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Heart Health Assessment in Thailand Your guide to cost, top specialists & hospitals

Heart disease is the world's leading killer, and the one most responsive to early intervention.

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What Is Heart Health Assessment?

Also known as: Heart Check-Up · Cardiovascular Risk Assessment

A heart health assessment is a cardiac screening programme that measures how well your heart works and your risk of future heart disease by combining blood tests, electrical tracings, and imaging into one reviewed picture. It looks for coronary artery disease, irregular rhythms, valve problems, and early heart failure markers, often before any symptom appears. A typical programme runs an ECG, a treadmill stress test, an echocardiogram that pictures the heart with ultrasound, and a blood panel, with coronary CT added when your risk warrants it. It usually takes 2 to 4 hours and needs no recovery.

The heart is easy to put off thinking about when you feel well. That is the point of screening: to check while things are quiet, so anything brewing is caught early. A cardiologist sits with you the same day and explains what your results mean.

Most people leave reassured, with a clear sense of where their risk sits and how to keep it low. For a minority, screening flags something worth following up, and finding it now tends to be a good thing.

It can address a range of concerns, including:

Family history of heart disease, heart attack, or stroke
High blood pressure, high cholesterol, or diabetes
Chest discomfort, shortness of breath, or palpitations during exercise
Over 40 and wanting a cardiac risk baseline before symptoms appear
Quick Facts
Cost from $500
Fasting 8–12 hours
Procedure 2–4 hours
Results in Same day to 48 hours
Minimum stay 2–3 days

Am I a Good Candidate for Heart Health Assessment?

Cardiac screening is for assessing risk before symptoms arrive, not for investigating symptoms that already have.

Cardiologists separate screening candidates from patients who need urgent assessment instead.

Best suited: Adults over 40, especially men over 45 and women over 55, plus anyone with high blood pressure, cholesterol, diabetes, smoking, or a family history of heart disease.

Symptoms change the pathway: Active chest pain, recent palpitations, or known unstable angina need urgent cardiology, not a screening package.

Stress test fitness: Orthopaedic, lung, or mobility limits that make a treadmill unsafe are flagged in advance so a pharmacological stress test is planned instead.

CT considerations: Pregnancy, contrast allergy, or impaired kidney function affect whether CT coronary angiography is appropriate, and medication such as beta-blockers needs careful pre-test timing.

Who is not suitable for heart health assessment?

  • Active chest pain or unstable angina, which needs urgent cardiology assessment
  • CT coronary angiography in pregnancy, contrast allergy, or impaired kidney function
  • Treadmill stress testing where mobility or lung limits make it unsafe, until a pharmacological alternative is arranged
  • Exercise stress testing in severe symptomatic aortic stenosis, decompensated heart failure, an uncontrolled arrhythmia, or severe untreated hypertension (over 200/110), until the condition is stabilised

Pricing

How Much Will Heart Health Assessment Cost in Thailand?

How Thailand compares on cost, quality and reliability against leading destinations for heart health assessment.

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Is it better value in Thailand than in the USA?

Yes, comparable results at a fraction of the cost

Thailand's leading clinics are internationally accredited and its specialists highly experienced, so for most patients the results are comparable to those at home, at a fraction of the price. Here's how the cost breaks down by clinic tier.

Cost comparison by clinic level

Clinic levelYour price in ThailandTypical USA costYou save
StandardAccredited clinic, experienced specialist from ~$500 from ~$1,000 ~50%
PremiumLeading clinic, senior specialist from ~$700 from ~$1,400 ~50%
LuxuryTop specialist, private concierge from ~$950 from ~$1,850 ~50%

Prices are indicative and shown in your local currency. You pay the clinic directly, with no markup.

How Thailand comparesClinic and specialist standards

Accreditation

🇹🇭 ThailandInternationally accredited hospitals and clinics; leading hospitals hold JCI accreditation (Bumrungrad was the first in Asia, in 2002)
🇺🇸 USAHospitals accredited by The Joint Commission; clinics by recognised national accreditors

Specialist credentials

🇹🇭 ThailandBoard-certified specialists, registered with Thailand's national medical or dental councils
🇺🇸 USABoard-certified through the American Board of Medical Specialties (ABMS) or the relevant dental board

International experience

🇹🇭 ThailandBumrungrad alone treats around 520,000 international patients a year, from 190+ countries
🇺🇸 USACaseloads are mostly domestic

Thailand's advantages

  • Save thousands on the same treatment and standard of care
  • JCI-accredited clinics and board-certified specialists
  • Airport transfers and aftercare included, with hotels arranged nearby
  • Little to no waiting list, so you plan around your travel
  • A dedicated coordinator from first enquiry to flight home

Considerations

  • Travel and time off work to factor in
  • Follow-up care needs planning once you are back home
  • Choosing the right clinic and specialist matters most
Bottom line: For most international patients, Thailand offers the strongest balance of price and quality for heart health assessment: internationally accredited clinics and experienced specialists at a fraction of Western prices, with savings that comfortably cover the trip.Internationally accredited clinics and experienced specialists, with transparent, itemised pricing.

Hospitals Trusted for Heart Health Assessment

From internationally accredited flagships to dedicated specialist hospitals, these are the kinds of facilities where international patients have this procedure.

Bumrungrad International Hospital

Bumrungrad International Hospital

JCI since 2002 Bangkok

Tertiary hospital with over 1,200 physicians treating 520,000+ international patients a year.

Bangkok Hospital

Bangkok Hospital

JCI accredited Bangkok

BDMS flagship tertiary campus with standalone heart, cancer, and neuro-orthopaedic hospitals.

Samitivej Sukhumvit Hospital

Samitivej Sukhumvit Hospital

JCI accredited Bangkok

Tertiary hospital known for paediatrics, home to Thailand's first private children's hospital.

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The complete guide to Heart Health Assessment in Thailand

Everything below is for readers who want the full detail: costs broken down, types and techniques, recovery, risks and safety, and planning your trip.

Cardiac Screening Centres in Thailand

Cardiac screening is only as good as the equipment and the cardiologist interpreting the results.

Leading Hospitals in Bangkok

Our partner hospitals operate dedicated cardiology departments with stress testing suites, echocardiography labs, and cardiac CT scanners on-site. These are not wellness clinics offering a basic ECG; they are full-service cardiac centres that handle everything from screening to interventional cardiology and cardiac surgery under one roof.

Experienced Cardiologists

Partner cardiologists are board-certified by the Thai Board of Internal Medicine and Cardiology, with many holding subspecialty training in interventional or preventive cardiology from the US, Europe, or Japan. They interpret your results in the context of your full risk profile, not as isolated numbers.

What to Look for in a Cardiac Screening Centre

Confirm the hospital holds JCI accreditation and has a dedicated cardiology department, not just visiting cardiologists. Check that stress testing is supervised by a cardiologist, not a technician. If you want coronary CT, verify the facility has a 64-slice or higher CT scanner, as lower-resolution scanners produce inadequate cardiac images.

Understanding Your Cardiac Risk

Cardiac screening produces a risk profile, not a diagnosis. Here is what that means and how to use it.

Typical Assessment Outcomes

Most patients receive reassuring results with a low or moderate cardiovascular risk score. Your cardiologist will identify specific modifiable risk factors (cholesterol, blood pressure, smoking, inactivity) and provide a personalised risk-reduction plan. A minority of patients will have findings that warrant medical follow-up, and early detection at this stage significantly improves outcomes.

What Your Risk Score Means

Cardiovascular risk scores integrate multiple factors (age, sex, blood pressure, cholesterol, smoking status, diabetes, and family history) into a single number representing your probability of a cardiac event over the next ten years. This number guides screening frequency, medication decisions, and lifestyle priorities. Your cardiologist will explain exactly what your score means and what actions, if any, it warrants.

Heart Health Assessment Cost in Thailand

Average Cost of Cardiac Screening

A heart health assessment in Thailand typically costs between $500 and $1,500, depending on the programme tier. Standard screening with blood work and ECG sits at the lower end. Advanced programmes with stress test, echo, and coronary CT sit higher. Every quote is fully itemised.

What Affects the Price?

The depth of investigation is the main cost driver. Adding a stress test, echocardiogram, or coronary CT increases cost because each requires specialised equipment, trained technicians, and cardiologist interpretation. Hospital tier also plays a role: JCI-accredited facilities charge a premium for their accreditation-level infrastructure.

Cost by Programme Tier

Typical ranges at our partner hospitals in Thailand:

  • Standard Cardiac Screen: $500–$600. Blood panel, resting ECG, cardiologist consultation
  • Comprehensive Assessment: $700–$900. Adds treadmill stress test and echocardiogram
  • Advanced Cardiac Imaging: $1,000–$1,500. Adds coronary calcium score, CT angiography, and CIMT

Exact pricing is confirmed after your care coordinator matches you with the right programme.

Thailand vs International Price Comparison

Cardiac screening in Thailand costs 50–70% less than equivalent programmes in the US ($1,000–$2,000), Australia (A$900–A$1,750), and UK (£800–£1,500). The equipment, clinical protocols, and cardiologist qualifications are directly comparable. The savings come from Thailand's lower operating costs.

Types of Cardiac Screening

Cardiac assessments are structured in tiers. The right level depends on your age, risk factors, and whether you are screening for the first time or following up on a known concern.

Standard Cardiac Screen

A core cardiovascular assessment suitable for adults under 50 with no significant risk factors. Provides a reliable baseline of heart function and cardiac risk markers without the cost of advanced imaging.

  • Resting 12-lead ECG
  • Cardiac blood panel (lipid profile, fasting glucose, HbA1c, hs-CRP)
  • Blood pressure assessment and BMI
  • Cardiologist consultation
  • Best for: low-risk adults wanting a reliable cardiac baseline

Comprehensive Heart Assessment

A more detailed programme for patients over 50 or those with risk factors such as hypertension, diabetes, or family history. Adds functional testing and imaging that a resting ECG would miss entirely.

  • Everything in the Standard screen
  • Treadmill stress test (exercise ECG)
  • Transthoracic echocardiogram (heart structure and valve function)
  • Homocysteine and BNP (heart failure marker)
  • Best for: patients with risk factors or family history of heart disease

Advanced Cardiac Imaging Programme

The most thorough option, combining functional assessment with coronary imaging. This is the programme for patients who want to see their coronary arteries directly rather than relying on indirect markers and stress responses.

  • Everything in the Comprehensive assessment
  • Coronary calcium scoring (CT)
  • CT coronary angiography (non-invasive imaging of coronary arteries)
  • Carotid intima-media thickness (CIMT) ultrasound
  • Extended cardiologist consultation with written risk report
  • Best for: high-risk patients or those wanting the most detailed cardiac evaluation

Cardiac Assessment Methods

Each diagnostic component in a cardiac assessment answers a different question about your heart. Here is what each test does and what it reveals.

Electrocardiography and Stress Testing

A resting ECG captures your heart's electrical activity at rest, detecting arrhythmias and conduction abnormalities. A treadmill stress test pushes cardiac demand progressively higher, revealing ischaemic changes that only appear under load. These are problems a resting ECG would completely miss.

  • 12-lead ECG recorded in under five minutes
  • Bruce protocol treadmill test supervised by a cardiologist
  • Heart rate, blood pressure, and ECG monitored continuously during exercise
  • Best for: detecting arrhythmias, ischaemia, and exercise-induced cardiac changes

Echocardiography

A transthoracic echocardiogram uses ultrasound to image the heart's chambers, valves, and walls in real time.6 It measures ejection fraction, detects valve regurgitation or stenosis, and identifies structural abnormalities that blood tests and ECGs cannot see.

  • Non-invasive, painless, and completed in 30–60 minutes
  • Assesses chamber size, wall motion, and valve function
  • Ejection fraction measurement indicates overall pump strength
  • Best for: structural and functional heart assessment

Coronary CT and Calcium Scoring

A coronary calcium score quantifies calcified plaque in your coronary arteries using a fast, low-dose CT scan. It is one of the strongest independent predictors of future heart attack risk.5 CT coronary angiography goes further, visualising the coronary arteries in detail to detect soft plaque and narrowing before symptoms develop.

  • Calcium scoring takes under five minutes with minimal radiation
  • CT angiography produces detailed 3D images of coronary anatomy
  • Both tests are non-invasive and require no arterial catheter
  • Best for: quantifying coronary artery disease risk with direct imaging

What to Expect on Assessment Day

Day of Assessment

Arrive fasted if blood work is included. The assessment typically takes 2–4 hours depending on the programme tier. Wear comfortable clothing and trainers for the stress test.

After the Assessment

You can resume normal activities immediately. If mild sedation was used for CT imaging, rest for 1–2 hours before driving or strenuous activity.

Results Review

A cardiologist reviews all findings with you the same day in a private consultation. You receive a clear explanation of each test, your overall cardiovascular risk score, and written recommendations.

Follow-Up

Your care coordinator can arrange follow-up consultations, medication review, or repeat testing, whether you are still in Thailand or back home. Results can be shared with your GP or cardiologist.

Comprehensive Multi-test cardiac evaluation
Same-Day Review Cardiologist consultation included
Risk Scored Personalised cardiovascular risk profile

How Long Should You Stay?

Two to three days is recommended. Day one covers the assessment itself, with results reviewed the same afternoon. Day two provides a buffer for any additional tests or specialist consultations your cardiologist may recommend based on findings. Some patients combine cardiac screening with broader health assessments during the same trip.

When Can You Fly After Cardiac Screening?

There are no restrictions on flying after a standard cardiac assessment, since these are diagnostic tests, not procedures. If your screening identifies a significant cardiac concern, your cardiologist will advise whether any precautions are needed before flying home.

When Will You See Final Results?

Most results (blood work, ECG, stress test, and echo) are reviewed the same day. CT imaging reports may take 24–48 hours for full interpretation by a specialist radiologist. Your care coordinator will arrange a follow-up consultation if any results arrive after your initial review.

Risks and Considerations

Cardiac screening is non-invasive and carries very low risk for the vast majority of patients.

  • Minor bruising from blood draw
  • Temporary fatigue or muscle soreness after treadmill stress test
  • Brief lightheadedness during or after exercise testing
  • Stress-test-triggered arrhythmia and, very rarely, an ischaemic event or heart attack during treadmill testing (a serious adverse event is rare)1,2
  • Small radiation exposure from CT imaging (within safe clinical limits)
  • Mild allergic reaction to CT contrast dye (rare)
  • Contrast-induced acute kidney injury (transient kidney impairment) after CT coronary angiography in patients with pre-existing kidney problems or diabetes4
  • Possible false-positive findings requiring further investigation

Your cardiologist will review your medical history before the assessment and advise on any specific considerations. Patients with known heart conditions or mobility limitations will have their programme adapted accordingly.

Is Cardiac Screening Safe in Thailand?

Yes. Cardiac assessments at JCI-accredited hospitals in Thailand meet the same clinical safety standards as screening in the UK, US, or Australia. Stress tests are supervised by cardiologists with continuous ECG and blood pressure monitoring. CT imaging uses the same protocols and dose limits as international standards.

Understanding the Stress Test

Treadmill stress tests are a standard cardiac investigation performed millions of times each year worldwide. The test is supervised by a cardiologist who monitors your ECG and blood pressure throughout. It is stopped immediately if any abnormality is detected or if you reach your target heart rate. The main risk is that pushing the heart can provoke an abnormal rhythm (arrhythmia) or, very rarely, an ischaemic event such as a heart attack. Serious adverse events are uncommon, which is precisely why the test is run under continuous cardiologist supervision with resuscitation equipment on hand.1,3

What If Something Is Found?

If screening identifies a cardiac concern such as an elevated calcium score, valve abnormality, or exercise-induced ischaemia, your cardiologist will explain the finding, its significance, and recommended next steps. This may include medication, lifestyle changes, further imaging, or referral to a cardiac interventionist. Having screening done at a full-service hospital means specialist follow-up is available on-site.

Planning Your Cardiac Screening Trip

Most patients need two to three days in Thailand for a heart health assessment. Here is how to organise your visit.

How to Prepare

Arrive fasted (8–12 hours) if your programme includes blood work. Wear comfortable clothing and trainers for the stress test. Bring a list of current medications, recent blood work if available, and any relevant family medical history. If you take beta-blockers, your cardiologist may advise adjusting timing for accurate stress test results.

Combining with Other Assessments

Cardiac screening pairs naturally with a full body screening, blood panels, or metabolic testing. Since the blood draw is already done, adding cardiac-specific markers to a broader panel is efficient and cost-effective. Your care coordinator can build a combined programme that covers everything in a single visit.

Follow-Up After Returning Home

Your report, including all test results, imaging, and cardiologist commentary, is formatted for direct sharing with your GP or cardiologist at home. If medication is recommended, your Thai cardiologist can provide a prescription or treatment recommendation that your home doctor can implement. Remote follow-up consultations are available via telemedicine.

Related Procedures

Other procedures that address similar goals or conditions, in case one of them is a closer fit for you.

Common Questions About Heart Health Assessments

What to know before booking your cardiac screening in Thailand

A heart health assessment in Thailand typically costs $500–$1,500, compared with $1,000–$2,000 in the United States and around £800–£1,500 in the UK. What you pay depends mainly on the programme tier you choose and whether advanced imaging such as a coronary CT or echocardiogram is included. Request a free quote for a figure matched to your case.

Yes. Our partner hospitals are JCI-accredited cardiac centres using the same imaging technology and clinical protocols as leading hospitals in the US and Europe. Stress tests are supervised by cardiologists with continuous ECG and blood pressure monitoring, and CT imaging follows the same dose limits as international standards. Your results are interpreted by a board-certified cardiologist, not read off a machine.

We recommend a stay of 2–3 days. Day one covers the assessment and your same-day cardiologist review, and the extra day gives a buffer for any additional test or specialist consultation your findings might prompt. Many patients combine the visit with a holiday or a broader health screening.

In most cases, yes. These are diagnostic tests rather than procedures, so there are no flying restrictions after a standard cardiac screening. If your assessment uncovers a significant cardiac concern, your cardiologist will advise plainly whether any precaution is needed before you travel home.
Nick Peplow

Nick Peplow

EDITORIAL REVIEW

Founder & Lead Coordinator

Last reviewed: July 2, 2026

Medical References

  1. Exercise Stress Test (Cleveland Clinic)
  2. Exercise stress test (MedlinePlus)
  3. Exercise Stress Test (American Heart Association)
  4. Protecting Your Kidneys During MRI and CT Scans with Contrast Dye (National Kidney Foundation)
  5. Coronary Artery Calcification (Cleveland Clinic)
  6. Echocardiogram how to read your results (British Heart Foundation)

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Medical disclaimer: Content on this site is provided for informational purposes and should not be treated as medical advice. Outcomes, timelines, and eligibility differ from person to person. Consult a qualified medical professional before making any decisions about surgery or treatment.

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