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Hip Replacement Cost in Dayton, OH (2026): Average Prices & What You'll Pay

What does a hip replacement cost in Dayton, OH?

The same hip replacement in Dayton, OH might cost you $11,376 at one facility and $11,376 at another — the building you walk into drives the difference. The median cash price across 8 reporting hospitals is $11,376. These figures come straight from hospital price transparency files published under federal law.

Dayton, OH prices for a hip replacement span 1.1× across 8 reporting hospitals, from $11,376 (Beavercreek Medical Center in Beaver Creek) up to $12,728 (Kettering Medical Center in Miamisburg) for identical care. The median Dayton, OH price is $11,376. Most facilities fall between $11,376 and $11,376. There's a gap between the sticker and the real price here: a median cash quote of $11,376 sits above the $11,376 insurers negotiate. Even within Dayton, OH, Troy ($11,979) and Dayton ($12,052) are 1× apart on the median price.

Forecast your out-of-pocket cost

How prices are distributed across Dayton, OH hospitals:
  • Lower-cost hospitals (bottom 25%): under $11,376
  • Median hospital: $11,376
  • Higher-cost hospitals (top 30%): $11,376+

Where hip replacement costs vary in Dayton, OH

Pins show hospitals with price-transparency data (colored by vs. state average) and nearby ambulatory surgery centers, imaging centers, and other facilities (colored by type). Click any pin for facility name and estimated cost range.

Hospital (below avg) Hospital (above avg) Click a pin for details.

See every Dayton, OH hospital's price

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Cheapest Hip Replacement Providers in Dayton, OH

Based on declared cash/self-pay prices from CMS hospital price transparency files.

# Facility City Price vs Median
1 Beavercreek Medical Center Beaver Creek, OH $11,376 +$0
2 Greene Memorial Hospital Inc Xenia, OH $11,376 +$0
3 Dayton Osteopathic Hospital Dayton, OH $11,376 +$0
4 Kettering Medical Center Miamisburg, OH $11,376 +$0
5 Kettering Medical Center Troy, OH $11,376 +$0
6 Kettering Medical Center Kettering, OH $11,376 +$0
7 Upper Valley Medical Center Troy, OH $12,582 +$1,206
8 Miami Valley Hospital Dayton, OH $12,728 +$1,352

Prices are declared self-pay rates. Contact each facility for a formal quote before scheduling.

The facility you choose matters more than almost anything else — the same procedure, same quality, same state can cost 5× more at one hospital versus the one down the road.

Compare all procedure costs   → Hip Replacement costs nationwide

Check YOUR hospital's pricing → Estimate YOUR exact cost →

Worth knowing: A small number of hospitals report very high prices above $12,131, which pulls the overall range wider than what most patients encounter. The typical range above is a better guide for planning.
Every hospital in this dataset offers a cash price — with a median of $11,376. If your deductible hasn't been met, always ask for the self-pay rate before scheduling.

What you'll actually pay — example scenarios

Your situation Estimated out-of-pocket
Deductible not yet met (pay in full) ~$11,376
Deductible met — 20% coinsurance ~$2,275
Out-of-network provider $25,027+

Based on the state median facility price of $11,376. Your actual cost depends on your plan deductible, coinsurance rate, and network tier. Get YOUR personalized estimate →

What this means for you

If you haven't met your deductible, you are effectively a cash-pay patient.

That means:

  • You should verify your hospital is in-network before an elective visit when possible
  • The cheapest facility can save you $0+ vs. the median.

This is the single biggest lever most patients have to reduce their cost.

Lower-cost options in Dayton, OH start around $11,376 or below. Most hospitals cluster between $11,376 and $11,678. A smaller group reports prices above that — often academic medical centers or high-cost markets.

If you're comparing specific hospitals, the lowest self-pay rates reported in this dataset include: Beavercreek Medical Center in Beaver Creek (cash price from $11,376); Greene Memorial Hospital Inc in Xenia (cash price from $11,376); Dayton Osteopathic Hospital in Dayton (cash price from $11,376). These are declared cash prices — contact each facility for a formal quote before scheduling.

Quick decision guide:
  • Best value hospitals (lowest prices): Beavercreek Medical Center: $11,376; Greene Memorial Hospital Inc: $11,376; Dayton Osteopathic Hospital: $11,376
  • Most expensive (outpatient): Miami Valley Hospital: ~$12,728; Upper Valley Medical Center: ~$12,582

→ Choosing the right facility can save $0+ vs. the state median.

Dayton, OH Hip Replacement prices by facility

All prices below come from hospital chargemasters — the official price lists each hospital must publish under federal law. Gross charge is the undiscounted list price; cash price is the self-pay rate; negotiated range covers the spread across insurance contracts.

How we calculate "Your Price" — We prioritize the most actionable price in this order:
  1. Cash price — the self-pay rate you can actually negotiate and pay
  2. Negotiated rate — if reported by the hospital across insurance contracts
  3. Gross charge — fallback only; this is the inflated list price few people pay

This reflects the real prices patients encounter — not inflated chargemaster rates.

# Facility City Your Price vs Median Gross Charge
#1 Beavercreek Medical Center Beaver Creek, OH $11,376 +$0 $11,376–$12,650
#2 Greene Memorial Hospital Inc Xenia, OH $11,376 +$0 $11,376–$12,582
#3 Dayton Osteopathic Hospital Dayton, OH $11,376 +$0 $11,376–$12,650
#4 Kettering Medical Center Miamisburg, OH $11,376 +$0 $11,376–$12,728
#5 Kettering Medical Center Troy, OH $11,376 +$0 $11,376–$12,582
#6 Kettering Medical Center Kettering, OH $11,376 +$0 $11,376–$12,650
#7 Upper Valley Medical Center Troy, OH $12,582 +$1,206 $12,582
#8 Miami Valley Hospital Dayton, OH $12,728 +$1,352 $12,728

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We'll email you the full Dayton, OH price list as a PDF. Sourced from CMS files. No spam.

Source: CMS hospital price transparency machine-readable files. vs Median = savings or premium relative to the state median price. Gross Charge = undiscounted list price for reference.

Received a bill? Check it for errors → Estimate YOUR cost before you go →

Compare other procedures in Dayton, OH:

Where you can save the most on hip replacement in Dayton, OH

These facilities have the lowest declared prices relative to the state median — they represent the best opportunities to reduce your out-of-pocket cost for this procedure.

Facility City Your Price vs Median
Beavercreek Medical Center Beaver Creek, OH $11,376 +$0
Greene Memorial Hospital Inc Xenia, OH $11,376 +$0
Dayton Osteopathic Hospital Dayton, OH $11,376 +$0
Kettering Medical Center Miamisburg, OH $11,376 +$0
Kettering Medical Center Troy, OH $11,376 +$0

How to choose a lower-cost facility

  • Choose independent outpatient centers when possible — freestanding ASCs (ambulatory surgical centers) consistently charge less than hospital outpatient departments for identical procedures.
  • Ask for the cash price if your deductible isn't met — self-pay rates are often lower than what insurance pays before your deductible is satisfied, especially at facilities that have a high cash-price discount.
  • Avoid hospital outpatient departments for routine cases — hospital-owned locations add a facility fee that freestanding centers don't charge, often adding $500–$1,500 to the same procedure.
Important: Many procedures are done at ambulatory surgical centers (ASCs) that are often 30–60% cheaper than hospital outpatient departments with the same clinical quality. Most ASCs are not in this hospital dataset — meaning your cheapest option may not even appear here. Ask your doctor if the procedure can be done at a freestanding ASC.

Most expensive hip replacement providers in Dayton, OH

These facilities report the highest prices for this procedure. Academic medical centers and specialty hospitals often top this list — their gross charges rarely reflect what anyone actually pays, but understanding the spread helps you negotiate.

Facility City Price vs Median
Miami Valley Hospital Dayton, OH $12,728 +$1,352
Upper Valley Medical Center Troy, OH $12,582 +$1,206
Beavercreek Medical Center Beaver Creek, OH $11,376 +$0
Greene Memorial Hospital Inc Xenia, OH $11,376 +$0
Dayton Osteopathic Hospital Dayton, OH $11,376 +$0

Why prices vary this much

A small number of hospitals (2) report very high prices above $12,131, which drives much of the overall price range. Excluding these, most facilities cluster in a significantly tighter band.

Of the Dayton, OH facilities reporting prices, 6 fall in a low-cost tier (up to $11,376) while 2 sit in a high-cost tier ($11,678 and up) — a lower-priced option almost always exists within the same state.

Among the cities with the most reporting hospitals, Dayton has a median reported price of $12,052 across 2 facilities, while facilities in Troy tend to report lower prices (median: $11,979). City-level variation within a state often reflects local market structure, not procedure complexity.

The spread comes from how each hospital sets its chargemaster (the undiscounted list price), what cash discounts it applies, and what rates it negotiates with each insurer. Facility classification matters too — a hospital-owned outpatient center adds a facility fee that a freestanding clinic does not. Understanding these mechanics is the first step to paying less.

Learn more:
Allowed amount vs negotiated rate — what your EOB is really saying
How to read your medical bill
Why hospital prices are so hard to find — and what to do about it

How insurance changes what you actually pay

Hospital list prices are only part of the picture. What you pay out of pocket depends on your deductible, your plan's out-of-pocket maximum, whether the facility is in-network, and whether your plan classifies the visit as outpatient or inpatient. A lower gross charge doesn't guarantee a lower bill if the facility is out-of-network or adds facility fees your plan doesn't cover.

Understand your cost before you go:
Deductible vs out-of-pocket max
EOB vs medical bill — complete guide
How to stop medical bill problems before they start (in-network vs out-of-network)

Compare hip replacement costs in nearby states

Frequently asked questions: hip replacement costs in Dayton, OH

How much does a hip replacement cost in Dayton, OH?

Across 8 Dayton, OH hospitals that publish prices, a hip replacement ranges from $11,376 to $12,728, with a median of $11,376. Most facilities fall between $11,376 and $11,376. What you pay depends on the facility, your insurance, and whether you have met your deductible.

Where is the cheapest place to get a hip replacement in Dayton, OH?

Based on declared prices, the lowest-cost facility in our Dayton, OH data is Beavercreek Medical Center in Beaver Creek at about $11,376. By metro, Troy has the lowest median ($11,979). Freestanding ambulatory surgery and imaging centers are often cheaper still and may not appear in hospital price data — ask your doctor whether one is an option.

Why is a hip replacement so much cheaper at some Dayton, OH hospitals?

Prices vary up to 1.1× because each hospital sets its own list price, cash discount, and insurer-negotiated rates. In Dayton, OH, the median cash (self-pay) price is $11,376 versus a median negotiated rate of $11,376 — about 1× higher. Asking for the cash price or your insurer's negotiated rate is often the single biggest lever on what you pay.

How much will I actually pay out of pocket for a hip replacement in Dayton, OH?

Your out-of-pocket cost depends on your deductible, coinsurance, out-of-pocket maximum, and whether the facility is in-network — not just the sticker price. If you have not met your deductible, you will typically pay the negotiated rate in full until you do. Use the CostKits cost forecaster to estimate your specific out-of-pocket amount before you go.

Explore all hip replacement cost data

See hip replacement costs across all states

What's Actually on Your Hip Replacement Bill

A hip replacement involves multiple providers — each bills separately. Understanding each line item helps you verify your Explanation of Benefits and catch billing errors.

Hospital Inpatient

  • Drg Facility Stay — DRG 470 (major joint replacement without MCC) is most common.
  • Orthopedic Surgeon Professional Fee
  • Anesthesia
  • Implant Device Cost — Hip implant adds $5,000–$15,000+ depending on manufacturer and implant type. Often the largest single cost variable.
  • Physical Therapy Inpatient — Embedded in DRG — not a separate charge during the hospital stay.

Hip Replacement Cost by Type

Which type your doctor orders changes the billing code — and what you pay. Here's how the common types differ.

Total Hip Replacement

A recognized variation that can change the billing code and what you owe. Most common. Replaces both ball and socket.

Partial Hip Replacement (Hemiarthroplasty)

A recognized variation that can change the billing code and what you owe. Used primarily for femoral neck fractures. Replaces only the ball.

Hip Revision Surgery

A recognized variation that can change the billing code and what you owe. Replacement of a failed implant. Significantly more complex and expensive.

This Procedure Is Shoppable — Choosing the Right Facility Can Save Thousands

Hip Replacement is elective and schedulable. You have time to compare facilities — and hospital outpatient prices often run 2–4× higher than alternative settings for identical clinical outcomes.

How to shop: Ask your doctor for the CPT code, then call 2–3 facilities and request an out-of-pocket cost estimate. Confirm your insurance is accepted. If uninsured, ask for the cash-pay rate — it's usually 20–50% below the list price.

Prior Authorization Is Usually Required

Most commercial and Medicare Advantage plans require pre-approval for hip replacement before scheduling. If your doctor submits the order without prior authorization — or if the authorization lapses — your insurer can deny the entire claim, leaving you responsible for the full cost.

Action step: Call the member services number on your insurance card before scheduling. Ask: "Does this procedure require prior authorization?" Get the authorization number in writing and confirm it's attached to the claim before your appointment.

The Implant Is the Largest Cost Driver

For hip replacement, the implant or device typically accounts for 40–70% of the total hospital bill. Surgeons have preferred device relationships that affect which implant is used — and different implants can vary by $5,000–$15,000 in cost.

What to ask: Request an itemized estimate that breaks out the implant separately. Ask your surgeon whether a comparable implant is available at a lower cost.

Who performs this: Hip Replacement is typically performed by a Orthopedic Surgery. The specialist's professional fee is billed separately from the facility charge — you will likely receive separate bills from each.


CostKits compiles hospital price transparency data to help families make informed decisions. If you've received a bill for this procedure:
Analyze your medical bill for errors
How to negotiate your medical bills
Track and manage your healthcare costs (free account)

Other Procedure Costs in Dayton, OH

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About the Author

John Caruso, FSA, MAAA

Healthcare actuary with 20+ years of experience in insurance pricing, medical billing systems, and healthcare cost analytics.

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Published June 12, 2026

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