"Is it safe?" is the single most important question you can ask before any elective surgery — and especially before one that involves a flight.
The honest answer: yes, with the right clinic. Like everywhere else in the world, Albania has a range of providers. The ones we work with meet standards equivalent to those in the EU; the ones we don't work with, we don't work with for a reason.
What's actually regulated in Albania?
Albania's healthcare system is regulated by the Ministry of Health and Social Protection. Physicians are licensed through the Albanian Order of Physicians (Urdhri i Mjekëve të Shqipërisë). To operate on patients, a surgeon must:
- Hold a recognised medical degree
- Complete a specialty residency (5–6 years for plastic surgery)
- Be registered, insured and in good standing with the Order
- Practise in a licensed clinical facility
This is the same basic regulatory model used across the EU. Albania has been a candidate country for EU membership since 2014 and much of its medical regulation is already harmonised with EU standards.
How surgeons we work with are trained
Many aesthetic surgeons practising in Tirana trained in the EU before returning home. It's common to find surgeons with:
- Medical school in Tirana or abroad
- Specialty training in Italy, Germany, Austria or the UK
- Fellowship training in a specific technique (e.g. rhinoplasty in Rome, breast surgery in Milan)
- ESPRAS, DGPRÄC, AICPE or ISAPS membership
We verify these credentials directly with the issuing bodies before adding anyone to our network. If we can't verify, they don't get added.
What about the clinics?
Our partner clinics all have:
- Dedicated operating theatres with positive-pressure ventilation
- On-site MD-qualified anaesthesiologists
- Post-anaesthesia care units (PACU) with monitoring
- Modern sterilisation protocols (autoclave, documented cycles)
- ISO 9001 or equivalent quality management certification (in most cases)
- Professional indemnity insurance
If your clinic doesn't have a trained anaesthesiologist in the building at all times, get up and leave — wherever you are in the world.
The most honest comparison: outcomes
Safety is, ultimately, about outcomes. In aesthetic surgery, you can reasonably compare:
- Major complication rates (infection, haematoma, thrombosis)
- Revision rates (how often does a second surgery get needed)
- Patient satisfaction at 12 months
The surgeons we work with publish these figures and they're in line with — or better than — UK and German benchmarks. We review them annually; anyone trending in the wrong direction leaves our network.
The checklist every patient should use
Before you book anything — with us or anyone else — ask:
- Who exactly is my surgeon? Full name, specialty board, years of experience, case volume.
- Where is the surgery happening? Name of the clinic, licensing authority, accreditation.
- Who will administer anaesthesia? MD anaesthesiologist, not a nurse.
- What implants/materials will be used? By brand — e.g. "Mentor MemoryGel Xtra 375cc", not "silicone".
- What's the revision policy? In writing.
- What insurance does the surgeon carry? Policy number should be available on request.
- Who handles aftercare? For how long? By what channel?
Any reputable operator — in Albania or anywhere else — will answer all seven without hesitation.
Where we draw the line
We don't work with:
- Providers who refuse to name their anaesthesiologist
- Clinics that pressure-sell or offer "today only" discounts
- Surgeons who aren't board-certified in their advertised specialty
- Any operator who asks for full payment upfront before you arrive
You'd be surprised how many operators across Europe fail one or more of those tests.
The bottom line
Aesthetic surgery in Albania is as safe as aesthetic surgery in Italy, Germany or the UK — when done at the right clinic with the right surgeon. The gap between a top-tier and bottom-tier provider is bigger than the gap between countries.
We exist, in large part, to close that gap for you.
