About Singapore Buddhist Free Clinic
Singapore Buddhist Free Clinic is a TCM wellness provider based at 48 Lor 23 Geylang, serving patients islandwide. It is KakiList-verified, meaning operating details and contact channels have been confirmed by a real person. It holds a 4.7-star rating across 74 Google reviews, a moderate sample that lends reasonable confidence to the score. No regulatory licence details are currently listed on this profile, so prospective patients are advised to confirm practitioner registration directly.
When attending Singapore Buddhist Free Clinic, expect an initial consultation in which the practitioner assesses your condition or wellness goal — common presentations include chronic pain, digestive complaints, fatigue, and stress-related conditions. TCM consultation typically involves tongue and pulse diagnosis, a discussion of your medical history, and an outline of the proposed treatment approach, which may include acupuncture, herbal prescription, or tui na. Clarify whether you require a recurring package or prefer single sessions, and ask about the cancellation policy should you need to reschedule.
To make an appointment, contact Singapore Buddhist Free Clinic by phone or through the enquiry form listed on this profile, and bring any relevant medical reports or medication lists to your first visit.
Confirm the practitioner's licence number on the relevant board's public register before treatment.
So glad to discover this community healthcare provider that offers low cost TCM and free medical help to the elderly (age above 65). God bless the donors & Board for doing good!
Can't be thankful enough for this clinic. Staff friendly and doctor is caring.
The service is excellent and cheap...i am happy this service helps lower income citizen.
Consultation, acupuncture, cancer treatment & counselling.
I frequently visit this clinic 6 years ago when I had problems with my legs infections. Results was good. Charges free from your heart to donate. Doctors are exper and patient. This time I am going for my arm when I have a bad fall and injured the vein on my right arm. Thanks to God I found my member card.
Side-by-side with the next three highest-rated tcm providers on KakiList, so you can see how Singapore Buddhist Free Clinic stacks up at a glance.
| Provider | Google Rating | Reviews | Years | Verified |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Singapore Buddhist Free Clinic (this page) | ⭐ 4.7 | 74 | — | ✓ |
| Ri An TCM Clinic | ⭐ 5.0 | 333 | — | ✓ |
| HSI Chinese Medicine | ⭐ 5.0 | 237 | — | ✓ |
| Han TCM Medical | ⭐ 5.0 | 198 | — | ✓ |
Singapore Buddhist Free Clinic operates as a free clinic, meaning consultations and treatments are provided at no charge or on a donation basis for eligible patients — confirm the exact fee arrangement when you call or submit an enquiry form, as some services or herbal prescriptions may carry a nominal charge. For context, private TCM consultations in Singapore typically run S$30–80 per session, with acupuncture packages and herbal dispensing adding S$20–80 per visit depending on the complexity of the prescription. GST may apply at commercial clinics, though free or charitable clinics generally fall outside standard GST billing. See the full TCM cost guide for Singapore →
No formal referral is required for most TCM consultations at Singapore Buddhist Free Clinic. First-time patients typically complete a brief intake form covering medical history, current medications, and presenting complaint before seeing the practitioner. If you have a complex or serious underlying condition — for example, a cardiac condition, active cancer treatment, or a pregnancy — it is worth informing the clinic in advance so the practitioner can assess whether TCM treatment is appropriate alongside your existing care. A GP referral letter, while not mandatory, can be useful if you intend to claim against a private insurance policy that covers complementary therapy.
In Singapore, TCM practitioners must be registered with the Traditional Chinese Medicine Practitioners Board (TCMPB) under the Ministry of Health. This covers acupuncturists, TCM physicians prescribing herbal medicine, and those performing tui na. You can verify any practitioner's registration on the TCMPB public register at moh.gov.sg before your appointment. No regulatory licences are currently listed on this KakiList profile for Singapore Buddhist Free Clinic. Contact the clinic directly to confirm the registration details of the practitioner you will be seeing, and cross-check the name on the TCMPB register. Confirm the practitioner's licence number on the relevant board's public register before treatment.
If Singapore Buddhist Free Clinic isn't the right fit, these are other tcm providers on KakiList worth shortlisting. All are independently listed — no affiliate fees, no "featured" sponsorships.