Tax Refund for Medical Procedures in Korea
Tax Refund for Medical Procedures in Korea
If you’re planning liposuction or other cosmetic procedures in Korea, one important update for 2026 is that tax refunds are no longer available for these treatments.
Can You Get a Tax Refund in Korea (2026)?
As of 2026, the answer is simple:
- No tax refund for cosmetic or aesthetic procedures
- The price you pay at the clinic is the final price
- Applies to all foreign patients, regardless of visa or stay
This change took effect on January 1, 2026, when Korea officially ended VAT refunds for cosmetic treatments.
What Changed in 2026
Previously, Korea had a tax refund system designed to attract medical tourists.
- Around 10% VAT was included in procedure prices
- Foreign patients could get back roughly 6–8% after fees
- Refunds were processed at airports or tax refund kiosks
However, this system has now been completely removed for aesthetic procedures.
What Procedures Are Affected
The removal applies to all cosmetic and elective treatments, including:
- Liposuction
- Fat transfer
- Botox and fillers
- Laser treatments
- Skin procedures
There are no exceptions for aesthetic treatments in 2026.
Are There Any Exceptions at All?
- Medical (non-cosmetic) treatments: follow standard healthcare billing
- Korean residents: may use national insurance (if eligible)
- Shopping (clothes, cosmetics, electronics): still eligible for VAT refund
The policy specifically targets cosmetic / elective procedures only.
Important Note About Older Information
A lot of online content still mentions tax refunds—but that’s outdated.
Before 2026:
- Many clinics offered VAT refund services
- Some were officially registered to process refunds
- Patients had to submit documents at the airport
Now:
- Clinics no longer issue tax refund forms
- Airport refund is no longer possible for procedures
- Any “tax refund” wording is usually just a discount or promotion, not an official refund
How This Affects Pricing
Even though the refund is gone:
- Clinic base prices have not necessarily increased dramatically
- Some clinics offer foreigner discounts to offset the loss
- Package deals are more common instead of tax refunds
So while you don’t get money back anymore, the overall pricing can still remain competitive.
What Foreign Patients Should Do Instead
- Focus on total package pricing, not refund expectations
- Ask if clinics offer foreigner discounts or promotions
- Compare final prices (not “after refund” estimates)
- Budget as if no refund exists (because it doesn’t anymore)
Final Thoughts
Tax refunds used to be a major advantage for medical tourists in Korea, but as of 2026, they are completely discontinued for cosmetic procedures. Today, the price you see is the price you pay—so planning your budget around full costs, rather than expected refunds, is essential.














