Fit to Fly After Heart Surgery: When Can You Travel Home?
By VNR Medical Service Editorial Team Β· Reviewed in line with our Medical Review Policy Β· April 22, 2026
Most patients are cleared to fly home a week or more after heart surgery, once the cardiac team confirms the wound is healing, the heart rhythm is stable, and there are no complications. After bypass or valve surgery this is usually within the typical two-week stay. VNR coordinates fit-to-fly clearance and the documents you need.
What 'fit to fly' means
Airlines and doctors consider factors such as wound healing, heart rhythm, oxygen levels and the risk of blood clots before clearing a patient to fly after cardiac surgery. The treating cardiac team makes this decision.
Travelling safely
Once cleared, simple measures β staying hydrated, moving your legs, and following the team's advice β help you travel safely. VNR can help arrange comfortable seating and assistance.
Documents for the journey
You travel with full discharge documentation and a fit-to-fly letter for the airline and your home cardiologist β all prepared with VNR's help.
Related pages
Common Questions
FAQs
Usually a week or more after surgery, once the cardiac team confirms you are medically fit β typically within the standard two-week stay.
Yes β VNR coordinates fit-to-fly clearance and the documentation the airline and your home cardiologist need.
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