Does UnitedHealthcare cover total hip replacement?
UHC covers total hip replacement with prior authorization. Outpatient (same-day discharge) hip replacements are increasingly approved when the surgeon and facility are certified for it. Member costs mirror knee replacement: typically $250-$1,500 on commercial PPO after deductible.
Quick summary
Coverage
Yes - typically covered
Prior authorization
Always required
Typical patient cost
Commercial insurance patient cost: $1,000-$4,500 depending on deductible and plan design. Medicare beneficiaries with Medigap pay little or nothing beyond the deductible. Uninsured patients face hospital-billed charges that often exceed $35,000-$50,000.
Prior authorization for UHC
Route through eviCore. Same 3-7 day timeline as knee. Outpatient facility approval may add a step - confirm with your surgeon before scheduling.
Always verify your specific UHC plan before scheduling. Plans within the same insurer (UnitedHealthcare) 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
- 1Call UHC member services (number on back of your insurance card) and ask specifically if total hip replacement is covered under your plan.
- 2Ask your orthopedic surgeon's office to verify benefits on your behalf - they do this routinely and can identify in-network requirements.
- 3Request the prior authorization criteria in writing if prior auth is required. Ask what documentation is needed from your surgeon.
- 4Confirm your deductible remaining for the year - your out-of-pocket cost depends on where you are in the deductible cycle.
- 5Get a pre-service cost estimate from the facility if you want a specific dollar figure before scheduling.
What to do if UHC denies coverage
Insurance denials for orthopedic procedures are common and frequently overturned on appeal. Follow these steps:
- 1Request the denial reason in writing
- 2Ask for a peer-to-peer review between your surgeon and the insurer's medical reviewer
- 3Document conservative treatment attempts with dates, provider notes, and outcomes
- 4File a formal internal appeal with clinical documentation attached
- 5Escalate to external review if denied again
- 6Contact your employer's HR benefits team if using an employer-sponsored plan - they can often expedite appeals
Common questions
Will insurance cover outpatient hip replacement?
Does insurance cover hip resurfacing?
How long does insurance prior auth for hip replacement take?
Find a Total Hip Replacement specialist who accepts UHC
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