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What Accreditation Should a Thread Lift Clinic in Turkey Have?
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Trust & Verification

What Accreditation Should a Thread Lift Clinic in Turkey Have?

trueclinic Team
June 23, 2026
6 min read

JCI, USHAŞ, TEMOS, ISO and the Ministry of Health licence — what each accreditation actually means for a thread lift clinic, and how to verify it for real.

Accreditation badges are everywhere on thread lift clinic websites — but they mean different things, and a logo is not proof. Here's what each one actually certifies and how to verify it.

JCI (Joint Commission International)

An international hospital-accreditation standard covering patient safety, infection control, and quality of care. Turkey has one of the highest counts of JCI-accredited facilities of any country. How to verify: Search the official JCI “Accredited Organizations” directory on jointcommissioninternational.org for the hospital’s exact legal name. Accreditation is awarded to the facility, not to an individual surgeon or a marketing brand. What it guarantees: That the accredited facility meets an internationally recognised standard for hospital safety and quality systems. What it doesn't: It is awarded to a hospital, not to a specific clinic brand, surgeon, or the package you are sold. A clinic operating inside a JCI hospital is not itself JCI-accredited unless named in the directory.

USHAŞ / Health Tourism Authorisation

Turkey requires facilities and intermediaries serving international patients to hold a health-tourism authorisation. It is the country’s official permission to operate in medical tourism. How to verify: Ask the clinic for its health-tourism authorisation certificate and the authorised facility name, and cross-check that the operating facility is licensed by the Turkish Ministry of Health. What it guarantees: That the facility/intermediary is officially authorised by Turkey to provide health-tourism services. What it doesn't: Authorisation is an operating permission, not a measure of a particular surgeon’s skill or your individual outcome.

TEMOS International Healthcare Accreditation

An accreditation focused specifically on the quality of care for international and medical-tourism patients, including the patient journey and aftercare. How to verify: Check the official TEMOS directory of accredited providers for the facility’s name. What it guarantees: That the provider meets a recognised standard tailored to international-patient care. What it doesn't: As with any facility accreditation, it does not certify an individual surgeon or guarantee a specific result.

ISO 9001

A general quality-management-system certification. It is common across many industries and is not healthcare-specific. How to verify: Ask for the certificate and the certifying body, and confirm the scope covers the clinical service you are receiving. What it guarantees: That the organisation runs a documented quality-management system. What it doesn't: It is a process/management standard, not a clinical-outcomes or hospital-safety accreditation. Treat ISO 9001 alone as a weak signal for surgical quality.

Turkish Ministry of Health licence

The baseline legal licence every healthcare facility operating in Turkey must hold. A surgeon must also be registered with the Turkish Medical Association to practise. How to verify: Confirm the operating facility (not just the brand) is licensed, and that the named surgeon is a registered specialist. A legitimate clinic will share the licensed facility name on request. What it guarantees: That the facility is legally permitted to operate and the surgeon is licensed to practise in Turkey. What it doesn't: A licence is the legal minimum, not a quality ranking — combine it with reviews, accreditation, and surgeon credentials.

How to use accreditation in your decision

Treat the Ministry of Health licence and a registered specialist surgeon as the baseline. International accreditation (JCI, TEMOS) and a USHAŞ health-tourism authorisation are strong additional signals — but only when you verify them against the official directory using the exact legal facility name. Thread Lift typically costs €800 – €2,500; accreditation is part of what you're paying for, so confirm it's real.

About Thread Lift in Turkey

A thread lift is a minimally invasive procedure that uses dissolvable PDO (polydioxanone) threads inserted under the skin to lift and tighten sagging areas of the face, jawline, and neck. The threads also stimulate collagen production for continued improvement.

Turkey offers advanced thread lift techniques at competitive prices, making it an attractive option for patients seeking facial rejuvenation without the downtime and cost of a traditional facelift.

The procedure takes 30-60 minutes under local anesthesia. Threads are inserted using thin needles, with immediate lifting visible. Results improve over 2-3 months as collagen builds around the threads, and last 12-18 months.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I combine a thread lift with other treatments?

Yes, thread lifts are often combined with Botox, fillers, or PRP therapy for comprehensive facial rejuvenation. Your practitioner may recommend a "liquid facelift" combining these non-surgical treatments.

How long does a thread lift last?

Thread lift results last 12-18 months. The PDO threads dissolve within 6-8 months, but the collagen they stimulate continues to provide lift and firmness. Many patients opt for maintenance treatments every 12-18 months.

Thread lift vs facelift: which should I choose?

Thread lifts are best for mild to moderate sagging and patients who want minimal downtime. Surgical facelifts provide more dramatic, longer-lasting results (7-10 years) for significant sagging. Thread lifts are sometimes called "lunchtime facelifts" due to their quick recovery.

How much does a thread lift cost in Turkey?

A thread lift in Turkey costs €800-€2,500 depending on the number of threads and areas treated. This compares to €2,000-€5,000 in the UK. Full face thread lifts are at the higher end, while targeted areas (jawline or brow) cost less.

Is a thread lift painful?

The procedure is performed under local anesthesia and is well-tolerated. You may feel some tugging and pressure during insertion. Post-procedure soreness, mild swelling, and bruising resolve within 3-7 days.

What accreditation is most important for a thread lift clinic?

The Turkish Ministry of Health facility licence plus a registered specialist surgeon are the non-negotiable baseline. JCI and USHAŞ authorisation are strong additional signals when verified officially.

Is a JCI logo on the website enough?

No. JCI accredits a hospital, not a marketing brand. Confirm the exact facility name in the official JCI directory.

What is USHAŞ?

It's the Turkish Ministry of Health's international-health-services authorisation — official permission to operate in medical tourism. Ask to see the certificate and the authorised facility name.

Does ISO 9001 mean a clinic is good at surgery?

Not on its own — ISO 9001 is a general management-system standard, not a clinical or hospital-safety accreditation. Treat it as a weak signal.

Related Topics

Medical Tourism
Turkey
Trust & Verification
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