Panama: A $1,477 Executive Checkup vs. $2,000-$6,000 at Home
25/6/2026 · 9:13

Panama: A $1,477 Executive Checkup vs. $2,000-$6,000 at Home

Panama City can compress a preventive executive screening into one or two days for far less than many U.S. self-pay programs, but the savings only matter if you verify the doctor, the facility, and the follow-up plan first.

A Panama City executive checkup can put a serious preventive screening into one or two days for less than many U.S. self-pay programs. The catch: this is still medical travel. The savings only matter if the doctor, facility, records, insurance, and follow-up plan all survive a boring verification pass.
The starting screen: Pacífica Salud publishes a B/.1,477 standard plan, while PartnerMD says most U.S. executive physicals fall between $2,000 and $6,000; the savings band below is derived from those published ranges, not from a personal quote (Pacífica Salud, PartnerMD).
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The cost math

Pacífica Salud lists a standard executive health plan at B/. 1,477.00 and says it includes labs, imaging, an ECG, dental and eye evaluations, nutrition, and a family-medicine consultation in one day on its Executive Health Plan page. For a U.S. benchmark, PartnerMD says most executive physicals fall in the $2,000 to $6,000 range, with luxury clinics often at $10,000 or more on its 2025 executive physical cost guide.
Screening optionU.S. self-pay benchmarkPanama price foundRough savingsWhat to verify before booking
Standard executive checkup$2,000-$6,000 for most U.S. executive physicals, according to PartnerMDB/. 1,477 at Pacífica SaludAbout 26%-75%That the quoted package includes the labs, imaging, consults, meals, and written report you expect.
Panama executive checkup market$6,000-$15,000 for deeper U.S. screening packages, per Medical Tourism Packages$1,477-$2,800 for standard packages and $2,900-$3,500 for premium MRI packages, per Medical Tourism PackagesAbout 42%-81% on premium packagesWhether "premium" means full-body MRI, CT calcium scoring, colonoscopy, specialist visits, or only add-ons.
Stress-test add-on$500-$1,200 in the same Panama cost comparisonB/. 264.00 as an optional add-on at Pacífica SaludAbout 47%-78%Whether you need the stress test at all, and whether abnormal results can be followed up at home.
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The chart is a planning screen, not a quote. Package names are slippery; the same phrase can mean basic labs at one clinic and imaging plus specialists at another. Panama's use of the U.S. dollar does remove exchange-rate guesswork, but it does not remove billing fine print.

What you are actually buying

The useful version of this trip is a coordinated preventive workup: fasting labs, chest X-ray, abdominal and pelvic ultrasound, ECG, eye screening, dental evaluation, nutrition consult, and physician review in one place. Pacífica Salud says its standard plan includes those components and provides a results file plus medical report with recommendations through its one-day executive plan.
MRI, treadmill, heart-monitoring, and Panama imagery
Medical Tourism Packages uses MRI, treadmill testing, heart-monitoring, and Panama imagery to describe executive screening; treat the image as a package-scope cue, not proof that a specific quote includes every test. Source: Medical Tourism Packages
That is different from buying a diagnosis. A screening can find risk signals; it can also produce false positives, incidental findings, or results that need repeat testing in the United States. If you cannot name the U.S. clinician who will review the report when you get home, the bargain is incomplete.

Credential checks before you send a deposit

Start with the physician, not the travel package. Ask for the lead doctor's full name, specialty, and Panamanian idoneidad number. Panama Digital describes medical idoneidad as the Ministry of Health process that authorizes doctors to practice medicine in Panama through its Idoneidad para el Ejercicio de la Profesión Médica service. AMEPA, a Panamanian medical association, also describes a MINSA Consejo Técnico de Salud app workflow for checking whether a doctor is idóneo by searching the doctor's name in its physician-idoneidad guide.
Then check the facility. Pacífica Salud says Hospital Punta Pacífica has Joint Commission International accreditation and an affiliation with Johns Hopkins Medicine International on its about page. JCI maintains a current directory of internationally accredited organizations on its Find JCI Accredited Organizations page. Use the directory or ask the hospital for current accreditation documentation; a marketing badge is not enough.
The CDC gives the right caution here: accreditation helps with standards, but it does not guarantee a good outcome. Its medical tourism guidance tells travelers to check clinician qualifications and facility credentials before care abroad.

Risks that do not disappear because it is preventive

This trip is lower risk than surgery, but it is not risk-free. The CDC warns that medical tourism complications can include infections, antimicrobial-resistant organisms, quality-of-care problems, communication issues, and expensive follow-up care after returning home in its medical tourism risk guidance. For Panama specifically, the CDC advises travelers to be up to date on routine vaccines, consider hepatitis A and B vaccination, prevent mosquito bites, and review malaria guidance for certain provinces on its Panama traveler page.
The geography matters. Panama City is not the Darién. The U.S. State Department currently tells travelers to exercise increased caution in Panama and says not to travel to parts of the Mosquito Gulf and parts of the Darién Region on its Panama travel advisory. If your trip is a two-day screening in Panama City, do not bolt on remote adventure travel before or after the appointment without checking health and safety risk separately.
Insurance is the quiet deal-breaker. Standard travel insurance may cover a sudden illness or accident, but planned screening, abnormal findings, complications, evacuation, or U.S. follow-up may be excluded. The CDC recommends travel health insurance and medical evacuation planning for medical travelers in its risk-reduction checklist. Get the exclusion language in writing before you buy flights.

Booking checklist

  1. Get an itemized quote: tests, physician time, imaging, report language, portal access, optional add-ons, cancellation terms.
  2. Ask which doctor signs the final report, then verify the doctor's idoneidad and specialty.
  3. Check the facility's current accreditation directly, not only the clinic's brochure.
  4. Send your U.S. doctor the test list before you book; remove tests that are not useful for your age, history, or risk profile.
  5. Schedule a travel-medicine visit at least a month before departure, consistent with the CDC's Panama advice to review vaccines and medicines before travel.
  6. Bring medication lists, allergies, prior labs, imaging, and any family-history notes that affect screening choices.
  7. Confirm whether the results are delivered in English and whether imaging comes in a format your U.S. doctor can read.
  8. Buy travel health and evacuation coverage only after the insurer confirms how it treats planned outpatient screening abroad.

The verdict

Panama City is a credible wellness/preventive option if you want a compact executive screening and can do the homework. The strongest case is the official B/. 1,477 package price, the dollarized budget, and the presence of internationally oriented private hospitals.
Skip it if the clinic will not give you the doctor's idoneidad details, an itemized test list, current facility credentials, and a written follow-up plan. A cheaper screening is only useful if the results can be trusted and acted on after you fly home.

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