Patient preparing for gastric sleeve surgery at a Tijuana bariatric clinic

Why Mexico Dominates Bariatric Medical Tourism

Mexico is the single largest destination for international bariatric surgery. Tijuana alone hosts a large concentration of bariatric-dedicated hospitals and clinics that perform tens of thousands of gastric sleeve and gastric bypass procedures every year. Mexicali, Monterrey, Guadalajara, Puerto Vallarta and Cancún add significant additional volume. The patient base is dominated by US residents who drive or fly south, with a steady stream from Canada, the UK, Australia and Europe.

The draw is straightforward. A vertical sleeve gastrectomy (VSG) in the United States or Canada with full private pricing can exceed the cost of a used car; the same procedure in a reputable Tijuana hospital is typically a small fraction of that, and the bundled packages commonly include hospital, surgeon, anaesthesia, hotel, airport transfers, and a defined post-op diet protocol.

Market rank

Mexico is the world’s #1 bariatric medical-tourism destination by volume

Primary hub

Tijuana (border with San Diego, California)

Most common procedure

Vertical Sleeve Gastrectomy (VSG, “gastric sleeve”)

Typical stay

5–7 days in-country, with at least 2–3 days in-hospital


The Procedures Most Mexican Patients Undergo

Vertical Sleeve Gastrectomy (VSG / Gastric Sleeve)

Approximately 75–80% of the stomach is removed laparoscopically, leaving a long, narrow tube-shaped stomach. VSG is the dominant bariatric procedure globally because it avoids intestinal rerouting, has fewer long-term nutritional consequences than bypass, and produces excellent average weight loss. It is technically demanding, and the key risk is staple-line failure — a leak.

Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass (RYGB)

A smaller stomach pouch is created and the intestine is rerouted, producing restriction plus malabsorption. Considered more effective for severe reflux and type 2 diabetes resolution, but technically more complex with more anastomoses (surgical joins) and therefore more potential leak sites.

Mini Gastric Bypass / OAGB

A simpler single-anastomosis variant of gastric bypass. Increasingly popular in Mexican bariatric centres. Long-term data on bile reflux and cancer risk is still evolving.

Duodenal Switch, SADI-S and revisional surgery

More complex procedures generally reserved for patients with very high BMI or revision of prior bariatric surgery. Risk profile is materially higher than VSG.


What Actually Goes Wrong: Bariatric Complications

Early, serious complications (first 30 days)

Medium-term complications

Long-term complications

Do not fly home too soon. The American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery (ASMBS) and international bariatric bodies emphasise that the highest-risk window for leak and DVT is the first 1–2 weeks after VSG and bypass. A 3-day in-country stay and an immediate long-haul flight materially increases the risk of a catastrophic complication occurring in the air or thousands of kilometres from your operating surgeon.


Where Coverage Actually Falls Short

Your US, Canadian or UK health plan

US private health insurance (UnitedHealthcare, Anthem, Aetna, Cigna, BCBS and others) typically excludes care tied to elective procedures obtained outside the plan’s network or outside the United States. Life-threatening emergencies at a US ER will be stabilised, but ongoing care, revision surgery, and follow-up specifically tied to a Mexican bariatric procedure are often denied, disputed or materially limited. Medicare and Medicaid do not cover care abroad, and rules for treating complications from non-covered procedures vary. Canadian provincial plans, the UK NHS, Australia’s Medicare, Ireland’s HSE and EU statutory schemes similarly do not fund the original procedure and apply varying restrictions to complications follow-up.

Your standard travel insurance

Elective bariatric surgery and any complications arising from it are almost universally excluded from travel insurance. A leak, DVT or hemorrhage on your return flight or in the week after is not a covered event.

Your clinic’s “complication package”

Many Mexican bariatric clinics offer structured complication-care programs covering follow-up at their own hospital, sometimes with a named limit per event. These vary enormously in scope. They generally do not cover hospitalisation at a US or Canadian hospital, emergency medical evacuation, care at an independent facility, specialist consultations at home, lost wages for a protracted recovery, or the full cost of a major leak requiring prolonged ICU care and multiple surgical revisions. Some clinic programs carry reinsurance through third-party underwriters; coverage and claims behaviour vary.


How Medical Travel Complication Insurance Closes the Gap

Medical travel complication insurance is a purpose-built category for patients travelling for a planned procedure. The covered event is a medical complication of that procedure.

What the right plan typically covers

What these plans do not do

Benefit amounts, limits, waiting periods and exclusions vary by plan — always review the full policy certificate before travelling.

Want a plan that fits your residency, your Mexican clinic and your procedure date? Request a personalised quote or chat with Ava for answers specific to your situation.


How to Vet Your Mexican Bariatric Surgeon and Hospital


Pre-Travel Checklist


Frequently Asked Questions

What are the biggest complications of gastric sleeve surgery in Mexico?

Staple-line leak is the single most feared complication. DVT / pulmonary embolism and major bleeding are the other acute high-risk events. Medium-term: stricture, GERD, wound infection. Long-term: nutritional deficiencies, gallstones, weight regain.

Will my US health insurance cover Mexican bariatric complications?

Generally no. Most US policies explicitly exclude care tied to elective procedures obtained abroad. Emergency stabilisation at a US ER may be covered, but ongoing care and revision tied to the Mexican procedure is typically denied or disputed.

Does travel insurance cover bariatric complications?

No. Elective bariatric surgery and its complications are excluded from standard travel insurance policies.

Isn’t the clinic’s complication package enough?

Clinic complication packages cover care at their own hospital, not hospitalisation in your home country, evacuation, or independent specialist care. Scope and limits vary.

How long should I stay in Mexico after gastric sleeve surgery?

Minimum 5–7 days in-country, with at least 2–3 days in-hospital. Longer stays reduce the risk of being in the air during a leak or PE.

Can I buy insurance if I’ve already booked my Mexican clinic?

In most cases, yes — provided you purchase coverage before you depart. Request a quote and confirm eligibility based on your residency, clinic and procedure date.


The Bottom Line

Mexico is the world’s largest bariatric medical-tourism destination for good reasons: experienced surgeons, modern hospitals, quick scheduling, and pricing that cannot be matched anywhere in the US or Canada. The outcome profile at leading centres is excellent. But the stakes of a bariatric complication — leak, DVT, PE, hemorrhage — are extraordinarily high, and the financial consequences are not covered by your health insurance, your travel insurance, or (fully) by your clinic’s complication package.

Medical travel complication insurance is the category built for exactly this scenario. If you are planning a gastric sleeve, gastric bypass, or any other bariatric procedure in Mexico, put coverage in place before you book your flight.

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute insurance, medical, or financial advice. Always review your full policy documents and consult a licensed healthcare provider and qualified bariatric surgeon regarding medical decisions before travelling. Coverage terms of medical travel complication insurance are subject to the policy certificate issued by the underwriter. Avia provides insurance brokerage services only.

Related reading: Bariatric Surgery Abroad Insurance (general guide) · Medical Tourism in Mexico: Insurance Guide · Bariatric Surgery Mexico vs Thailand · Best Medical Travel Insurance for International Patients · Medical Travel Insurance for Canadians