There is no single price for a doctor visit in the United States. The amount a patient pays depends on the type of visit, the provider's network status, the patient's insurance plan, and, increasingly, whether the patient asked for a cash price in advance.
This article explains the typical price ranges, where those numbers come from, and the rights patients have under the federal No Surprises Act and the hospital price-transparency rule. We do not provide billing advice for any specific case, but the framework here is the one consumer-finance and patient-advocacy groups generally recommend.
Typical price ranges, with caveats
A primary-care visit billed to insurance typically lists at $150–$300 before any contracted discount. Specialty visits — cardiology, dermatology, orthopedics — often list at $250–$500. Urgent care sits in between, and emergency-department visits start in the high hundreds and climb quickly when imaging, labs, or procedures are added.
These are list prices. What a patient actually pays depends on the insurer's negotiated rate, the deductible, and any copay or coinsurance. Cash prices — what an uninsured patient or a patient choosing to pay out of pocket would owe — are often lower than the list price but higher than the insured negotiated rate.
What 'in-network' really means
An in-network provider has agreed to a contracted rate with your insurer. The contracted rate is usually substantially below the list price. Visits to out-of-network providers are billed at higher rates, and your plan may pay a smaller share or none at all.
Confirming network status before a visit is the single most effective cost-control step a patient can take. Insurer directories are imperfect; calling the provider's billing office and giving them your plan name is more reliable.
Surprise bills and the No Surprises Act
Since 2022, federal law has limited many out-of-network surprise bills for emergency care and for certain services delivered by out-of-network clinicians at in-network facilities. The protections do not cover every situation — ground ambulance is a notable gap — but they significantly reduce the risk of unexpected charges in covered scenarios.
Patients who believe they have been surprise-billed can file a complaint with the federal No Surprises Help Desk. Self-pay patients are also entitled to a Good Faith Estimate before scheduled, non-emergency services.
Asking for prices in advance
Under federal price-transparency rules, hospitals are required to publish standard charges for a defined set of shoppable services. Compliance is uneven, but the underlying data is available for many systems, often through patient-facing estimator tools.
For routine care, the most reliable approach is to ask the provider's billing office for: the CPT code that will be used, the in-network negotiated rate for your plan, the cash price, and any expected coinsurance. Not every office will provide all four numbers, but most will provide at least two.
When cash pay is cheaper than insurance
For low-cost services and high-deductible plans, the cash price can be lower than what would otherwise be applied to the deductible. Common examples include generic prescriptions, routine imaging at independent centers, and some lab tests.
Patients who choose to pay cash should ask whether the charge can still be submitted to insurance for deductible credit. Policies vary by provider and plan.
