Short answer: you usually have to pay a significant amount upfront in India, but some flexibility (like staged payments or partial installments) may be available depending on the hospital and situation.
Here’s how it works in real life.
💰 1. Standard Practice: Advance Payment Required
Most hospitals—especially private ones—require:
👉 50% to 100% advance payment before admission or surgery
This covers:
- Booking your surgery slot
- Hospital bed reservation
- Initial tests and preparation
In cities like Delhi, Gurgaon, and Chennai, this is standard across major hospitals.
📊 2. Common Payment Structures
🟢 Option 1: Full Upfront Payment
- Pay entire package before surgery
👉 Most common for international patients
🟡 Option 2: Partial Advance + Balance Later
Typical structure:
- 50–70% before admission
- Remaining before discharge
👉 Very common and practical
🔵 Option 3: Deposit + Final Billing
- Initial deposit (₹50,000–₹2,00,000)
- Final bill settled at discharge
👉 More common for smaller procedures
🏥 3. Why Hospitals Ask for Advance
Hospitals do this because:
- No insurance delays (especially for foreign patients)
- High cost of surgery setup
- Risk management (patients leaving without paying)
👉 It’s a standard global practice in private healthcare
⚠️ 4. Are Installments Allowed?
👉 Usually NO for short-term treatments
Hospitals generally do NOT offer:
- Monthly EMIs
- Long-term installment plans
Because:
- Treatment is completed quickly
- Billing is immediate
💡 5. When Installments MAY Be Possible
There are exceptions:
✅ 1. Long-Term Treatments
- Cancer therapy
- Dialysis
- Rehabilitation
👉 Payments may be split per cycle/session
✅ 2. Through Financing or Loans
Some hospitals tie up with:
- Medical loan providers
- NBFCs
👉 You can convert cost into EMI (indirect installments)
✅ 3. Insurance Cases
- Cashless insurance → no upfront payment (or minimal)
- Reimbursement → you pay first, claim later
✈️ 6. For Medical Tourists (Important)
If you’re coming from abroad:
👉 Expect:
- Advance payment BEFORE travel (sometimes)
- Or immediately on arrival
Some hospitals may ask:
- Deposit to confirm appointment
- Balance on admission
💳 7. Payment Methods Accepted
Most hospitals accept:
- International cards (Visa/Mastercard)
- Bank transfer (SWIFT)
- Cash (within legal limits)
- Forex cards
🧾 8. What Happens at Discharge?
Before leaving hospital:
👉 You must:
- Clear final bill
- Pay for extras (if any)
Only then:
- Discharge summary is issued
- You’re allowed to leave
🚨 9. Hidden Payment Triggers
Even if you paid upfront, you may need to pay extra for:
- Complications
- Extra stay
- Implant upgrades
- Additional tests
👉 These are settled before discharge
📊 10. Real Example
Surgery Package: ₹4,00,000
Payment flow:
- ₹2,50,000 before surgery
- ₹1,50,000 at discharge
If extras arise:
- ₹50,000 additional at discharge
✅ Final Answer
👉 Yes, you usually need to pay upfront (full or partial)
👉 Installments are rarely offered directly by hospitals, but:
- Possible via loans
- Possible for long-term treatments
🧠 Bottom Line
👉 Think of it like this:
- Short-term surgery → upfront payment
- Long-term treatment → staged payments possible
