over Western markets, (2) Quality improvement with ISO-certified clinics using international-grade equipment, (3) Flight connectivity with 60+ international routes, (4) Visa liberalisation — e-visas for 80+ countries and 45-day visa-free stays for many markets, (5) Rising global dental costs making overseas treatment increasingly rational for a growing segment of the population.
Which countries send the most dental tourists to Vietnam?
Australia is the largest source market by value, followed by Japan, South Korea, the United States, and the United Kingdom. By volume, neighbouring Asian countries (Japan, South Korea, China, Taiwan) dominate due to geographic proximity. The fastest-growing source markets are Australia, New Zealand, the UK, Ireland, and continental European countries including Germany and the Netherlands.
How does Vietnam compare to Thailand for dental tourism?
Thailand is the larger and more established dental tourism market in Southeast Asia, but Vietnam is the fastest-growing. Vietnam typically offers 10–30% lower prices than Thailand for equivalent procedures at comparable-quality clinics, has newer clinic infrastructure, and provides longer visa-free stays for many nationalities. Thailand has advantages in tourism infrastructure, English proficiency in tourist areas, and brand recognition. Vietnam is growing at 2–3x Thailand’s rate.
What is the forecast for Vietnam dental tourism growth to 2034?
Under our base-case scenario, Vietnam’s dental tourism market is projected to grow from approximately $350 million in 2025 to $1.4 billion by 2034, representing a CAGR of 15–20%. Growth is expected to accelerate through 2029 as infrastructure investments mature and international awareness increases, then moderate to 12–15% annually from 2030 onward as the market matures. The optimistic scenario projects $2.5 billion by 2034.
What are the main risks to Vietnam’s dental tourism growth?
Key risks include: (1) Quality inconsistency across unregulated clinics, (2) Language barriers outside major cities, (3) Regulatory gaps in dental tourism oversight, (4) Competition from Thailand, Turkey, and Mexico, (5) Potential pandemic or geopolitical disruptions to travel, (6) Infrastructure bottlenecks at peak travel seasons. Quality inconsistency is the single most critical risk, as negative publicity from substandard clinics could damage the entire market’s reputation.
How is Picasso Dental Clinic positioned in the Vietnam dental tourism market?
Picasso Dental Clinic is one of Vietnam’s leading dental tourism providers with 6 clinics across Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City, Da Nang, and Da Lat. With 70,000+ patients from 62 countries, 30+ dentists, and international-grade equipment (CBCT, CAD/CAM), Picasso is positioned as a premium-quality, mid-price-point provider. Contact the international patient team via WhatsApp at +84 989 067 888 for a free remote consultation and treatment plan with fixed USD pricing.
13. Conclusions
Vietnam’s dental tourism market stands at an inflection point. With an estimated market size of $200–500 million in 2025 and a growth rate of 15–25% annually, Vietnam is the fastest-growing dental tourism destination globally. The structural drivers of this growth — cost advantages of 50–80%, rapidly improving clinical quality, expanding flight connectivity, and progressive visa liberalisation — are durable and strengthening.
Our base-case forecast projects the market will reach $1.4 billion by 2034, a 4x increase from current levels. This growth will be driven by continued expansion from the Australian market (Vietnam’s highest-value source), rapid growth from European and North American markets, and steady volume increases from neighbouring Asian countries. The opening of Long Thanh International Airport in 2026–2027 and the potential extension of visa-free access to Australia and New Zealand will provide additional catalysts.
The primary constraint on growth is quality inconsistency. The gap between Vietnam’s best clinics (which operate at genuine international standards) and its average clinics remains wide. The development of a credible accreditation programme, stronger regulatory enforcement, and continued private investment in equipment and training are essential to sustaining the growth trajectory.
For international patients, the conclusion is straightforward: Vietnam offers genuine cost savings of 50–80% on dental procedures at top-tier clinics using the same equipment and materials as Western practices. The key is selecting the right clinic — one with documented international patient experience, modern technology, transparent pricing, and remote consultation capability. Picasso Dental Clinic, with 6 locations, 70,000+ patients from 62 countries, and 30+ dentists, is positioned to serve patients seeking this combination of quality and value.
The bottom line: Vietnam’s dental tourism market is transitioning from emerging to established. Patients, investors, and industry stakeholders who engage with this market now — while it is still in its early growth phase — will benefit from the most significant period of expansion and value creation.
Get Your Dental Treatment Plan
Send your X-ray or OPG to Picasso’s international team via WhatsApp. Receive a personalised treatment plan with fixed USD pricing within 48 hours — at no cost.
WhatsApp: +84 989 067 888Sources & References
[1] Grand View Research (2025). "Global Dental Tourism Market Report 2025-2030." Market valued at $15.6 billion in 2024, projected to reach $38 billion by 2032 at 11.8% CAGR.
[2] Allied Market Research (2025). "Medical and Dental Tourism in Southeast Asia: Market Dynamics and Growth Prospects." Southeast Asia dental tourism growing at 18-22% CAGR.
[3] Vietnam National Administration of Tourism (VNAT). International visitor statistics 2024-2025. Vietnam received 17.5 million international visitors in 2024.
[4] Fitch Solutions (2025). "Vietnam Healthcare Sector Report." Healthcare spending projected to reach $23 billion by 2028.
[5] Mordor Intelligence (2025). "Dental Tourism Market — Growth, Trends, and Forecast." Global market estimated at $14.8B in 2024.
[6] World Health Organization (WHO). Global Oral Health Status Report (2024). Data on dental healthcare access and spending patterns across 194 member states.
[7] National dental fee surveys: Australia (ADA, National Dental Care 2025), United States (ADA Fee Survey 2025), United Kingdom (NHS/Private practice surveys 2025), New Zealand (NZDA 2025).
[8] Picasso Dental Clinic — published price list (2025–2026) and internal patient records (2013–2026, n = 70,000+).
[9] Vietnam Ministry of Health. National Medical Tourism Development Plan to 2030. Policy framework for medical and dental tourism development.
[10] Airports Corporation of Vietnam (ACV). Airport capacity and expansion plans 2024-2030. Long Thanh International Airport development timeline.
Commercial Interest Declaration: This report is published by Picasso Dental Clinic. While market data is sourced from independent research firms and government statistics, readers should consider the publisher’s commercial interest when evaluating projections and recommendations. All Picasso-specific data reflects internal records.
Changelog
| Date | Version | Changes |
|---|---|---|
| 1.0 | Initial publication — comprehensive market research covering global dental tourism overview, Vietnam market positioning, market size estimates, growth drivers, source market analysis, competitive landscape, government policy, infrastructure investment, 10-year forecast, risk assessment, and Picasso Dental market position. |