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India’s medical tourism falls below pre-COVID peak amid geopolitical tensions and visa delays

 

India’s medical tourism sector, once one of the fastest-growing segments of inbound travel, has fallen below its pre-COVID peak levels. The slowdown comes despite strong hospital infrastructure and competitive treatment costs, which earlier made India a preferred destination for foreign patients.


What is happening

The inflow of international patients seeking treatment in India has weakened compared to pre-pandemic levels. Although the sector recovered strongly after COVID-19, recent months show a noticeable decline in arrivals.

Reports indicate that India is now struggling to fully regain the momentum it had before 2020, when it attracted several lakh medical tourists annually for treatments such as cardiology, orthopaedics, oncology, organ transplants, and fertility care.


Key reasons for the decline

1. Geopolitical tensions

  • Rising instability in regions like West Asia has disrupted travel routes.

  • Airspace restrictions and flight cancellations are making travel difficult, especially for patients from Gulf countries, Africa, and Central Asia. (mint)

  • These regions are major sources of medical tourists for India.


2. Visa delays and administrative hurdles

  • Foreign patients are facing longer waiting times for medical visas.

  • Slower processing and stricter documentation requirements are discouraging urgent medical travel.

  • Even small delays matter in healthcare, where treatment timing is critical.


3. Rising global competition

  • Countries like Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, and Turkey are aggressively expanding their medical tourism offerings.

  • They are providing faster visa approvals, packaged treatment-travel services, and strong promotional campaigns.


4. Travel uncertainty

  • Frequent flight disruptions and higher air travel costs are affecting affordability.

  • Patients often prefer destinations with predictable and smoother entry processes.


Impact on India

  • India is still a major global healthcare hub, but patient inflow is below expected recovery levels.

  • Hospitals report reduced international occupancy in some departments.

  • The sector is under pressure despite long-term growth potential.

At the same time:

  • India remains highly competitive in cost and quality of care.

  • It continues to attract patients for complex and affordable treatments.


Industry outlook

  • Experts believe the slowdown is temporary but concerning.

  • If visa systems are streamlined and geopolitical disruptions ease, India could regain lost ground.

  • Long-term projections for the sector remain strong due to rising global demand for affordable healthcare in India.


Conclusion

India’s medical tourism industry is facing a short-term setback driven mainly by geopolitical instability, visa delays, and global competition, rather than a loss of medical capability. While the country still holds strong advantages in healthcare quality and pricing, restoring ease of travel and patient confidence is key to returning to pre-COVID peak levels.


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