Executive
Check-Up Cost in Bali: 2027 Price Guide
A premium executive check-up in Bali in 2027 generally ranges
from roughly USD 600–1,200 for an essential package, USD 1,200–2,500 for
a comprehensive screening, and USD 3,000–7,000+ for a platinum tier with
advanced imaging and concierge service. The final figure
depends on how much imaging is included, whether advanced cardiac and
cancer panels are added, and the level of privacy and concierge support
you choose. Below is an honest, tier-by-tier guide to what your money
buys — and where Bali sits relative to Singapore and Bangkok.
I am Dr. Anneke Wijaya, the preventive-medicine physician who
oversees the clinical content here. I cannot quote a single “Bali
price,” because no responsible physician prices a screening before
understanding who is being screened. What I can do is explain
the ranges transparently and tell you exactly what changes the
number.
What actually drives the
cost
Three factors move an executive check-up price far more than location
does:
- Imaging depth. A basic ultrasound costs a fraction
of a coronary calcium CT, and both are dwarfed by a whole-body MRI.
Imaging is usually the single largest line item in a premium
package. - Cardiac and cancer panel breadth. Adding stress
echocardiography, ApoB and lipoprotein(a), or a full age-appropriate
cancer panel raises the cost — and, when chosen well, the clinical
value. - Service tier. A shared hospital pathway is cheaper
than a private, concierge, single-day experience with a dedicated nurse
and in-villa options. You are partly paying for time and
discretion, which for many executives is the whole point.
Typical price tiers
in Bali (2027 estimates)
These are indicative ranges for the executive/concierge segment, not
budget medical tourism. Always confirm current pricing directly, as
costs shift with currency and inclusions.
Essential (≈ USD 600–1,200)
A focused screening: core bloodwork (metabolic, lipid, liver, kidney,
thyroid), resting ECG, abdominal ultrasound, blood pressure, and a
physician consultation with a written report. Suitable for younger
executives with no significant risk factors who want a solid annual
baseline.
Comprehensive (≈ USD
1,200–2,500)
The most popular tier. Everything in Essential, plus a coronary
calcium score or stress test, expanded cancer screening appropriate to
age and sex, additional imaging, advanced lipid and inflammatory
markers, and a longer consultation. This is the package I recommend for
most leaders over 40.
Platinum / Concierge (≈ USD
3,000–7,000+)
The white-glove tier: whole-body or organ-specific MRI, the fullest
cardiac and cancer workup, advanced biomarker testing, in-villa or
priority-lane logistics, a dedicated concierge nurse, and same-day or
next-day results. Chosen by C-suite executives, high-net-worth
individuals, and those who value maximum privacy.
Where Bali sits
internationally
Bali’s executive screening is typically positioned below comparable
private packages in Singapore and often competitive with Bangkok, while
offering a level of privacy and recovery environment that is hard to
match in a dense city hospital. We cover the full comparison — cost,
quality, time, and discretion — in our companion guide, Bali vs
Singapore vs Bangkok for an Executive Check-Up.
For the exact current tiers, USD and IDR pricing, and what is
included at each level, see our executive check-up
packages and pricing page. If you want to understand the clinical
content behind the price, our comprehensive executive health
check-up service breaks down every panel.
Hidden costs to ask about
A transparent provider will tell you up front whether the quoted
price includes:
- The physician consultation and written report (it
should). - Follow-up for any incidental findings.
- Imaging interpretation by a radiologist.
- Concierge logistics — transfers, scheduling,
translation.
Beware of headline prices that exclude the consultation or the
report, because the interpretation is where the real value of a
screening lives.
How to compare two quotes
fairly
Headline numbers are easy to misread, because two “executive
packages” at the same price can contain very different value. When you
compare quotes, normalise them against the same checklist:
- Imaging: ultrasound only, or does it include a
coronary calcium CT or MRI? - Cardiac depth: resting ECG only, or stress testing
and advanced lipids (ApoB, Lp(a))? - Cancer panel: age- and sex-appropriate
evidence-based screens, or a list padded with low-value tumour
markers? - Consultation and report: included, and how much
physician time? - Follow-up: is interpretation of any incidental
findings covered? - Service: shared pathway or private concierge, and
is same-day results part of it?
A cheaper package that omits the consultation, or an expensive one
padded with tests of little clinical value, both represent poor value.
The right comparison is clinical value per dollar, not the
sticker price.
Why the
cheapest option is rarely the best value
It is tempting to optimise purely for price, but in screening the
cheapest path often costs more in the end. A bare-bones panel that skips
the coronary calcium score or the consultation can miss exactly the
finding that matters, while an over-stuffed panel generates false alarms
that lead to unnecessary follow-up scans and procedures. The best value
sits in the middle: an evidence-based panel matched to your risk,
interpreted by a physician who will tell you what to act on and what to
ignore. That judgment — knowing which tests to leave out — is
part of what you are paying for, and it is hard to put on a price
list.
Is it worth it?
For a time-poor executive, the calculus is rarely about the absolute
price — it is about the value of catching a treatable condition early
and the cost of a day away from work. A structured annual screening that
detects elevated cardiovascular risk, prediabetes, or an early cancer
signal can be one of the highest-return investments a leader makes. That
said, more testing is not automatically better; an over-broad panel can
generate false alarms and unnecessary procedures. The goal is the
right tests for your risk, not the longest possible list.
Medical disclaimer: This content is for general
information only and is not a substitute for individualised medical
advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Prices are estimates and change over
time; confirm current pricing directly. Screening recommendations vary
by personal risk — always consult a qualified physician.
For context on the value of early detection and preventive screening,
the World Health Organization
publishes accessible material on noncommunicable disease prevention.
Get a precise, personalised
quote
Because the right package depends on your age and history, the most
accurate way to know your cost is a short concierge intake. Start at the
Bali Executive Checkup homepage to see the experience,
then arrange your private
executive check-up here for a tailored quote. Prefer to ask
questions first? Reach our concierge on WhatsApp at wa.me/BEC_WA_PLACEHOLDER
.
Related reading: Bali vs
Singapore vs Bangkok for an Executive Check-Up · What an
Executive Health Check Includes in Bali · Do You Need Insurance for
an Executive Check-Up in Bali?
Written and clinically reviewed by Dr. Anneke Wijaya, MD
(Universitas Indonesia), MSc Occupational & Travel Medicine, Medical
Advisor & Preventive Medicine Lead at Bali Executive
Checkup.