How Much Does Total Hip Replacement Surgery Cost?
Also known as: Total hip arthroplasty (CPT 27130)
Surgery to replace a damaged hip joint with an artificial joint made of metal, ceramic, or plastic.
The total estimated cost of Total Hip Replacement Surgery (CPT 27130) is $15,119 to $41,997, including hospital fees, anesthesia, and supplies. The surgeon's Medicare fee alone is $1,162. Average Medicare total payment: $16,799.
Total Estimated Cost of Care
This estimate includes hospital facility fees, anesthesia, implants, and supplies for an inpatient hospital stay. Based on CMS data for MAJOR HIP AND KNEE JOINT REPLACEMENT OR REATTACHMENT OF LOWER EXTREMITY WITHOUT MCC (DRG 470), the average Medicare total payment is $16,799.
Patient Guide: Total Hip Replacement Surgery
What you need to know before your appointment
What to Expect
Under general or spinal anesthesia, the surgeon replaces the damaged hip socket and ball joint with artificial components. Hospital stay is typically 1-3 days.
How Long Does It Take?
1-2 hours surgery, 1-3 days hospital stay
Common Reasons Doctors Order This
Severe hip arthritis, hip fracture, hip pain limiting daily activities, avascular necrosis
How to Prepare
Follow pre-surgery instructions carefully. Stop medications as directed. Arrange home help and prepare your home to avoid fall risks.
Procedures Commonly Done Together
These procedures are frequently performed alongside Total hip arthroplasty
What Insurance Companies Actually Pay
Real negotiated rates from 16 hospitals across 6 states (from hospital price transparency filings)
| Insurance Company | Avg Rate | Range | Hospitals |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aetna | $6,366 | $2,408 - $19,886 | 10 |
| United | $16,933 | $4,969 - $30,000 | 10 |
| Cigna | $20,042 | $2,496 - $60,464 | 9 |
| Humana | $14,604 | $2,204 - $31,243 | 9 |
| BCBS | $33,193 | $12,888 - $46,413 | 5 |
| Superior Health Plan | $2,097 | $948 - $19,331 | 4 |
| KAISER FOUNDATION HEALTH PLAN, INC. | $26,858 | $15,548 - $48,690 | 5 |
| BCBS-TX | $14,279 | $1,925 - $22,849 | 3 |
| Kaiser | $24,866 | $21,585 - $31,174 | 2 |
| Anthem | $37,427 | $18,929 - $44,089 | 2 |
| BCBS - TN | $380 | $167 - $1,134 | 2 |
| Devoted Health | $16,525 | $16,121 - $16,929 | 4 |
How to Reduce Your Cost for Total hip arthroplasty
Practical tips that can save you hundreds or thousands of dollars
- 1 Ask about cash-pay discounts
Many hospitals and clinics offer 20-40% discounts for self-pay patients. Always ask before scheduling.
- 2 Compare facility vs. office setting costs
Some procedures cost significantly less in an office setting than a hospital. Ask your provider about options.
- 3 Shop around — costs vary significantly
Costs can vary 2-3x between providers in the same city. Get quotes from multiple facilities.
How is the Price Calculated?
Medicare calculates procedure payments using Relative Value Units (RVUs). Each procedure has three components multiplied by a conversion factor ($33.40 in 2026) and adjusted by geographic cost indices.
Payment = Total RVU (34.79) x CF ($33.40) = $1,162
Related Procedures
Similar procedures in the same category or body system
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does Total hip arthroplasty cost?
The Medicare facility rate for Total hip arthroplasty is $1,162. Commercial insurance rates typically range from 150% to 250% of Medicare (varies by plan).
How much does Total hip arthroplasty cost without insurance?
Without insurance, the cost of Total hip arthroplasty can range from 150% of Medicare to 500% of Medicare depending on the facility. Many hospitals and clinics offer self-pay discounts of 20-40% off their chargemaster price. Always ask about cash pricing before your visit.
Does insurance cover Total hip arthroplasty?
Most commercial health insurance plans and Medicare cover Total hip arthroplasty when ordered by a physician for a medically necessary reason. Your out-of-pocket cost depends on your plan's deductible, copay/coinsurance structure, and whether you use an in-network provider. Check with your insurance company before scheduling to confirm coverage and get a cost estimate.
Why does the cost vary so much by location?
Medicare adjusts payments using Geographic Practice Cost Indices (GPCIs) that reflect local differences in physician work costs, practice expenses, and malpractice insurance. Manhattan, San Francisco, and other high-cost areas pay significantly more than rural regions. Commercial insurers follow similar geographic patterns.