Recovery After Plastic Surgery in Turkey: What to Expect
A realistic guide to recovering from aesthetic surgery abroad — what is normal, what requires attention, and how to manage the trip home.
- →The first 48 hours carry the highest risk — stay near the clinic and follow all post-op instructions exactly.
- →Swelling peaks at 48–72 hours and is completely normal — this is the worst time to assess your result.
- →Flying too early significantly increases DVT risk; confirm minimum days in-country with your surgeon before booking flights.
- →Normal recovery involves discomfort, not severe pain — escalating, one-sided, or unexpected pain requires immediate clinic contact.
- →Final results cannot be assessed for 3–12 months depending on procedure — patience and realistic expectations are essential.
The Recovery Nobody Tells You About
Clinic marketing shows the result. It rarely shows the 2–6 weeks between surgery and that result. Understanding recovery accurately — what is normal, what is alarming, and what the timeline realistically looks like — prevents unnecessary panic and helps you make good decisions if something does go wrong.
The First 48 Hours
The immediate post-operative period is managed by the clinic. You will typically spend 1–3 nights in hospital or the clinic's recovery facility, depending on the procedure.
During this period:
- Pain is managed with IV or oral analgesics. Pain levels vary significantly by procedure — rhinoplasty is mild to moderate; tummy tuck and facelift are more significant.
- Swelling begins immediately and peaks at 48–72 hours. This is normal and expected.
- Drains are common after tummy tuck, facelift, and body procedures. They are removed before discharge or at a follow-up appointment.
- Nausea from general anaesthesia is common in the first 12–24 hours.
Do not evaluate your result during this period. What you see immediately post-operatively is not the result — it is the beginning of healing.
Days 3–7: Peak Swelling and Bruising
This is typically the most uncomfortable and visually confronting phase of recovery. Bruising and swelling peak and are often worse than patients expect.
What is normal:
- Significant bruising extending beyond the surgical area (especially after rhinoplasty and facelift)
- Asymmetry in swelling — the two sides will not swell identically
- Numbness or altered sensation in and around the surgical site
- Emotional fluctuation — post-operative blues are common and documented
- Low-grade fatigue
What requires urgent attention:
- Fever above 38°C
- Wound opening or significant discharge
- Hardness, redness, or warmth spreading rapidly from the wound (signs of infection)
- Sudden increase in pain after initial improvement
- Shortness of breath (urgent — can indicate DVT or pulmonary embolism)
Keep your surgeon's emergency contact number accessible at all times. Report anything that concerns you — clinics would rather receive unnecessary calls than have patients delay reporting a genuine problem.
Flying Home: When Is It Safe?
The minimum safe flying window varies by procedure:
| Procedure | Minimum Before Flying | Preferred | |-----------|----------------------|-----------| | Rhinoplasty | Day 7 | Day 10 | | Blepharoplasty | Day 7–10 | Day 10–14 | | Breast augmentation | Day 5–7 | Day 10 | | Liposuction | Day 5–7 | Day 10 | | Tummy tuck | Day 10–14 | Day 14–21 | | Facelift | Day 10–14 | Day 21 | | BBL | Day 7–10 | Day 10–14 |
DVT risk is elevated after surgery. For flights over 4 hours, wear compression stockings and follow your surgeon's advice on anticoagulation. Move in your seat regularly. Stay hydrated.
Do not fly against your surgeon's advice. If your recovery has a complication — an infection, a drain issue — resolve it before travelling home.
Managing the Trip Home
Plan your return journey with your post-operative condition in mind:
- Book aisle seats for comfort and easier movement
- Bring your post-operative medications in your carry-on (with a letter from the clinic confirming the prescription if required for customs)
- Bring a travel pillow — essential after rhinoplasty and facelift
- Arrange ground transport at home — do not drive for at least 1 week after general anaesthesia, longer for specific procedures
Weeks 2–6: The Long Recovery
Most patients return home between day 7 and day 14. The weeks following are where consistency with post-operative instructions matters most.
Compression garments: After liposuction, tummy tuck, and BBL, you will wear a compression garment continuously for 4–6 weeks. This is not optional — it directly affects your result. The garment controls swelling and shapes healing tissue.
Sleep position: After rhinoplasty and facelift, sleep elevated (head at 30–45 degrees) for 2–4 weeks. After BBL, no direct pressure on the buttocks for 6–8 weeks.
Activity restrictions: No strenuous exercise for 4–6 weeks. Light walking is encouraged from day 3–5. Heavy lifting restrictions (typically 5kg) apply for 4–6 weeks after tummy tuck and breast procedures.
Sun exposure: Keep scars out of direct sun for 6–12 months. UV exposure darkens healing incision lines. Use SPF 50+ on any visible scar once the skin is fully closed.
Follow-Up with Your Home GP
Brief your GP about your procedure before you travel. When you return, schedule an early follow-up appointment to:
- Have the clinic's discharge notes reviewed
- Check wound healing
- Review your medications (some pain medications and antibiotics require monitoring)
- Establish a contact point if complications emerge
UK and EU patients: your local healthcare system is obligated to treat complications from elective surgery performed abroad. You should not hide that you had surgery abroad.
When the Result Appears
For most procedures, you will see an approximation of your final result at 2–3 months. Full maturation takes longer:
- Rhinoplasty: 12 months for final tip definition
- Breast augmentation: 3–6 months for implants to settle and soften
- Facelift: 3–6 months for swelling to fully resolve; scars continue to fade for 12 months
- BBL: 3–6 months for final fat survival to stabilise (40% reabsorption is normal)
- Tummy tuck: 6–12 months for scar maturation
Do not judge your result before the 3-month mark. The most common source of unnecessary post-operative anxiety is evaluating an unfinished result.