Thailand is the established name in dental tourism: Bangkok clinics like Bumrungrad and BIDC have served international patients for decades, English is widespread, and the tourism is effortless. China is the newer entrant — cheaper for many procedures, with very modern technology, but less known and harder to navigate without help.
Neither is simply “better”. The right choice depends on where you’re travelling from, your budget, and how much hand-holding you want. Here’s a straight comparison.
Side by side
| China | Thailand | |
|---|---|---|
| Implant cost | from ~¥8,000 (~$1,100), price-capped | ~$1,500–$2,500 |
| Quality / technology | Very modern; strong digital & AI-assisted dentistry | Mature, consistent, JCI-accredited hospitals |
| English | Limited outside international clinics — the main hurdle | Widely spoken at dental-tourism clinics |
| Establishment / reviews | Newer to inbound dental tourism | Decades of track record and English reviews |
| Tourism | Vast, varied — and you’ll see a side of China few do | Famously easy, beach + city |
| Best access from | Asia, Oceania, and anyone via Hong Kong / Macau | Everywhere; a well-worn path |
Where China wins
- Often cheaper on implants, with government price caps keeping costs predictable.
- Newest equipment and digital workflows (same-visit crowns, AI-assisted planning).
- Excellent value if you’re already in Asia or visiting via Hong Kong / Macau.
Where Thailand wins
- Easier to do solo — English is widespread at the major clinics.
- A longer public track record and far more English-language reviews.
- Effortless tourism and a deep, proven dental-tourism ecosystem.
The honest verdict
Choose Thailand if you want the most established, do-it-yourself-friendly option and English everywhere.
Choose China if you want the newest technology, often-lower implant costs, and you’re happy to have the language and logistics handled for you — which is exactly what we do, closing China’s one real disadvantage.