Reviews you can actually trust
Online clinic ratings are easy to fake. Ours aren't — only patients who prove they visited can vote. Real receipts, real visits, real opinions, weighted to resist manipulation.
The "ghost surgery" problem
"Ghost surgery" is when the surgeon you chose and consented to isn't the one who actually operates — after you're under anesthesia, an unannounced substitute may step in. It has driven repeated investigative reporting and regulatory action in Korea, including operating-room CCTV rules. Fake, glowing reviews help risky clinics hide. Verified, real-patient reviews are one of the best defenses — they make praise far harder to fake and let honest clinics rise.
Rated by verified patients
Scored across four things that actually matter — not one blended star.
Demo: seed scores are illustrative. Your votes below update the board live (saved in your browser). On launch this runs on a server with real receipt verification and anti-manipulation safeguards.
Verify your visit, then rate
Only verified patients can vote — that's what keeps this honest.
Built to resist manipulation
Verified patients only
Reviews require proof of a real visit — receipt, appointment record or payment — before they count. Unverified noise is down-weighted.
One person, one vote
Each rating is bound to a unique verified identity and a specific completed treatment. No vote-stuffing, no duplicate receipts.
Pattern detection
Sudden bursts, uniform 5-stars, and coordinated rings are flagged or held — we resist both fake praise and sabotage.
Platform-owned scoring
We own the algorithm, not the clinics. Clinics can't pick which reviews show or game a fixed formula.
Recency weighted
Recent verified experiences count more, so a clinic's current quality shows — and old bursts can't dominate forever.
Full transparency
We show verified vs unverified counts and the full distribution. A 5.0 from 3 isn't a 4.6 from 800 verified patients.
Consumer protection for foreign patients
- International patients in Korea are covered by the same medical and consumer-protection laws as locals.
- Use only providers registered to treat foreign patients — verify their registration before you commit.
- You have the right to informed consent and to know who operates; you may request operating-room CCTV recording for general-anesthesia surgery.
- Request consent & aftercare documents in a language you understand, with a qualified interpreter.
- Cancellation refunds are generally larger the earlier you cancel before surgery — confirm terms in writing.
- For disputes, the Korea Consumer Agency (call 1372) and K-Medi (medical dispute mediation) can help.
General information, not legal advice. Verify current rules with official sources.
Want a clinic match you can trust?
We only recommend verified, well-reviewed clinics — and a human confirms the fit. Free.