Removal Of Rear Piece Of Upper Spine Bone

Medicare Payment (avg)
$367.45
What Medicare actually pays
Billed Charge (avg)
$6,436.57
What providers submit
Markup
17.5x
1652% above Medicare rate
85
Total Services
59
Beneficiaries
67
Providers
0
States with Data

What You Might Pay

Est. Commercial Insurance
$1,033.39
Range: $723.37 – $1,446.74
Est. Cash / Self-Pay
$2,116.06
Typical self-pay discount

Estimated using RAND 2024 commercial-to-Medicare ratios. Actual prices vary by insurer, plan, and facility.

How we estimate these prices

These estimates are based on the RAND Hospital Price Transparency Study (4th Edition, 2024), which found that commercial insurance prices average 224% of Medicare rates nationally. We apply category-specific ratios: Musculoskeletal Surgery procedures average 2.24x Medicare rates. Cash/self-pay estimates blend typical cash discounts (55% of billed charges) with Medicare-based estimates (150% of allowed amounts). These are statistical estimates, not quotes. Contact your insurer or provider for actual costs.

What the Data Says About Removal Of Rear Piece Of Upper Spine Bone

Across 0 states with reporting providers, CPT code 22100 (Removal Of Rear Piece Of Upper Spine Bone) shows a national average Medicare payment of $367.45 against an average billed charge of $6,436.57. That gap — a 17.5x markup, or 1652% above the Medicare allowed amount — reflects chargemaster pricing, not what most insured patients actually pay. Medicare's negotiated rate is the statutory benchmark; commercial insurers typically settle between the two figures based on network contracts.

Musculoskeletal Surgery procedures like this one saw 85 services billed to Medicare in 2023 by 67 distinct providers, serving 59 unique beneficiaries. Regional variation is limited in the underlying CMS file. Geographic Practice Cost Indices (GPCIs) explain much of that spread — local malpractice premiums, practice expense, and physician work adjustments all shift the allowed amount even when the procedure is identical.

Applying RAND 2024 commercial-to-Medicare ratios specific to the Musculoskeletal Surgery category (2.24x), the estimated commercial insurance price lands near $1,033.39, with self-pay cash discounts commonly bringing the figure closer to $2,116.06. Uninsured patients facing the full billed charge have the strongest leverage to negotiate — the Hospital Price Transparency Rule (effective January 2021) requires providers to publish standard charges, cash rates, and payer-specific negotiated prices. This data is for educational reference; confirm coverage and out-of-pocket exposure with your insurer before any procedure.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does Removal Of Rear Piece Of Upper Spine Bone cost?

The national average Medicare payment for Removal Of Rear Piece Of Upper Spine Bone (CPT 22100) is $367.45, while providers typically bill $6,436.57. Prices vary significantly by state, ranging from N/A to N/A.

Why do providers charge more than Medicare pays?

Providers set their own chargemaster rates (billed charges), which are typically much higher than what any insurer pays. Medicare pays a fixed rate based on the procedure code and geographic location. The billed charge is relevant mainly for uninsured patients, who may face prices closer to the submitted charge.

How much does Removal Of Rear Piece Of Upper Spine Bone cost with insurance?

With commercial insurance, Removal Of Rear Piece Of Upper Spine Bone costs an estimated $1,033.39 on average (range: $723.37 – $1,446.74). Without insurance, the estimated cash price is $2,116.06. These estimates are based on RAND 2024 research on commercial-to-Medicare price ratios. Your actual cost depends on your insurer, plan, and provider.

How many providers perform Removal Of Rear Piece Of Upper Spine Bone?

Nationally, 67 providers billed Medicare for Removal Of Rear Piece Of Upper Spine Bone in 2023, performing 85 total services for 59 beneficiaries across 0 states and territories.

What is the billed-to-Medicare markup for Removal Of Rear Piece Of Upper Spine Bone?

Providers bill 17.5x what Medicare pays for Removal Of Rear Piece Of Upper Spine Bone — a 1652% markup. This gap between billed charges and actual payment is common across healthcare. Uninsured patients may face charges closer to the billed amount, while insured patients pay negotiated rates between the Medicare and billed figures.

Related

Data sourced from the CMS Medicare Physician and Other Practitioners dataset. See our methodology for details. Retrieved and formatted by PlainProcedure Editorial