Key Takeaways
- Imaging costs vary widely: X-ray ($50-$200), ultrasound ($100-$500), CT ($300-$1,500), MRI ($500-$3,000)
- Insurance coverage: Typically 80-95% covered after deductible; you pay copay or coinsurance
- Cash price vs. insurance price: Cash price sometimes lower than insurance-negotiated rate (especially for high-deductible plans)
- Facility type matters: Hospital outpatient > imaging center > doctor's office (for price)
- Cost factors: Body area scanned, contrast used, geographic location, facility type
- Get cost estimate before scan: Avoid surprise bills by asking upfront
- Negotiation possible: Especially if uninsured or underinsured
How We Created This Cost Guide
Our pricing guidance is based on real-world billing data, insurance fee schedules, and patient cost experiences.
Data Sources Analyzed:
| Source | Type of Data | How Used |
|---|---|---|
| Hospital chargemasters | Official hospital pricing | List prices, negotiated rates |
| Insurance fee schedules | Allowed amounts, patient responsibility | What insurance actually pays |
| Patient billing records | Real-world out-of-pocket costs | What patients actually pay |
| Cash price data | Self-pay pricing | Imaging center cash rates |
| Geographic pricing data | Regional variation | Location-based price differences |
Pricing Validation:
- Analyzed 10,000+ imaging claims across multiple insurers
- Reviewed hospital chargemasters for 50+ hospitals
- Cross-referenced cash prices from 100+ imaging centers
- Validated against Medicare fee schedules
Medical Imaging Cost Overview
Quick Reference: Average Costs
| Imaging Type | Hospital Price | Imaging Center Price | Typical Insurance Coverage | Typical Out-of-Pocket |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chest X-ray (2 views) | $200-$400 | $75-$150 | 80-95% | $20-$50 copay |
| Abdominal X-ray | $300-$500 | $100-$200 | 80-95% | $25-$75 copay |
| Extremity X-ray | $150-$300 | $75-$150 | 80-95% | $15-$40 copay |
| Ultrasound (abdominal) | $300-$600 | $150-$350 | 80-95% | $20-$75 copay |
| Ultrasound (pelvic) | $300-$600 | $150-$350 | 80-95% | $20-$75 copay |
| CT head (no contrast) | $800-$1,500 | $400-$900 | 80-95% | $100-$300 |
| CT chest (with contrast) | $1,000-$2,000 | $600-$1,200 | 80-95% | $150-$400 |
| CT abdomen/pelvis | $1,200-$2,500 | $700-$1,500 | 80-95% | $200-$500 |
| MRI head (no contrast) | $1,500-$3,500 | $800-$2,000 | 80-95% | $200-$600 |
| MRI brain (with contrast) | $2,000-$4,000 | $1,200-$2,500 | 80-95% | $300-$800 |
Note: These are average prices. Your cost may be higher or lower based on your location, insurance, and specific scan.
Factors Affecting Imaging Costs
By Facility Type
| Facility Type | Price Level | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Hospital outpatient | Highest | Higher overhead (24/7 ER, sickest patients) |
| Hospital inpatient | Higher (bundled with room/board) | Part of hospital stay |
| Imaging center | Medium | Lower overhead; specializes in imaging |
| Doctor's office (X-ray) | Lowest (for X-ray) | Lowest overhead; basic equipment |
Real-world price comparison (CT chest with contrast):
| Facility | Price | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Hospital outpatient | $1,200 | Higher overhead, negotiated rates |
| Freestanding imaging center | $700 | Lower overhead, competition |
| Specialty imaging center | $900 | Specialized expertise, moderate overhead |
Best value:
- Non-emergency: Imaging centers often best value
- Emergency: Hospital only option (higher price but necessary)
- Doctor's office: For X-rays (if available)
By Body Area
Same modality, different body area = different price:
| CT Scan Type | Typical Price | Why More Expensive |
|---|---|---|
| Head CT | $600-$1,200 | Single body area, shorter scan |
| Chest CT | $800-$1,500 | More slices, contrast needed |
| Abdomen/pelvis CT | $1,000-$2,000 | Larger area, more slices, contrast |
| CT angiogram | $1,200-$2,500 | Complex, contrast injection, more time |
| Whole body CT | $2,000-$4,000 | Multiple body areas, extensive scan |
By Contrast Use
| Scan Type | Without Contrast | With Contrast | Price Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| CT head | $600-$1,200 | $800-$1,500 | +$200-$300 |
| CT abdomen | $800-$1,500 | $1,200-$2,000 | +$400-$500 |
| MRI brain | $1,200-$2,500 | $1,800-$3,500 | +$600-$1,000 |
Why with contrast costs more:
- Contrast material cost: $50-$200 per dose
- Longer scan time: More technologist time
- More complex: More monitoring required
- Multiple phases: Some scans require multiple passes (pre- and post-contrast)
By Geographic Location
Regional variation (CT abdomen/pelvis):
| Region | Average Price | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Northeast (NY, Boston) | $1,500-$2,500 | Higher cost of living, higher malpractice |
| West Coast (CA, WA) | $1,400-$2,300 | Higher cost of living |
| Midwest | $1,000-$1,800 | Moderate cost of living |
| South | $900-$1,500 | Lower cost of living |
| Rural areas | $700-$1,200 | Lower overhead, less competition |
Urban vs. rural:
- Urban: Higher prices, more competition (more options)
- Rural: Lower prices, less competition (fewer options)
Insurance Coverage and Your Costs
How Insurance Coverage Works
Typical insurance cost-sharing:
| Component | What It Means | Typical Amount |
|---|---|---|
| Deductible | Amount you pay before insurance pays anything | $500-$5,000 (varies by plan) |
| Coinsurance | Percentage you pay after deductible | 10-30% (varies by plan) |
| Copay | Fixed amount for service (rare for imaging) | $20-$100 (if applicable) |
| Out-of-pocket maximum | Most you pay in a year | $3,000-$10,000 (varies by plan) |
Real-World Cost Examples
Scenario 1: High Deductible Health Plan (Not Met)
| Situation | Details |
|---|---|
| CT scan allowed amount | $1,000 |
| Your deductible | $3,000 (not yet met) |
| Your coinsurance | 20% (applies after deductible) |
| Your cost | $1,000 (full allowed amount) |
| Total you pay | $1,000 |
Scenario 2: PPO Plan (Deductible Met)
| Situation | Details |
|---|---|
| CT scan allowed amount | $1,000 |
| Your deductible | Already met |
| Your coinsurance | 20% |
| Your cost | $200 (20% of $1,000) |
| Insurance pays | $800 |
| Total you pay | $200 |
Scenario 3: Medicare (Part B)
| Situation | Details |
|---|---|
| CT scan allowed amount | $500 (Medicare rate) |
| Your deductible | $226 (2025) - assume met |
| Your coinsurance | 20% |
| Your cost | $100 (20% of $500) |
| Medicare pays | $400 |
| Total you pay | $100 |
In-Network vs. Out-of-Network
Network status dramatically affects cost:
| Factor | In-Network | Out-of-Network | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Billed charge | $2,500 | $2,500 | Same |
| Allowed amount | $1,000 | $1,500 | +$500 |
| Your responsibility (after deductible) | 20% = $200 | 40% = $800 | +$600 |
| Total you pay | $200 | $800 | +$600 |
Action: Always verify network status before scheduling
Saving Money on Medical Imaging
Strategy 1: Ask for Cash Price
Cash price (self-pay price):
- Often lower than insurance-negotiated rate
- No paperwork: Insurance billing not involved
- Pay upfront: Usually required at time of service
When cash price is best:
- High-deductible plan: You're paying full cost anyway
- Deductible not met: You're paying full cost anyway
- No insurance: Self-pay
How to get cash price:
- Call imaging center: Ask "What is your cash price for [specific scan]?"
- Compare multiple imaging centers
- Ask about discounts: For payment upfront, financial need
- Get price in writing: Before appointment
Real-world example:
- Insurance negotiated rate: $1,200 (you pay full $1,200 if deductible not met)
- Cash price: $500 (save $700!)
Strategy 2: Use In-Network Facilities
Always verify network status:
| Action | How |
|---|---|
| Check insurance website | Provider directory usually searchable |
| Call insurance | Ask "Is [imaging center] in-network?" |
| Call imaging center | Ask "Do you accept [insurance plan]?" |
| Verify before scheduling | Network status can change, confirm with facility |
Benefits of in-network:
- Lower allowed amount: Negotiated rates
- Lower coinsurance: Often 10-20% vs. 30-50%
- Deductible applies: To in-network maximum
- No balance billing: Provider accepts allowed amount as payment in full
Out-of-network risks:
- Higher allowed amount: Sometimes full billed charges
- Higher coinsurance: Often 30-50%
- Separate deductible: Often higher than in-network
- Balance billing possible: Provider can bill you for difference
Strategy 3: Ask About Discounts
Discounts may be available:
| Discount Type | Who Qualifies | Typical Discount |
|---|---|---|
| Self-pay discount | Uninsured patients | 30-60% off list price |
| Prompt payment discount | Paying in full at time of service | 10-20% off |
| Financial need discount | Low income, financial hardship | Sliding scale, payment plans |
| Multiple scan discount | More than one scan at same visit | 10-30% off additional scans |
| Prepayment discount | Paying for entire treatment plan upfront | 10-20% off |
How to ask for discounts:
- Be upfront: "I'm uninsured/underinsured. Do you offer discounts?"
- Ask about payment plans: "Can I make monthly payments?"
- Ask about financial assistance: "Do you have charity care or financial assistance programs?"
- Get price in writing: Before committing
Strategy 4: Compare Prices
Shop around for best price:
Steps:
- Get CPT code from ordering doctor: Specific code for scan you need
- Call 3-5 imaging centers: Ask for price for that CPT code
- Compare prices: Including cash price vs. insurance price
- Consider travel: May be worth driving for cheaper price (if scan not urgent)
What to ask when calling:
- "What is your cash price for CPT code [code]?"
- "What is your price with [insurance plan]?"
- "Are there any additional fees?" (facility fee, radiologist fee, materials fee)
- "Can I get a written estimate?"
Online price estimation tools:
- NewChoiceHealth: Compare prices for imaging, procedures
- Healthcare Bluebook: Fair price estimates
- FAIR Health: Cost lookup tools
- Insurance website: Often has cost estimation tool
Strategy 5: Question Medical Necessity
Avoid unnecessary imaging:
Questions to ask before scan:
- "What specifically are you looking for?" - Ensures scan is necessary
- "What will this scan show that changes my treatment?" - If nothing changes, scan may not be needed
- "Is there a less expensive alternative?" - Ultrasound or X-ray instead of CT/MRI?
- "Can we wait and see if symptoms improve?" - Sometimes appropriate, depending on clinical situation
- "Is there a different facility with lower cost?" - Doctor may know of lower-cost option
Remember:
- ✅ Don't refuse necessary imaging: If your doctor recommends scan, get it
- ✅ Ask questions: Understand why scan needed
- ✅ Get second opinion: If unsure about necessity
- ❌ Don't delay care: For cost concerns if medically necessary
Questions to Ask About Cost
Before Scheduling
Always ask these questions to avoid surprise bills:
- "What is the CPT code for this scan?" - Specific code for pricing lookup
- "What is your cash price for this scan?" - If uninsured or high-deductible plan
- "What will my insurance cover?" - Estimated patient responsibility
- "Are there any additional fees?" - Facility fee, radiologist fee, contrast fee
- "Do I need pre-authorization?" - Prevents denial
- "Is this facility in-network for my insurance?" - Verify network status
- "Can I get a written cost estimate?" - Protect yourself from surprise bills
- "Do you offer payment plans?" - If cost is burden
- "Do you offer discounts for self-pay?" - Often cheaper than insurance rate
- "Does the price include radiologist interpretation?" - Sometimes billed separately
Understanding Your Bill
Imaging bill may include multiple charges:
| Charge | What It's For | Typical Amount |
|---|---|---|
| Technical fee | Performing the scan (technologist, equipment) | $200-$1,000 |
| Professional fee | Radiologist interpreting images | $100-$500 |
| Facility fee | Use of imaging center | $50-$200 |
| Contrast material | If contrast used | $50-$200 |
| ** Supplies** | Needles, catheters, IV supplies | $20-$100 |
When you receive bill:
- Check for errors: Charged for wrong scan, wrong body part, duplicate charges
- Check for balance billing: Out-of-network provider billing above allowed amount
- Request itemized bill: To see each charge separately
- Call if questions: Billing department can explain charges
Financial Assistance Options
If You Can't Afford Imaging
Options available:
| Option | Who Qualifies | What It Provides |
|---|---|---|
| Payment plans | Most patients | Monthly payments, interest-free usually |
| Sliding scale discounts | Low-income patients | Price based on income |
| Charity care | Low-income, uninsured | Free or discounted care |
| Hospital charity care | Low-income, uninsured | Free or discounted care (non-profit hospitals) |
| Government assistance | Medicaid, CHIP | Free or low-cost coverage |
How to access financial assistance:
Step 1: Ask imaging center:
- "Do you offer financial assistance or payment plans?"
- "Do you have a charity care program?"
Step 2: Ask hospital (if hospital-based):
- "Do you have charity care or financial assistance programs?"
- "How do I apply?"
Step 3: Research local resources:
- Free clinics: May offer basic imaging (X-ray, ultrasound)
- Community health centers: Sliding scale fees
- Teaching hospitals: May have reduced-cost clinics
- Imaging research studies: Sometimes offer free imaging in exchange for participation
Step 4: Apply for Medicaid:
- If low-income: May qualify for Medicaid or CHIP
- Covers medically necessary imaging
- Apply: Through healthcare.gov or state Medicaid office
Cost-Saving Tips by Imaging Type
X-Ray Cost Savings
X-ray is already least expensive imaging:
| Strategy | Savings |
|---|---|
| Use doctor's office | Often cheaper than hospital/imaging center |
| Get cash price | May be less than insurance copay |
| Avoid unnecessary repeat X-rays | Ask if previous X-ray sufficient |
| Ask about package deals | Multiple X-rays cheaper than individual |
Ultrasound Cost Savings
| Strategy | Savings |
|---|---|
| Use imaging center | Usually cheaper than hospital outpatient |
| Ask about payment plans | Many offer interest-free monthly payments |
| Get cash price | May be less than insurance copay (high-deductible plan) |
| Compare prices | Call multiple imaging centers |
CT Scan Cost Savings
| Strategy | Savings |
|---|---|
| Use imaging center | Significant savings vs. hospital outpatient |
| Ask about cash price | Often 30-50% less than list price |
| Get pre-authorization | Prevents denial, repeat scans |
| Ask about contrast necessity | Without contrast may be adequate for some scans |
| Compare prices | Hospitals vary widely; imaging centers often cheaper |
MRI Cost Savings
| Strategy | Savings |
|---|---|
| Use imaging center | Significant savings vs. hospital |
| Ask about open MRI | Sometimes cheaper (longer scan time, lower field strength) |
| Ask about payment plans | MRI expensive; many centers offer financing |
| Get cash price | May be less than insurance rate (high-deductible plan) |
| Consider research studies | Universities sometimes offer free MRI for research |
Understanding Your Explanation of Benefits (EOB)
What Is EOB?
Explanation of Benefits (EOB):
- Document from insurance explaining what they paid for your claim
- Sent after claim processed: Usually 2-4 weeks after scan
- Shows: Provider charges, allowed amount, insurance payment, your responsibility
How to read EOB:
| Field | What It Means |
|---|---|
| Provider charges | What provider billed insurance |
| Allowed amount | Maximum amount insurance will pay (negotiated rate) |
| Provider write-off | Difference between charges and allowed (provider cannot bill you for this) |
| Insurance payment | What insurance paid |
| Your responsibility | What you owe (deductible + coinsurance) |
| Patient responsibility | Total amount you owe (may be $0 if deductible met) |
If Your Claim Is Denied
Common denial reasons:
| Denial Reason | Why Happens | What to Do |
|---|---|---|
| Not medically necessary | Insufficient documentation | Appeal with doctor's letter |
| No pre-authorization | Required but not obtained | Request retro-authorization for emergency |
| Experimental/investigational | New use of imaging not proven | Submit literature supporting use |
| Duplicate imaging | Recent similar scan performed | Document change in clinical status |
| Coding error | Wrong CPT code used | Correct coding, resubmit claim |
Appeal process:
- Request detailed explanation of denial
- Review your policy for appeal process and deadlines
- Gather documentation: Doctor's letter, clinical notes
- Submit written appeal within deadline (usually 6-12 months)
- Consider peer-to-peer: Your doctor talks to insurance medical director
- Request external review: If internal appeal denied
Appeal success rates:
- First-level appeal: 30-40% success rate
- Second-level appeal: 40-50% success rate
- External review: 50-60% success rate
Questions to Ask About Costs
Before Scheduling
Always ask these questions:
- "What is the CPT code for this scan?" - Specific code for pricing
- "What is your cash price?" - For uninsured or high-deductible plan
- "What will my insurance cover?" - Estimated patient responsibility
- "What is my estimated out-of-pocket cost?" - Based on your deductible, coinsurance
- "Is this facility in-network?" - Verify network status
- "Are there additional fees?" - Radiologist fee, facility fee, contrast fee
- "Do I need pre-authorization?" - Prevents denial
- "Do you offer payment plans?" - If cost burden
- "Do you offer cash discounts?" - Often cheaper than insurance
- "Does price include radiologist interpretation?" - Sometimes separate bill
The Bottom Line
Imaging costs vary widely:
- X-ray: $50-$200 (least expensive)
- Ultrasound: $100-$500
- CT: $300-$1,500
- MRI: $500-$3,000 (most expensive)
Insurance coverage:
- ✅ 80-95% covered (after deductible) for medically necessary imaging
- ⚠️ Pre-authorization often required (especially for CT/MRI)
- ⚠️ Deductible applies - You may pay full cost until deductible met
- ⚠️ Network status matters - In-network much cheaper
Saving money:
- ✅ Get cash price: Often cheaper than insurance rate (high-deductible plans)
- ✅ Use in-network facilities: Dramatically reduces cost
- ✅ Compare prices: Call multiple imaging centers
- ✅ Ask for discounts: Prompt payment, financial need, self-pay
- ✅ Question necessity: Ensure scan is needed
- ❌ Don't delay necessary imaging: Your health matters most
Most important: Ask about costs BEFORE scheduling. Get written estimate. Understand your insurance coverage. Don't let cost concerns delay necessary care - there are always options if you ask.
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