Pre-Employment
Medical Check-Ups in Bali: What Tests Employers Require
Answer first: A pre-employment medical check-up in
Bali usually includes a general physical examination, blood and urine
tests, a chest X-ray, vision and hearing checks, and a doctor’s
certificate of fitness for work. Some roles add job-specific tests —
drug screening, an ECG, or extra checks for safety-critical or
physically demanding positions. The exact panel depends on the employer
and the role, so the requirement list should come from the company. This
guide explains the common components and how to arrange screening for
individuals or corporate teams through the Sanur Health
Concierge.
Pre-employment medicals exist to confirm a candidate is fit for the
specific job and to establish a baseline before they start. For
employers hiring in Bali, and for candidates asked to complete a
medical, here’s a practical, plain-English overview.
What employers are
actually checking
A fitness-for-work assessment is not a diagnosis of every possible
condition; it’s a focused check that the person can safely perform the
role’s demands. International occupational-health guidance frames
pre-placement examinations around the genuine requirements of the job
rather than blanket testing (International
Labour Organization, Technical and ethical guidelines for workers’
health surveillance). In practice that means an office hire and
an offshore-rig hire will have very different panels.
Common components
of a pre-employment medical
Most pre-employment screens in Bali draw from this menu:
- General physical examination — blood pressure,
height/weight/BMI, basic systems review - Blood tests — typically a full blood count and
basic chemistry; sometimes blood-borne virus or other markers depending
on the role - Urinalysis — and, for some employers, drug
screening - Chest X-ray — often for tuberculosis screening
- Vision and hearing tests — important for many
roles, essential for safety-critical ones - ECG — for older candidates or physically
demanding/safety-sensitive jobs - Certificate of fitness — the signed conclusion the
employer needs
Many of these overlap with a standard health check, which is why we
explain each test in our what’s-included
page. The difference is purpose: a pre-employment medical is judged
against a job, and the output is a fitness statement, not just a set of
numbers.
Role-specific add-ons
Beyond the core panel, certain jobs trigger extra tests:
- Safety-critical roles (driving, machinery, heights)
— stricter vision, hearing, and sometimes cardiac or neurological
checks - Physically demanding roles — musculoskeletal
assessment, fitness evaluation - Food handling / hospitality — additional infection
screening in some cases - Offshore / remote work — more comprehensive
medicals, sometimes to international standards
Because these vary so widely, the authoritative list always comes
from the employer or their occupational-health provider. Our role is to
arrange the tests accurately once you know what’s required — and to flag
if a request looks incomplete.
For employers: screening
a team in Bali
If you’re an employer or HR manager bringing on staff in Bali — or
sending existing employees for periodic medicals — coordinating
individual appointments is time-consuming. A concierge can
batch-schedule a team at an accredited facility, standardise the panel,
and consolidate the fitness certificates. Our expats, tourists, visa
and corporate page outlines how corporate and pre-employment
screening is handled, and the contact team can
scope a group booking.
For candidates: how to
prepare
If you’ve been asked to complete a pre-employment medical:
- Get the exact requirement in writing from the
employer. - Bring ID and any forms the company provided.
- Follow fasting instructions if blood tests are
included — our preparation
guide covers this. - Allow time for results and the certificate — see how long
results take in Bali to plan around your start date. - Bring your glasses or hearing aids if you use them,
so vision/hearing tests reflect your corrected ability.
A useful chance for a real
baseline
Like visa medicals, a pre-employment screen overlaps enough with a
comprehensive check-up that some people add the rest of an MCU at the
same visit — establishing a genuine health baseline alongside the
required fitness certificate. Whether that’s worthwhile depends on your
age and history; our packages
comparison shows what a fuller screen adds, and our cost guide keeps pricing
transparent.
Honest limits and privacy
We arrange and coordinate screening; we don’t make hiring decisions
or interpret fitness on an employer’s behalf — that’s the examining
doctor’s role, within occupational-health ethics that protect the
candidate’s medical privacy. A pre-employment medical should respect
confidentiality: the employer receives a fitness conclusion, not your
full clinical detail, unless you consent. If a requested test seems
unrelated to the job or intrusive, it’s reasonable to ask why. And, as
always, the medical content here is educational, not a substitute for
advice from a qualified doctor.
Arrange a
pre-employment medical in Bali
Whether you’re a candidate asked to complete a medical or an employer
screening a team, the Sanur Health Concierge can arrange
the right panel at an accredited Sanur-area facility, coordinate timing
around start dates, and consolidate fitness certificates. Start with a
quick inquiry on our contact page, or message us
on WhatsApp (wa.me/6281139414563), and have
the employer’s requirement list ready so we can match it exactly.
About the author. Dr. Anindita
Wirahadi is Medical Advisor & Preventive-Health Lead at Sanur
Health Concierge (MD, Universitas Udayana; MPH in Preventive Medicine,
University of Melbourne) and reviews every guide on this site for
medical accuracy.
Medical disclaimer. This content is for general
education only and is not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.
Always consult a qualified doctor. balimedicalcheckup.com is a
medical-travel concierge and does not provide clinical services.
Source cited: International Labour Organization,
Technical and ethical guidelines for workers’ health
surveillance.