Hair Transplant in Turkey: Safety, Real Risks & Deaths Explained (2026)
Are hair transplants in Turkey safe? The real risks, what actually causes the rare reported deaths, and the concrete checks that remove almost all of that risk.
Are hair transplants in Turkey safe? The real risks, what actually causes the rare reported deaths, and the concrete checks that remove almost all of that risk.
A correctly performed hair transplant in Turkey is a low-risk, well-established procedure — but the rare serious incidents that make headlines are real, and they are almost always traceable to a specific, avoidable cause: a procedure run by technicians without proper medical supervision, anaesthesia mishandled, or pre-existing conditions not screened. This guide explains, honestly, what the actual risks are, what has caused the small number of reported deaths, and the concrete checks that remove almost all of that risk. It is built from DoctorVi's verified data (n=7,042 clinics) and published medical literature — not marketing.
For a healthy patient, at a properly run clinic, under appropriate medical supervision: yes. Hair transplantation (FUE/DHI) is minimally invasive and performed under local anaesthesia. Serious complications are rare in that setting. The danger is not "Turkey" — it is the mill model that a segment of the cheapest clinics use.
The very small number of widely reported hair-transplant deaths share recurring factors. Being clear about them is how you avoid them:
Note the pattern: these are system failures of unsupervised, high-volume operations, not inherent properties of the procedure. A clinic with a physician present, correct anaesthetic dosing and pre-op screening removes essentially all of this.
Even at good clinics, normal risks exist and you should expect to be told about them:
| Risk | Frequency | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Swelling (forehead) | Common, transient | Resolves in days |
| Numbness / tingling | Common, temporary | Usually weeks to months |
| Folliculitis | Occasional | Treatable, usually minor |
| Shock loss (temporary shedding) | Common | Regrows; expected, not a complication |
| Poor density / unnatural hairline | Avoidable | Caused by poor planning, not bad luck |
| Infection | Uncommon at good clinics | Hygiene-dependent |
Most "bad results" are not safety events — they are planning and skill failures (wrong hairline, over-harvested donor). Those are avoided the same way the rare safety events are: clinic selection.
1. A physician performs and supervises the procedure — not technicians alone. Confirm in writing.
2. Documented pre-operative medical screening (history, relevant bloods/ECG where indicated).
3. Medically supervised anaesthetic dosing — ask how lidocaine dose is calculated and capped.
4. Accredited facility with resuscitation capability on site.
5. Reasonable graft count for one day — extreme single-session mega-sessions are a throughput red flag.
6. Named surgeon and a written plan after reviewing your photos.
7. Realistic donor assessment — a clinic promising unlimited grafts is not assessing you honestly.
A clinic that meets points 1–4 has eliminated the factors behind essentially every reported serious incident.
DoctorVi only routes you to clinics that meet physician-supervision and accredited-facility criteria. Upload your photos once; up to three Verified clinics reply within 48 hours with a plan, graft estimate and the medical-supervision details in writing. No commission on treatment, no paid placement.
For a healthy patient at a physician-supervised, accredited clinic, yes — it is a low-risk, established procedure. The risk comes from unsupervised mill-model clinics, not from the procedure or the country.
Serious incidents are very rare relative to the very large number of procedures performed. The reported deaths are almost always linked to local-anaesthetic toxicity, unscreened medical conditions, or technician-run procedures without a physician present — all avoidable with proper clinic selection.
The most frequently cited factor is local anaesthetic (lidocaine) toxicity from excessive or unsupervised dosing, sometimes combined with unscreened cardiac conditions.
Confirm in writing that a physician performs and supervises the procedure, that there is documented pre-op screening, medically supervised anaesthetic dosing, and an accredited facility with resuscitation capability.
Both are safe when properly performed; safety is determined by medical supervision and facility, not by which technique. Choose the clinic on supervision and screening, then discuss technique with the surgeon.
Reviewed by Prof. Dr. Gülfem Çelik, dermatologist and hair restoration specialist at CapaClinic, Istanbul. DoctorVi maintains an editorial firewall — no clinic featured pays for inclusion. This article is educational and not a substitute for individual medical advice.
Sources: DoctorVi 2026 verified clinic database (n=7,042), DoctorVi hair restoration outcome database, published literature on local anaesthetic systemic toxicity (LAST) and hair transplantation safety.
تحدّث مع الأطباء وجهاً لوجه عبر لقاء فيديو مجانية لمدة 20 دقيقة.