Overview
Hair transplant Poland cost runs roughly €2,500 to €6,000 in 2026 — about $2,700 to $6,500 in USD — for 2,500 to 3,500 grafts, which puts Warsaw and Kraków in the middle of the European range, above Turkey but below Germany and Spain.
Polish clinics usually quote per graft at €1.50 to €2, so a headline number can climb by thousands in the chair once the surgeon 'finds' you need more grafts — a flat-rate package is the honest way to plan around that.
Doctours' one vetted Polish partner clinic is Klinika Borejsza in Ruda Śląska, Silesia, led by head surgeon Dr. Maciej Borejsza, at a €5,500 flat-rate package for up to 3,500 grafts (about $5,950 USD) with a €500 deposit and the DHI method, PRP, hotel, and transport bundled in.
Every Polish clinic answers to the same EU floor — the EU Cross-Border Healthcare Directive, GDPR-level data protection, and surgeon licensing through Naczelna Izba Lekarska — so the price gap with the US reflects economics, not lower quality.
Across a vetted network in Turkey, Mexico, the United States, Poland, and South Korea, Doctours quotes flat-rate USD packages from $2,200 to $7,000, with deposits from $300, payment plans up to 36 months, and 12 months of US-based aftercare on a 24/7 line.
Hair transplant Poland cost runs roughly €2,500 to €6,000 — about $2,700 to $6,500 in USD — for 2,500 to 3,500 grafts in 2026, with Warsaw and Kraków clinics anchoring that range at €1.50 to €2 per graft. That places Poland squarely in the middle of the European market: above Turkey, below Germany and Spain. Through Doctours, the one Polish clinic vetted in person is Klinika Borejsza in Ruda Śląska, Silesia — head surgeon Dr. Maciej Borejsza, a €5,500 (about $5,950) flat-rate package for up to 3,500 grafts, with the DHI method, PRP therapy, hotel, and transport bundled into one number and a US-based care team that stays with you after you fly home.
If a Warsaw or Kraków clinic has been sitting in your open tabs, the price is rarely the only thing keeping you there. Istanbul feels like a factory. The US feels out of reach. Poland feels like the sensible middle — regulated, European, close enough that a complication would not strand you a continent away. That instinct is fair, and Poland delivers on a lot of it. What it does not always deliver is a number you can trust at first glance, because the per-graft quote you see up front is not usually the number that leaves your account.
Here is the honest breakdown. This guide walks through 2026 hair transplant pricing in Poland — Warsaw and Kraków specifically — against the wider European market and the vetted network alternatives, using widely-reported market ranges plus the verified Doctours partner price. Every figure is in euros with a USD conversion, and every claim about what Doctours bundles is grounded in a published partner-clinic package.
How Much Does a Hair Transplant in Poland Cost in 2026?
A hair transplant in Poland costs €2,500 to €6,000 for 2,500 to 3,500 grafts in 2026, with Warsaw pricing a step above Kraków and both quoting per graft at €1.50 to €2. Poland sits below Germany's €5,000 to €10,000 ceiling and Spain's premium tier, while running higher than most of Turkey. Here is how the Polish market compares to the rest of Europe and the vetted alternatives.
Location | Typical Package Price (2026) | USD Equivalent | Common Grafts | What Patients Get |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Warsaw (Poland) | €3,000 – €6,000 | ~$3,250 – $6,500 | 2,500 – 3,500 | Largest choice, widest quality range, easiest flights |
Kraków (Poland) | €2,800 – €5,500 | ~$3,050 – $5,950 | 2,500 – 3,500 | Strong surgeons plus a calm, walkable recovery city |
Poland (Doctours partner: Klinika Borejsza) | €5,500 flat-rate | ~$5,950 | Up to 3,500 | Vetted EU clinic, DHI + PRP + hotel + transport bundled |
Turkey (Doctours network) | $2,200 – $6,000 | $2,200 – $6,000 | 3,000 – 4,500 | Highest surgeon volume, lowest all-in price |
Two caveats on the Polish numbers. First, they are headline ranges — what a clinic publishes before add-ons. The honest all-in figure after sedation, extra grafts, hotel nights, and airport transfers can run 10% to 25% higher at clinics that quote per graft rather than bundle. Second, a low Warsaw quote and a high one can describe very different days — 1,800 careful grafts versus a rushed 3,500-graft marathon are not the same procedure. For the full continental picture, our country-by-country European price guide sets Poland against Spain, Hungary, Germany, and Portugal.
Why Is a Hair Transplant in Poland Cheaper Than in the US?
A hair transplant in Poland costs a fraction of the US price because the economics are different, not because the quality is lower. Polish labor, facility, and cost-of-living overhead sit well below American healthcare rates, and Polish surgeons perform hair restoration at volumes that keep per-case costs down. Poland also carries the full EU regulatory floor: clinics answer to the EU Cross-Border Healthcare Directive for patient rights, GDPR for medical records, and surgeon licensing through Naczelna Izba Lekarska, the Polish medical chamber.
So you are not trading safety for savings — you are trading a US price tag for European regulation and a shorter cultural distance than Turkey. That is the same math behind a full FUE procedure costing $1,500 to $4,000 in Turkey versus five figures at home. One honest trade-off worth naming: Poland's surgeon volume is lower than Istanbul's, and the International Society of Hair Restoration Surgery rates surgeon volume as the strongest predictor of a consistent result. Cheaper than home is not automatically the right pick. The mistake is shopping on the headline price alone and skipping the vetting you would do anywhere else.
What Is Actually Included in a Warsaw or Kraków Hair Transplant Quote?
This is where most cost spreadsheets go sideways. The headline number is one thing. What sits underneath is the budget that actually leaves your account. Polish clinics lean toward per-graft pricing, so it pays to know which line items are in and which arrive later.
Usually included in a Warsaw or Kraków quote: the FUE or DHI procedure, local anesthesia, the surgeon's time, a basic post-op kit, and the first follow-up appointment.
Often charged separately: grafts beyond the quoted band, IV sedation over local-only, PRP therapy, hotel nights (Warsaw and Kraków run roughly €80 to €160 per night in season), airport transfers, extended aftercare visits, and the currency-conversion margin on a euro wire transfer. Our breakdown of medical tourism hidden costs walks through the full list of fees that turn a €4,000 quote into a €5,500 final invoice. When you build a real budget, the true cost of surgery abroad is always more than the package line — which is exactly why per-graft pricing rewards a closer look before you commit.
Here is what is structurally different through Doctours. Every package is quoted flat-rate in US dollars, the deposit is in USD, the inclusions are published on the clinic page before the deposit clears, and Doctours is free for patients — partner clinics pay Doctours for the coordination, so the price you see is the price you pay. Deposits start at $300, payment plans run up to 36 months, and your US-based care team stays on a 24/7 line through the full recovery window. That is the difference between a price and a plan.
Warsaw vs Kraków: Does the City Change the Price?
A little. Warsaw holds the largest concentration of Polish clinics and the widest price range — from artist-led practices taking one case a day to high-volume chains running several — so it carries both the top of the market and the easiest international flights. Kraków prices a touch lower on average and draws patients who want the procedure plus a few recovery days somewhere genuinely beautiful. Wrocław and the Silesia region in the south tend to price lower still, because the regional cost of living is lower — not because the surgery is.
What changes between the cities is the experience around the procedure, not the surgery itself. Choose on the surgeon's individual casebook and your recovery comfort, not on a city-level price gap that is smaller than the gap between two clinics on the same Warsaw street. The surgeon's track record matters far more than the postal code — the same lesson behind our guide to surgeon-led clinics versus hair mills. And if a Polish quote climbs past €6,000, it is worth pressure-testing against Spain's Madrid and Barcelona pricing and Germany's Berlin and Munich range before you commit.
Is There a Flat-Rate Alternative to a Polish Clinic Quote?
Yes — and this is the honest part. Doctours does not have an in-network partner in Warsaw or Kraków today. The one Polish clinic we have vetted in person is Klinika Borejsza in Ruda Śląska, Silesia, led by head surgeon Dr. Maciej Borejsza. Its Standard package is €5,500 (about $5,950) for up to 3,500 grafts, with the DHI method, PRP therapy, hotel, and full-service transportation bundled into one flat-rate quote and a €500 deposit holding the date.
That flat-rate structure is the whole point. Per-graft pricing — the Warsaw and Kraków norm at €1.50 to €2 a graft — is where a €4,000 quote quietly becomes €6,000 once the surgeon decides you need more grafts mid-procedure. One number you can plan around removes that trap. Klinika Borejsza carries the exact same EU protections that draw people to Warsaw — the EU Cross-Border Healthcare Directive 2011/24/EU for patient rights, GDPR for your records, and Naczelna Izba Lekarska licensing for the surgeon — plus a Doctours care team and a price you can see before you wire anything. If you want the full Polish shortlist, our guide to the best hair transplant clinics in Poland weighs Warsaw and Kraków against the vetted option, and the 2026 Europe clinic guide zooms out to the wider continent.
How Do You Vet a Polish Hair Transplant Clinic Before You Book?
If you book in Warsaw or Kraków directly, run the same checks Doctours runs inside its own network — the EU floor is a floor, not a promise that a given surgeon suits your case. A short, non-negotiable list:
Confirm the surgeon is licensed by Naczelna Izba Lekarska, and that a named doctor — not just a technician — performs the extraction and implantation.
Insist on one flat, itemized quote — the Polish per-graft norm is where headline prices balloon in the chair.
Ask for case photos at 12 months, not day 180, so you are judging settled density rather than a fresh result.
Read the contract for what happens if a complication shows up after you fly home — who you call, and who pays.
Those four checks separate a real result from an expensive lobby. They are also the exact work Doctours does on your behalf — the same standard we hold Klinika Borejsza to, and the one our full guide to safety abroad lays out red flag by red flag. Across the network, verified reviews back it up — MetropolMED holds 4.8 stars across 29 reviews and Dr. Serkan Aygin Clinic 4.6 across 40.
The Bottom Line
A hair transplant in Poland costs €2,500 to €6,000 in 2026, and for the right person Warsaw or Kraków offers something real: EU-grade oversight, strong surgeons, and a city close enough to feel manageable. That is a defensible reason to look closely. It is also a number worth pressure-testing before you commit, because the per-graft quote you see up front is rarely the all-in figure — and the same EU regulatory floor exists at a flat-rate price you can see, with a care team that stays with you afterward.
That is the work this guide is built to save you. Whether you land on a Warsaw surgeon you vet yourself, the route Doctours coordinates through Klinika Borejsza, or a lower-priced clinic elsewhere on the 2026 best-country map, the questions never change — who verified the surgeon, what the all-in number really is, and who picks up the phone when you are home and worried. Through Doctours, that part is already handled across a vetted network in five countries, with flat-rate USD pricing and a care team that stays with you through month twelve.
You have been carrying this decision a long time. The flight to Warsaw — or to a vetted clinic that comes with a plan — is bookable today. Whenever you are ready, the plan is already in place, and the next move is yours.
Want to find out what your procedure would actually cost — in Poland or a vetted alternative? A free assessment matches you with vetted clinics and flat-rate USD pricing, no pressure and no commitment.
FAQs
How much does a hair transplant cost in Poland in 2026?
Hair transplant cost in Poland runs roughly €2,500 to €6,000 — about $2,700 to $6,500 in USD — for 2,500 to 3,500 grafts in 2026, usually quoted per graft at €1.50 to €2 in Warsaw and Kraków. That puts Poland in the middle of the European range, above Turkey but below Germany and Spain.
Is a hair transplant cheaper in Warsaw or Kraków?
Kraków tends to price a touch lower than Warsaw on average, roughly €2,800 to €5,500 against Warsaw's €3,000 to €6,000, but the city-level gap is smaller than the gap between two clinics on the same street. Warsaw offers the widest choice and easiest flights, while Kraków adds a calm, walkable recovery city — so choose on the surgeon's casebook, not the postal code.
Does Doctours have a hair transplant clinic in Warsaw or Kraków?
No. Doctours' only current Polish partner clinic is Klinika Borejsza in Ruda Śląska, in the Silesia region, not Warsaw or Kraków. Its Standard package is €5,500 (about $5,950) flat-rate for up to 3,500 grafts, and if you are considering a specific Warsaw or Kraków surgeon, a free Doctours assessment applies the same vetting checklist we use on every partner clinic.
Why is a hair transplant in Poland cheaper than in the US?
A hair transplant in Poland is cheaper because labor, facility, and cost-of-living overhead sit far below US healthcare rates, not because the quality is lower. Polish clinics also carry the full EU regulatory floor — the EU Cross-Border Healthcare Directive, GDPR records protection, and surgeon licensing through Naczelna Izba Lekarska — so the savings come from economics rather than cut corners.
What is included in a Poland hair transplant package?
Most Warsaw and Kraków quotes include the FUE or DHI procedure, local anesthesia, the surgeon's time, a post-op kit, and the first follow-up, while grafts beyond the quoted band, sedation, PRP, hotel nights, and transfers are often charged separately. Doctours' vetted Polish clinic, Klinika Borejsza, bundles the DHI method, PRP, hotel, and transport into one €5,500 flat-rate package for up to 3,500 grafts.


















