The day counts and flying advice in this article are for reference; recovery differs for everyone, so always defer to your treating physician. Visa, airport and transport details follow the latest official announcements. This article lists no fees — for costs, please check official sources or ask our concierge via WhatsApp or WeChat.

For cosmetic surgery in Taiwan, the thing overseas patients get stuck on most often isn't which clinic to choose — it's how many days to stay and how to arrange the trip without hurting recovery.

Stay too short and you're rushing to the airport before recovery is done; stay too long and your permitted days and budget both get tight. We'll break the trip down piece by piece: first work out the lead time for entry, then use three day-count templates matched to your procedure's recovery pace.

How you set the number of days isn't about how long you want to travel — it's about how long entry takes to arrange and how long the procedure needs to heal.

Don't rush to book flights — confirm entry first; this step hides lead time

The moment many people decide to come, the first thing they do is grab flights. Slow down. Entry routes differ by status — some need processing, some are visa-free — and flights should come after that, not before.

Holders of US, Canadian, Australian, British and EU passports mostly enter visa-free for up to 90 days; just confirm passport validity and the lead time is simple. Singaporean and Malaysian passports enter visa-free for 30 days. Travellers from Hong Kong and elsewhere mostly enter visa-free or by online visa, per local rules.

Overseas mainland Chinese travellers are different. If you hold a Chinese passport but have local permanent residency, or have lived abroad for over a year with proof of employment, you mostly use the "tourist entry for mainland residents living overseas" permit, which requires an application and an entry/exit permit before you can travel. A few key timings to keep in mind:

  • Apply for the tourist entry permit at least one month in advance; once approved and issued, then book flights.
  • The stay is 15 days from the day after entry; there's also an annual cap on total tourist stay, so watch the cumulative total if you enter more than once.
  • Entry routes and eligibility change with cross-strait policy; when unsure, confirm with a partner clinic or our concierge first.

For visa and document details, see our companion guide, Entry Routes and Proof of Funds for Cosmetic Surgery in Taiwan. Where you're unsure, hand it to a concierge — having someone go through the trip with you beats guessing.

First, work out how many recovery days your procedure needs

With entry lead time sorted, the day count comes next — and that depends on which recovery pace your procedure falls into.

Injectable treatments (hyaluronic acid, botulinum toxin) usually recover fast, barely affecting daily activity; liposuction is moderate, with a swelling peak and a compression garment, needing a few days; a facelift is also moderate, mainly swelling and avoiding strenuous movement, generally with no compression garment. Procedures like facial bone contouring, abdominoplasty, breast augmentation with implants and chest surgery depend on the area and how many regions are involved — the larger the area and the bigger the surgery, the more it tends to require bed rest, compression, or restricted arm movement, and you often need to wait for suture removal and a follow-up before it's safe to fly. "How soon you can be seen in public, and how soon you can fly" varies widely; for a finer breakdown of recovery pace, see our companion article on the recovery period.

Place yourself in the right category first, and the three templates below will tell you which to pick.

Six procedures: align the expected recovery range first

Before choosing a day-count template, look at the expected recovery range for six of the larger procedures. The following is drawn from various plastic-surgery aftercare guidance, as reference stays for completing recovery abroad — always defer to your treating physician:

ProcedureRecovery highlightsSuggested stay in Taiwan (overseas reference)
Facial bone contouringSwelling peaks at days 3-5, improves after a week, sutures out around a weekAbout 10-14 days
Facelift (mid/lower face, SMAS)Ice and compression for 72 hours, sutures out around 14 days, generally no compression garmentAbout 7-10 days
LiposuctionSwelling peaks at day 3, about 60% subsides in a week, compression garment requiredAbout 10-14 days
Chest surgeryDrains for 2-3 days, compression and restricted arm movement for the first three weeksAbout 10-14 days
AbdominoplastyBed rest for days 1-3, sutures out in about one to two weeksAbout 21 days
Breast augmentation (implants)No arm abduction or lifting for 7-10 days post-opAbout 10-14 days

14 days, 10 days, same day — which template fits you?

Condensing the trip into three templates, matched to recovery pace:

TemplateSuitable proceduresTrip rhythmWatch out for
14 daysFacial bone contouring, abdominoplasty, breast implants, chest surgery (bed rest, compression, restricted arms)Pre-op buffer → surgery → recovery → follow-up → flyMajor surgery suggests staying 10-14 days or more
10 daysFacelift, liposuction (swelling peak; liposuction needs a compression garment)Surgery → recovery → follow-up → flyDon't put the follow-up on your departure day
Same dayInjectables, lasers (hyaluronic acid, botulinum toxin)Treatment → same day works (short recovery)Avoid long-haul flights for a day or two after injection

The procedure mapping above is general reference, drawn from official aftercare notes — injectables and lasers can be same-day, minor surgery suggests at least 7 days, and major surgery suggests staying 10-14 days or more. Actual day counts still defer to your treating physician.

Three scheduling principles to keep every day in place:

  • Keep a spare day before the follow-up. If you put the follow-up the day before departure and the doctor wants to observe longer, your whole ticket has to change. A buffer day in between makes it far less stressful.
  • Don't rush major surgery. Trying to cram facial bone contouring, breast implants, abdominoplasty or chest surgery into a same-day turnaround often means you're still swollen, sutures still in, on the day you fly home. Better to choose the 14-day template and finish recovery than to rush to the airport with a wound.
  • On the tourist entry permit, mind the 15-day cap. The 14-day template fits right up against it with a day of flex; visa-free holders have more room, but it's still best to finish recovery before scheduling your return.

Songshan or Taoyuan? Which airport is kinder after surgery?

Most people pick an airport by flights; just after cosmetic surgery, you have one more dimension to weigh: how far you still have to travel into the city after landing.

AirportMain international routesTo central TaipeiPost-surgery friendliness
Songshan (TSA)Short-haul paired cities such as Tokyo (Haneda), Seoul (Gimpo), Shanghai (Hongqiao), Hong Kong (no North America routes)Wenhu Line, about 15 min at fastestShort transfer, least effort
Taoyuan (TPE)Global routes — North America (US/Canada), Europe, Southeast Asia (incl. Malaysia, Singapore), Hong Kong, Japan/KoreaAirport MRT / coach, about 40-60 minMany flights, but longer transfer

The most important point first: travellers flying from North America (US, Canada) can mostly only use Taoyuan — Songshan's international service is short-haul paired routes, only Tokyo, Seoul, Shanghai and Hong Kong, with no North America flights. If you live in North America, you'll basically arrive and depart via Taoyuan, then arrange transport into central Taipei after landing.

Songshan's advantage is being close to the city — the Wenhu Line reaches downtown in 15 minutes, which is easiest for someone just out of surgery who doesn't want to sit or stand long. If you're coming from a short-haul city like Tokyo, Seoul, Shanghai or Hong Kong and can get a Songshan flight, it's very comfortable — but that usually isn't an option for North American travellers. Taoyuan takes 40 to 60 minutes into the city, so how comfortably you choose your transport matters more for those flying long-haul from North America — covered in the next section. Routes change by season and airline, so check the airline's announcements before booking.

If you really can't decide which airport to use or how to get connected, hand your flight details to a concierge and we'll look together at the easiest arrangement for your post-surgery body.

How long after surgery can you fly? Don't guess this one

"How long after cosmetic surgery can I fly" is the question overseas patients ask most, and the one you should least estimate yourself. Get the timing wrong and at best swelling worsens, at worst it affects wound healing.

Cabin pressure changes, dry air and long periods of sitting can all affect post-op swelling, bleeding and wound healing, and prolonged sitting also raises the risk of leg blood clots. Suitable flying times vary a lot by procedure — here are three:

  • Injectables (hyaluronic acid, botulinum toxin): generally avoid long-haul flights for a short period after injection (commonly said to be a day or two), as pressure changes can swell the injected area.
  • Liposuction: no flying within 24 hours of surgery; if recovery goes well, short-haul flights at around a few days post-op, and long-haul flights generally after waiting at least about a week.
  • Major surgery (facial bone contouring, abdominoplasty, breast implants, chest surgery, etc.): plastic surgeons commonly advise flying 10 to 14 days after surgery, with breast implants at least a week or more, depending on the surgical method and individual recovery.

Treat these as a direction, not an answer. Recovery differs for everyone; whether and when you can board must be assessed by your treating physician — ask before you travel, then book your return. This isn't a hassle, it's looking after yourself: clear up the uncertainty first, and the whole trip goes more smoothly.

Between airport and city: how to move with the least jolting?

MethodFrom TaoyuanFrom SongshanPost-surgery friendliness
Taxi / pre-booked transferDoor-to-door, about 40 minTaxi rankFriendliest — no transfers, no carrying luggage
Airport MRTExpress / commuterWenhu LineRequires walking, carrying your own luggage
Coach busAbout 60 minCity busLong sitting, harder to board and alight

For the least effort and no dragging luggage through transfers, a taxi or pre-booked door-to-door transfer is the most considerate choice. If your recovery allows and your luggage is light, the MRT and coach also work. Just out of surgery, a comfortable ride is worth more than saving a little on fare.

This article lists no transport fares — please follow the latest official announcements. Far From Home Care can provide airport transfers: someone meets you on landing, helps with your luggage, and takes you straight to the clinic or hotel, so you're not fumbling alone in an unfamiliar airport. When you need it, message our concierge via WhatsApp or WeChat for details and booking help.

Those hours in the air: how to sit without harming recovery

Tickets booked, doctor's go-ahead in hand — once you're actually on the plane, a few small moves can help your recovery.

Prolonged sitting is what to watch most after surgery. The cabin is cramped with little movement, blood pools easily in the legs, raising the risk of deep vein thrombosis (the so-called economy-class syndrome), and someone just out of surgery needs more care than usual. A few simple things to lower the risk:

  • Drink plenty of water, go easy on caffeine and alcohol. Cabin humidity is low, so the body dehydrates and blood thickens easily. Regular small sips beat one big gulp.
  • Get up and move periodically. If you can, walk a few steps every hour or two; when getting up isn't convenient, do toe points and ankle flexes in your seat to help the blood return from your calves.
  • Wear loose, easy-to-move clothing, and compression socks if needed, to reduce blood pooling in the legs.
  • Choose an aisle seat. Easy in and out means you'll be more willing to get up, rather than enduring the whole way seated.

These moves take no effort, yet they're the most practical self-care on a long flight. Note them down, and you can look after your legs even during those hours in the air.

Which procedures especially need someone by your side?

For some procedures, the recovery period isn't just the wound healing — it's that you can't even manage everyday small tasks. The kind with large areas, compression, or arms you can't lift makes getting through recovery alone, far from home, genuinely hard. Far From Home Care's post-surgery companionship looks after exactly the daily living after these procedures:

  • Facial bone contouring: jaw, cheekbone and V-line — swelling peaks at days 2-3, early on a liquid and soft diet, needing help with eating and getting out of bed.
  • Facelift: SMAS and endoscopic — swelling peaks at days 5-7, sleeping with the upper body raised and avoiding strenuous movement.
  • Liposuction: after large-area liposuction of the abdomen, thighs or arms, a compression garment 24 hours a day for the first month, needing help putting it on and off.
  • Chest surgery: post-op chest compression and restricted arm movement; dressing, cleaning and eating all need help.
  • Abdominoplasty: complete bed rest for the first three days; getting up, the toilet and moving all need help.
  • Breast augmentation (implants): no arm abduction or lifting for 7-10 days post-op; dressing, washing and eating all need help.

The concierge provides daily living assistance, medication-time reminders, bilingual communication and follow-up accompaniment — not medical procedures or wound care. Leave the medical side to the doctors; when you need an extra pair of hands in daily life, Far From Home Care is by your side.

Pack these in advance so you're not scrambling on arrival

Before landing, get these ready and you'll find "composure" is really just preparation:

  • A follow-up schedule: surgery, recovery, follow-up, flying — list which day does what, on hand.
  • Prescriptions and aftercare notes: carry them with you, useful at customs or for sudden discomfort.
  • Travel / medical insurance: confirm the coverage and ask whether cosmetic-surgery-related care is included.
  • Emergency contact and clinic contact details: far from home, keep these two numbers within easy reach.
  • Loose, easy-on clothing: movement is limited after surgery, so comfortable clothes matter.

The list looks trivial, but one less rummage through your bag on arrival is one more bit of peace of mind. And if you do forget something, don't panic — there's a concierge nearby to help fill the gap.

Frequently asked questions

Q: How long does entry take, and when do I book flights?
Visa-free passport holders just confirm passport validity — the lead time is simple; overseas mainland Chinese travellers on the tourist entry permit should apply at least one month ahead, and book flights only after the permit is issued, not the other way around.
Q: Is the length of stay enough?
Visa-free holders can mostly stay 90 days (30 days for Singapore and Malaysia), which is generous; tourist-permit holders stay 15 days from the day after entry, and the 14-day template fits right up against that limit. Match it to your recovery pace and doctor's advice.
Q: Which day should follow-up visits be?
It depends on your procedure and clinic; follow-ups often fall around 7-10 days post-op, and some procedures involve daily dressing changes. Don't put a follow-up on your departure day — leave a buffer day in case observation is needed.
Q: Can I change my flight?
Depends on your fare type. Post-surgery trips are inherently uncertain, so a changeable, flexible fare is more reassuring than a non-changeable budget ticket.
Q: How long after liposuction can I fly?
Generally no flying within 24 hours of surgery; short-haul at around a few days post-op, long-haul after at least about a week — always subject to your treating physician's assessment.
Q: Can I carry my own luggage after surgery?
After surgery you shouldn't lift heavy items, as it can affect the wound. Use transfers and checked baggage where you can rather than forcing it; ask a travelling companion or concierge if needed. Far From Home Care can provide airport transfers, with someone to help carry on landing.
Q: How do I ask about transport and transfer costs?
This article lists no prices; for costs, message our concierge via WhatsApp or WeChat for details and arrangement help.

Entry, days, airport, transport, follow-ups — get these right and recovery won't get stuck on the road. Arranging it all alone overseas makes it easy to lose track. Hand the cross-border leg to someone who's counted the days, and you can focus on healing, on reaching the day you look in the mirror after the swelling fades. When you need it, the concierge is reachable on WhatsApp or WeChat.

Compiled from public information from the National Immigration Agency, the Taipei medical-tourism portal, plastic-surgery post-op flying guidance, deep vein thrombosis prevention guidance, and airport transport sources (2026/6). Visa rules, flying and recovery times follow official sources and your physician's assessment. This article lists no fees.