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Yes - typically coveredPrior auth: Usually required

Does Kaiser Permanente cover knee arthroscopy?

Knee arthroscopy is covered when there is a specific, identifiable mechanical problem: meniscus tear, loose bodies, or ACL/PCL injury. Coverage for arthroscopy for osteoarthritis alone (without a discrete mechanical problem) is significantly restricted after landmark studies showed no benefit over sham surgery for that indication. An MRI identifying specific structural pathology is the key prior authorization document.

Quick summary

Coverage

Yes - typically covered

Prior authorization

Usually required

Typical patient cost

With commercial insurance: $500-$2,500. Knee arthroscopy is one of the most common outpatient orthopedic procedures. Without insurance: $5,000-$10,000.

Prior authorization for Kaiser

Kaiser members generally cannot see outside orthopedic surgeons except in true emergencies, or when Kaiser refers out for highly specialized care. Kaiser orthopedic departments are integrated with primary care, imaging, and surgery scheduling, which streamlines care but limits choice. Cross-shopping between orthopedic providers as you might with a PPO plan is not how Kaiser works. Patients comparing Kaiser to other plans should weigh that tradeoff explicitly.

Always verify your specific Kaiser plan before scheduling. Plans within the same insurer (Kaiser Permanente) can have different prior authorization rules, network requirements, and cost-sharing. Call the number on the back of your insurance card or log into your plan portal to confirm coverage for your specific plan.

How to confirm your coverage before scheduling

  1. 1Call Kaiser member services (number on back of your insurance card) and ask specifically if knee arthroscopy is covered under your plan.
  2. 2Ask your orthopedic surgeon's office to verify benefits on your behalf - they do this routinely and can identify in-network requirements.
  3. 3Request the prior authorization criteria in writing if prior auth is required. Ask what documentation is needed from your surgeon.
  4. 4Confirm your deductible remaining for the year - your out-of-pocket cost depends on where you are in the deductible cycle.
  5. 5Get a pre-service cost estimate from the facility if you want a specific dollar figure before scheduling.

What to do if Kaiser denies coverage

Insurance denials for orthopedic procedures are common and frequently overturned on appeal. Follow these steps:

  1. 1Ensure MRI report clearly identifies the specific mechanical problem (meniscus tear, loose body, etc.)
  2. 2Avoid framing the indication as arthritis alone - document the discrete mechanical pathology
  3. 3Provide clinical notes describing mechanical symptoms (locking, catching, effusion)

Common questions

Will insurance cover knee scope for arthritis?
Generally no, and this is supported by medical evidence. Multiple studies have shown knee arthroscopy for degenerative arthritis without mechanical pathology provides no better outcomes than PT alone. Insurers follow this evidence. Coverage requires a specific structural problem - a meniscus tear, loose body, or ligament injury - documented on MRI.

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