πŸ’° Cost Guide

How Much Does a Hip Replacement Cost? (2026 Guide)

March 10, 2026 Β· Procedure Costs Β· 10 min read

March 10, 2026 Β· 10 min read Β· Reviewed by Taven Health
Average Cost
$10,795
Hip Replacement
Typical Range
$3,204–$16,779
Varies by facility & location
Biggest Price Driver
Facility Type
Hospital vs. outpatient center

Hip replacement is one of the most successful surgeries in modern medicine β€” and one of the most expensive. Over 450,000 total hip replacements are performed annually in the U.S., and the cost varies wildly depending on where you have it done.

Based on negotiated rate data from 975 hospitals, the national median cost for a total hip replacement (CPT 27130) is $10,795. Most hospitals charge between $3,204 and $16,779, with prices ranging from $1,101 to over $25,523.

The hospital you choose can mean a difference of $20,000+ β€” for the exact same surgery.

National Hip Replacement Cost Data (2026)

Metric Amount
National Median $10,795
National Average $12,565
Typical Range (25th–75th percentile) $3,204 – $16,779
Low End (10th percentile) $1,101
High End (90th percentile) $25,523
Hospitals Analyzed 975

Data source: Negotiated rates from hospital price transparency files, analyzed by Taven Health. Prices reflect facility fees for CPT 27130. Implant, anesthesia, and physical therapy are typically billed separately.

Compare hip replacement costs at hospitals near you β†’

Total Cost Breakdown

The facility fee is just one part of the total hip replacement cost:

Component Typical Cost
Surgeon/facility fee (CPT 27130) $3,204 – $16,779
Hip implant/prosthesis $4,000 – $15,000
Anesthesia $1,500 – $4,000
Hospital stay (1–3 nights) $2,000 – $8,000
Pre-op imaging and labs $500 – $1,500
Physical therapy (6–12 weeks) $1,000 – $5,000
Total Estimated Range $15,000 – $50,000+

Hip Replacement vs. Knee Replacement Cost

Hip and knee replacements are surprisingly similar in cost:

  • Hip replacement median: $10,795
  • Knee replacement median: $10,929

Both procedures use similar implant technology, operating time, and recovery protocols. For knee replacement pricing, see our knee replacement cost guide.

Factors That Affect Hip Replacement Cost

1. Hospital vs. Ambulatory Surgery Center

Outpatient hip replacements at ASCs cost 30–50% less than inpatient hospital procedures. More patients now qualify for outpatient hip replacement β€” discuss this option with your surgeon.

2. Surgical Approach

The three main approaches β€” anterior, posterior, and lateral β€” have slightly different cost profiles. Anterior hip replacement may cost slightly more due to specialized equipment, but the difference is usually modest.

3. Implant Type

Hip implants range from $4,000 to $15,000+. Options include ceramic-on-polyethylene, ceramic-on-ceramic, and metal-on-polyethylene. For most patients, outcomes are excellent with standard implants.

4. Geographic Location

Regional price variation is enormous. The same surgery can cost $12,000 in Oklahoma and $40,000+ in New York City.

5. Length of Hospital Stay

Hospital stays range from same-day (outpatient) to 3+ days. Each additional night adds $2,000–$5,000.

6. Complications

While uncommon, complications (infection, dislocation, blood clots) can significantly increase costs through extended stays, additional procedures, and medications.

Hip Replacement Cost With Insurance

  • High-deductible plan: $4,000–$8,000 (deductible plus coinsurance)
  • Standard PPO/HMO: $2,000–$5,000
  • After out-of-pocket max: $0

Tip: Schedule surgery strategically. If you've already incurred significant medical expenses for the year, scheduling before year-end means you're closer to your out-of-pocket maximum.

Hip Replacement Cost With Medicare

  • Part A (hospital): Inpatient deductible of $1,632 (2026)
  • Part B (surgeon): 20% of Medicare-approved amount after Part B deductible
  • Typical out-of-pocket: $2,000–$4,000 with Original Medicare
  • Medicare Advantage: Often lower copays; check your plan

How to Save on Hip Replacement

1. Compare Hospital Prices

Our data shows a range from $1,101 to $25,523. Compare prices at hospitals near you β€” the savings potential is massive.

2. Ask About Outpatient Surgery

If you're healthy enough, outpatient hip replacement at an ASC can cut your total cost by 30–50%.

3. Get a Good Faith Estimate

Request a Good Faith Estimate that includes all expected charges β€” facility, surgeon, anesthesia, implant, and PT.

4. Ask About Bundled Pricing

Some facilities offer bundled or "episode" pricing that covers everything in one price, eliminating surprise bills from individual providers.

5. Negotiate Cash Price

Uninsured patients should negotiate. Many hospitals offer 30–50% discounts for cash-pay patients.

6. Consider Medical Travel

Hospitals in lower-cost regions may offer the same quality at significantly lower prices. Some insurers and employers incentivize travel to Centers of Excellence.

Frequently Asked Questions

The facility fee alone has a national median of $10,795. Total all-in cost including implant, anesthesia, and recovery is typically $15,000–$50,000+.

Yes. Typical out-of-pocket with Original Medicare is $2,000–$4,000.

Most patients walk with assistance within a day. Full recovery takes 3–6 months with 6–12 weeks of physical therapy.

Slightly β€” typically $500–$2,000 more. Choose based on your surgeon's expertise, not cost alone.

The Bottom Line

A hip replacement costs a median of $10,795 nationally, with total all-in costs of $15,000–$50,000+. The hospital and setting (inpatient vs. outpatient) are the biggest cost drivers.

Compare prices at hospitals near you, ask about outpatient options, and get a Good Faith Estimate before scheduling. Smart shopping can save $10,000–$20,000.

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