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How many here in Brazil had cosmetic or dental medical treatment

I was just wondering if you had a medical procedure. What was it and how much did it cost. Example having MOHS surgery for a facial nodule that been show to be cancer. Mohs is the surgery that removed this result is 99% cure. In the USA without insurance starts at $5,000 and can go up to $12,000. Here in Brazil I have been quoted $1,500 to $1,850 for the same procedure of Mohs surgery. Also dental cleaning about $70.00 and whitening three sessions at dentist $130.00. Thank for any response

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@NewBrazil

Yeah I had a hip replacement. N also alot of dental work done.some dentists are good while others are shit Don't trust just one source for a dentist. My cousin recommended the guy n I had an implant聽 done. Guy did a shit job n had to get it more or less re-done. Cost was like 1k. My hip surgery聽 is had a great dr top notch. Paid for it in a few installments cus cash was a bit tight. I paid 55k rs. My older sister had to pay 35k back in Canada. There they make you get up right away n here I had to lay in bed for 3 or 4 weeks.

I had a total hip replacement done in Recife in December 2025. Total cost, inlcuding top-of-the-range titanium J+J prosthesis imported from the US, all doctors, 1 overnight hospital stay, operating theatre, initial consultations and follow-up ones, X-rays, etc, etc, was R$35,000 (less than our annual insurance was). Totally successful, highly recommend it, and as a result I cancelled our health insurance and will go private in the future if needed...

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29 Apr 2026

Dental procedures are cheaper in Brazil than in the US.聽 The materials used are different - for example porcelain vs resin based crowns.聽 In the US, the costs are mainly driven by insurance companies and greed.


Re: success / failure of the medical / dental procedures - there are good and bad doctors and dentists everywhere.聽 But in Brazil, please get more than 1 recommendation.


In terms of my exposure so far, the technology and procedures are less advanced in Brazil than in the US but the patient experience is much better.


I would definitely do non-critical procedures in Brazil and keep the difficult or novel treatments in the US.

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@NewBrazil

Dental care in Brazil is excellent. There are many highly competent dentists and specialists, and even top-level private treatment is internationally often only around 30鈥50% of the price charged in many other countries.


I had some complex microscopic root canal treatments done in Fortaleza 鈥 about R$3,000 per tooth, including three sessions of two hours each. The level of service and equipment was very high-end.


If you need a contact, I鈥檇 be happy to share one.

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@Vincent Devalk

Can confirm, I had excellent dental treatment in Salvador, several root canal treatments and one implant. I even found a clinic which offers 麓sedacao leve 鈥 (laughing gas), if you like your treatments painless. Unfortunately the charge for that is very expensive (1700 R), but it鈥檚 worth it.

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I do not pay for health insurance here. It is a racket and a scam IMHO. But, that's for another thread.


My wife OTOH pays Unimed some R$1.600 a month.


Private practice and medical/dental procedures here are cheap. 2 months ago my wife had invasive thyroid tumor tests done in probably the top oncological medical facility for this kind of thing. R$2.800 covered the anesthesiologist, the specialist doctor, and the OR, as well as two follow ups. She's fine. She paid privately because Unimed would have sent her to a third rate place hours away some 3 months in the future.


Our doctor charges R$400 for a 60-90 minute consult. She is licensed and degreed as a general practitioner, an endocrinologist, and a pharmacist. Teaches at UFRJ as well. Contacts you on What's App if she is going to be 10 minutes late on an appointment. Sends you prescriptions or other things by WA.


I need some cosmetic dental work. 10 veneers basically on the bottom. Going to shop around for a dentist next week. I'm expecting to pay R$10.000 or so versus 5X that amount or more, outside the country,


I was quoted R$2.000 a month by Unimed. In ten years I'd have paid them R$240.000 so they could deny claims and sponsor soccer teams on their jerseys. Invest that R$240.000 of premiums (or more) up front in a CDB earning around 13.5% (my historical 3 year rate) and in ten years it is worth R$980.000.......self insure yourself if you are in good health. If something critical happens SAMU and SUS will look after it initially anyways, and they are very good.

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