By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Health Works CollectiveHealth Works CollectiveHealth Works Collective
  • Health
    • Mental Health
    Health
    Healthcare organizations are operating on slimmer profit margins than ever. One report in August showed that they are even lower than the beginning of the…
    Show More
    Top News
    physical health
    5 Ways Playing Games Can Improve Neural and Physical Health
    September 9, 2022
    Reasons For Hair Loss and Its Treatment
    Reasons For Hair Loss and Its Treatment
    February 16, 2022
    healthcare organization
    5 Actionable Strategies For Healthcare Organizations
    August 15, 2022
    Latest News
    7 Most Common Healthcare Accreditation Programs: Which Should You Use?
    August 20, 2025
    Hospital Pest Control and the Fight Against Superbugs
    August 20, 2025
    Hygiene Beyond The Clinic: Attention To Overlooked Non-Clinical Spaces
    August 13, 2025
    5 Steps to a Promising Career as a Healthcare Administrator
    August 3, 2025
  • Policy and Law
    • Global Healthcare
    • Medical Ethics
    Policy and Law
    Get the latest updates about Insurance policies and Laws in the Healthcare industry for different geographical locations.
    Show More
    Top News
    4 Reasons Chris Cornell’s Death Raises Medical Ethics Questions
    December 19, 2018
    What If You Could Sell Your Vote?
    August 24, 2017
    The Sleepy American
    September 12, 2017
    Latest News
    How Social Security Disability Shapes Access to Care and Everyday Health
    August 22, 2025
    How a DUI Lawyer Can Help When Your Future Health Feels Uncertain
    August 22, 2025
    How One Fall Can Lead to a Long Road of Medical Complications
    August 22, 2025
    How IT and Marketing Teams Can Collaborate to Protect Patient Trust
    July 17, 2025
  • Medical Innovations
  • News
  • Wellness
  • Tech
Search
© 2023 HealthWorks Collective. All Rights Reserved.
Reading: How Much Does an MRI Cost? $425 to $2530
Share
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
Health Works CollectiveHealth Works Collective
Font ResizerAa
Search
Follow US
  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy
© 2023 HealthWorks Collective. All Rights Reserved.
Health Works Collective > Business > Finance > How Much Does an MRI Cost? $425 to $2530
BusinessFinanceHealth ReformHospital AdministrationNews

How Much Does an MRI Cost? $425 to $2530

Jeanne Pinder
Jeanne Pinder
Share
8 Min Read
SHARE

SUMMARY: Dear Insurance Co., Patient X called and he wants to know why you’re paying $425 and $2,530 for the same thing. Keep reading for a mini-mystery story, or…

Contents
  • A bit of background explanation
  • An MRI can cost from $425 to $2,530
  • Other procedures too
Culture change is here: People have awakened to the wide disparities in pricing in the health-care marketplace. Even if they’re insured, they’re upset.

Let’s call him Patient X. He wanted to talk about the coinsurance charges for his new health insurance plan. He wanted me to know a few things.

SUMMARY: Dear Insurance Co., Patient X called and he wants to know why you’re paying $425 and $2,530 for the same thing. Keep reading for a mini-mystery story, or…

Culture change is here: People have awakened to the wide disparities in pricing in the health-care marketplace. Even if they’re insured, they’re upset.

Let’s call him Patient X. He wanted to talk about the coinsurance charges for his new health insurance plan. He wanted me to know a few things.

More Read

walking safely
Walking Safety Tips to Help Pedestrians Minimize Injuries
Is Your Embarrassing Physician Website Costing You Money?
Do’s and Don’ts of Hospital Health IT
Financial Assistance for Clinical Trials
5 Aspects of CMS’s 2015 Proposed IPPS Regulations

For an MRI in his neighborhood, his insurance company’s site tells him, the insurance company is paying anywhere from $425 to $2,530.

How does he know that?

Well, he’s responsible for 10 percent of the contracted fee. And the insurance company tells him what that 10 percent would be, should he choose Provider A, Provider B, Provider C and so on.

Helpful? Yes. Maddening? Also yes.

A bit of background explanation

Health-care providers have a number of prices for procedures. Their charged price (often known as the chargemaster price) is something like a manufacturer’s suggested retail price in electronics or the rack rate at a hotel, prices that are seldom paid because there are so many discounts available.

Full-pay patients, those who pay the charged price, are rare. What the provider actually receives is either a fixed price from the government (Medicare, Medicaid, or Tri-Care, for military personnel) or a negotiated or contract price, so called because it’s negotiated by the provider (doc or hospital, let’s say) by contract with the payer – an insurance company, like Blue Cross, Cigna, Aetna or United Healthcare.

The negotiated rates are secret, protected by gag clauses in most contracts. The insurers don’t want Provider A, who’s getting $425 for a procedure, to know that Provider B is getting $2,530. So there are penalties to providers for disclosing what they get.

That information has long been available on people’s bills, and explanations of benefits, but for a great deal of time no one cared because it might all have been covered by a $20 copay. Also, because you weren’t able to compare what your provider received with what another provider received, you might not have known of the disparities.

But! With the new 10 percent disclosure, Patient X now knows that for an MRI, his co-insurance will be 10 percent of the contracted rate. Multiply the co-insurance by 10, and you have the contracted rate.

An MRI can cost from $425 to $2,530

Here are some of the prices, derived from multiplying his anticipated 10 percent coinsurance, as listed on the site, by 10:

Provider A: $425

Provider B: $753

Provider C: $1,495

Provider D: $1,760

Provider E: $1,708

Provider F: $2,530

What does Medicare pay? This is in the New York area, so it’s between $497 and $516. This is important because the Medicare rate is the closest thing to a fixed or benchmark price in the marketplace — it’s set by the government under a fairly convoluted equation described in this blog post.

This insurance company is undercutting Medicare at Provider A.

Does this mean that Provider F gives an MRI that is 6 times better than the MRI at Provider A? Well, not necessarily. It probably means that Provider F has more power in the marketplace – perhaps a bigger reputation, more patients, “must-have” status or something else. (Here’s a blog post about a paper my friend Chapin White wrote recently about higher-paid providers: the actual paper is behind a paywall, but the gist is that higher-priced hospitals don’t have better outcomes).

Does this mean that Provider A is getting taken to the cleaners? Well, maybe.

Does this mean that if you – as an insured person on this plan from this company, choose a less expensive provider, your premiums are subsidizing higher-priced providers? Yes.

But in our pricing survey of MRI providers in the New York City area, we learned that prices for cash or self-pay customers can range from $400 to $2,500.

So why do Providers C, D, E and F get more money than a cash customer would pay? And in some cases a lot more? Interesting question.

Note: We are not naming the insurer or the providers. Patient X gave us this information on the condition that we would not name the insurance company, and we agreed. If we named the providers, that would identify the insurance company. So we’re not naming them either.

Moving toward transparency

It should be noted here that we think transparency is good. All prices (or costs or charges) should be revealed, and all quality metrics too.

There’s no compelling argument we’ve heard for keeping all this information secret.

We are big supporters of complete transparency. Partial transparency? We’re less enthusiastic about that.

Other procedures too

By the way, Patient X told us, other procedures also vary: For one, judging from the 10 percent coinsurance, the total cost at Provider A is $120, and at Provider B it’s $370.

For another procedure, the range is from $129 to $349.

If you extrapolate this set of numbers to the entire marketplace, and to much more complicated procedures – appendectomies, knee replacements, cancer care? – you can start to see how explosive the release of a 10 percent coinsurance charge might be for a thinking person.

Patient X is not exactly a cynic, but he’s pretty clear about pointing out that the insurance company is not directing him or anyone else toward lower-cost care.

Provider A and B, we’d like to talk.

Share This Article
Facebook Copy Link Print
Share

Stay Connected

1.5kFollowersLike
4.5kFollowersFollow
2.8kFollowersPin
136kSubscribersSubscribe

Latest News

travel nurse in north carolina
Balancing Speed and Scope: Choosing the Nursing Degree That Fits Your Goals
Nursing
September 1, 2025
intimacy
How to Keep Intimacy Comfortable as You Age
Relationship and Lifestyle Senior Care
September 1, 2025
engineer fitting prosthetic arm
How Social Security Disability Shapes Access to Care and Everyday Health
Health care
August 20, 2025
a woman explaining the document
How a DUI Lawyer Can Help When Your Future Health Feels Uncertain
Public Health
August 20, 2025

You Might also Like

Study: Increasing Scope of NP Practice Does Not Undercut Physician Reimbursement

March 18, 2012

Supreme Court: Can State Governments Dictate How Publicly Available Information Can Be Used?

April 27, 2011

Precision Medicine or Personalized Medicine: What’s in a Name?

February 16, 2015
ACA
FinanceHealth ReformPolicy & Law

Groups Nationwide to Get Federal Grants to Promote ACA

August 18, 2013
Subscribe
Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!
Follow US
© 2008-2025 HealthWorks Collective. All Rights Reserved.
  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?