Practical guide
Planning a surgery trip to Turkey: a practical checklist
2026-06-03 · 5 min read · Dr. Akşan team
Documents, imaging, medication lists, travel insurance — what to organise before you fly, in the order that saves the most trouble.
A planned operation abroad goes smoothly when the boring paperwork is done early. Here is the practical order of operations.
1. Medical review first, flights second
Do not book flights before your imaging has been reviewed. Send your MRI or CT first, get a clear answer on whether surgery is actually indicated, and receive a written treatment plan. Only then does booking travel make sense.
2. Gather your medical records
- Recent MRI/CT images (the actual DICOM files, not just the written report)
- Previous reports and operation notes, if any
- A current list of medications with doses
- Known allergies and chronic conditions
Having these in one folder — digital or paper — saves days of back-and-forth.
3. Passport and entry requirements
Check your passport validity and whether your nationality requires a visa or e-Visa for Turkey. Official government sources are the reliable reference here; requirements vary by country and change over time.
4. Travel insurance
Standard travel insurance often excludes planned treatment. Read the policy, and ask specifically about coverage for complications and for changes to your return date.
5. Medication and mobility planning
Bring enough of your regular medication for the full stay plus a buffer. If mobility will be limited after surgery, request airport assistance in advance — airlines handle this well when told early.
6. Keep the schedule humble
Leave buffer days. A schedule with no slack turns a small delay into a cascade of rebookings.
This article is general information, not medical advice. Every case is different — please discuss your own situation with a qualified specialist.
