Eugenix Hair Sciences Gurugram is now NABH-accredited, and what that means goes far beyond a certificate on the wall.
There is a peculiar ritual in the world of healthcare quality certifications. Auditors walk into the premises. They inspect your sterilisation protocols, review your consent forms. They count your fire safety protocols along with a series of other strict compliances. And then, if you’ve done everything right, the National Accreditation Board for Hospitals & Healthcare Providers tells the world what your patients already knew: you are exceptional.
On March 12, 2026, Eugenix Hair Sciences Pvt. Ltd. officially became NABH-accredited under the Allopathic Clinic programme. It’s official. And the meaning is anything but small.
It bears noting that this first accreditation covers our Global Facility in Gurgaon at Sector 51. But make no mistake: this is a beginning, not a boundary. The NABH framework is now embedded in how we think, how we operate, and how we hold ourselves accountable. Gurgaon is the proof of concept. The rest of the Eugenix network will follow soon.
“NABH accreditation is not a destination. It is a published declaration of the journey you’ve committed to.”

Check the NABH certification here.
Let us be honest about what NABH actually is, because it is easy to mistake it for a trophy. The National Accreditation Board for Hospitals & Healthcare Providers operates under the Quality Council of India and is globally recognised as India’s highest benchmark for clinical quality. It doesn’t ask whether your lobby looks nice. It asks whether your patient’s journey — from inquiry to incision to follow-up – is safe, documented, ethical, and reproducible.
That last word matters enormously. Reproducible. Any clinic can have a good day. An accredited clinic has a system that makes good days the only kind of days possible.
Now, you might be tempted to think this is a story about paperwork. It is not. This is a story about what happens when a clinic that was already excellent decides that excellent isn’t a strong enough word. NABH accreditation requires standardised operating procedures across every department, from how a patient is greeted at registration to how a prescription is documented to how a surgical instrument is sterilised. It is rigorous in a way that rewards only those who were already doing things the right way, quietly and without fanfare.
That is precisely what we at Eugenix represent. For our patients, this accreditation is a promise made auditable. It means they can walk through our doors knowing that the quality of their care is not dependent on what is happening specifically on that day, who is on shift, or how busy the floor is. The system holds. The standard is constant. The outcome is protected.
For our team – every surgeon, every hair expert, every patient coordinator, counsellor and every sanitation worker who has ever come in early or stayed late to get something right – this accreditation is earned by us. NABH did not walk in and give us something we didn’t have. It walked in and formally acknowledged what our teams at Eugenix Gurugram have built.
There is also a commercial reality worth naming directly. India’s medical tourism sector is growing, and patients flying in from London, San Francisco, Toronto, and Singapore are increasingly making decisions based on international quality signals. NABH is one of the few Indian standards that travels well – it is recognised globally, it satisfies insurance empanelment requirements, and it tells the discerning patient: this is not a place that takes shortcuts.
Hair restoration is, at its core, an act of trust. Patients come to us at a vulnerable moment, placing their scalp – and often their self-esteem – in our hands. Every single standard NABH has now certified us against exists to protect that trust. The credentialing of our medical staff. The protocols for patient safety. The ethics of clinical practice. The documentation that ensures nothing falls through the cracks.
We did not earn this accreditation because we wanted a badge. We earned it because we built a clinic worthy of one.
The accreditation is official. And we intend to spend every single day proving that the auditor was right.

