Breast Augmentation Cost Calculator — 2026 Price Estimator by Implant Type
Get a realistic 2026 all-in estimate for breast augmentation by implant type, breast lift option, and surgeon credentials — then connect with board-certified plastic surgeons near you.
Implant Type
Breast Lift
Surgeon Type
Location
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Disclaimer: This calculator provides cost estimates for informational purposes only. It is not medical or dental advice, diagnosis, or treatment recommendation. Actual procedure costs vary by provider, location, insurance coverage, complications, and individual medical factors. Consult a licensed healthcare provider for medical guidance. Insurance coverage and out-of-pocket costs should be verified directly with your insurer and the provider before scheduling any procedure. This estimate does not include prescription medications, follow-up care, complications, or related ancillary services unless explicitly stated. No outcome, safety, or success rate is implied or guaranteed.
Did You Know?
Breast augmentation costs $5,000–$12,000 all-in in 2026 depending on implant type: saline implants $5,000–$8,000, silicone $6,000–$10,000, gummy-bear or cohesive gel $8,000–$12,000, fat transfer $6,000–$11,000. Adding a breast lift (mastopexy) in the same session adds $3,000–$6,000. These figures include surgeon fee, implant device, anesthesia, and facility.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q
How much does breast augmentation cost in 2026?
Breast augmentation costs $5,000 to $12,000 all-in in 2026 depending on implant type, whether a breast lift is combined, surgeon credentials, and location. Saline implants are the most affordable option at $5,000 to $8,000 all-in; silicone gel runs $6,000 to $10,000; gummy-bear or cohesive gel implants cost $8,000 to $12,000 for the implant device alone before facility and surgeon fees, pushing the all-in total to $8,000 to $12,000 or more. Fat transfer augmentation (no implant device) runs $6,000 to $11,000 but requires a liposuction donor site as part of the procedure. These are all-in figures including surgeon fee, implant cost, anesthesia, and surgical facility.
Gummy-bear / cohesive gel implants: $8,000–$12,000 all-in
Fat transfer (no implant device): $6,000–$11,000 all-in
Adding a breast lift (mastopexy): +$3,000–$6,000 to any of the above
Implant Type
All-In Range (2026)
Includes Implant Device?
Saline implants
$5,000–$8,000
Yes
Silicone gel implants
$6,000–$10,000
Yes
Gummy-bear / cohesive gel
$8,000–$12,000
Yes
Fat transfer (autologous)
$6,000–$11,000
No device (own fat)
Q
What is included in the all-in breast augmentation cost?
A true all-in breast augmentation quote covers four main cost components: the surgeon's fee (typically 35–55% of the total), the implant device cost ($800 to $2,500 per pair for FDA-cleared implants), the anesthesia fee (10–20% of the total), and the surgical facility or operating room fee (15–35% of the total). Fat transfer procedures replace the implant device cost with the donor-site liposuction cost. Some practices bundle all components into a single price; others quote the surgeon's fee alone and add the rest later. Always request an itemized breakdown before comparing quotes across clinics.
Surgeon fee: typically 35–55% of total quote
Implant device: $800–$2,500 per pair (saline to cohesive gel); not present in fat transfer
Anesthesia fee: typically 10–20% of total (nurse anesthetist or anesthesiologist)
Facility / OR fee: typically 15–35% of total (accredited surgical center)
Post-op bra and compression garments: $100–$300, often billed separately
Cost Component
Typical Share
Typical Dollar Range
Surgeon fee
35–55%
$1,800–$5,500
Implant device (pair)
10–25%
$800–$2,500
Anesthesia fee
10–20%
$600–$1,500
Surgical facility / OR
15–35%
$900–$3,500
Q
What does adding a breast lift cost on top of augmentation?
Combining a breast lift (mastopexy) with augmentation in the same session adds $3,000 to $6,000 to the all-in cost. The mastopexy component covers the extra surgeon time to reshape and reposition native breast tissue and the areola, plus the additional anesthesia time. Running both procedures in one session is typically less expensive than staging them separately, because anesthesia and surgical facility fees are incurred only once. However, the combined procedure is longer and more complex, and some surgeons recommend staging to optimize each outcome individually.
Breast lift (mastopexy) added to augmentation: +$3,000–$6,000 same session
Staging augmentation and lift separately: two separate anesthesia + facility fees
Same-session combo is typically $2,000–$4,000 cheaper than two separate procedures
Combined sessions run 3–4 hours vs 1.5–2 hours for augmentation alone
Recovery timeline extends when both procedures are combined
Q
Is a board-certified plastic surgeon worth the higher cost for breast augmentation?
Board-certified plastic surgeons (ABPS) typically charge 20 to 28 percent more than cosmetic surgery centers for equivalent breast augmentation procedures. For a straightforward saline or silicone augmentation on a patient at a stable weight with no prior breast surgery, an experienced cosmetic surgery center with strong reviews can be a sound choice. The credential premium becomes more clearly justified for gummy-bear or form-stable implants (which require precise pocket placement), fat-transfer procedures (which combine liposuction with augmentation), combined lift-augmentation procedures, and patients with prior implants seeking revision or exchange.
ABPS board-certified plastic surgeon: 20–28% premium over cosmetic center baseline
Cosmetic surgery center: competitive pricing, higher volume, variable credential depth
Board certification matters most for gummy-bear implants, fat transfer, and lift combos
Always confirm the operating surgeon's name and credentials before signing consent
Ask specifically who performs the procedure; some centers use supervising-only models
Provider Type
Typical Premium
Best Suited For
Cosmetic surgery center
Baseline
Straightforward saline or silicone augmentation
Board-certified PS (ABPS)
20–28% above baseline
Gummy-bear, fat transfer, lift combo, revisions
Q
Does health insurance cover breast augmentation?
Standard health insurance does not cover cosmetic breast augmentation performed for aesthetic reasons. A narrow exception applies when breast reconstruction is part of cancer treatment or when augmentation corrects a congenital deformity such as Poland syndrome or severe asymmetry with a documented functional impact. The Women's Health and Cancer Rights Act (WHCRA) requires insurance plans that cover mastectomy to also cover reconstruction, including augmentation of the contralateral (unaffected) breast to achieve symmetry. For purely cosmetic augmentation, medical financing through programs such as CareCredit, Alphaeon Credit, or Prosper Healthcare Lending is widely available, commonly at 12 to 24 months no-interest for qualified borrowers.
Cosmetic augmentation: not covered by health insurance
Breast reconstruction after mastectomy: WHCRA requires coverage for reconstruction
Poland syndrome / congenital deformity: may qualify with documented diagnosis
Severe asymmetry with functional impact: coverage varies widely by insurer and plan
How does location affect breast augmentation prices?
Geography can move the all-in cost by 25 to 45 percent. Major coastal metros such as New York City, Los Angeles, Miami, and San Francisco consistently command the highest prices, driven by commercial real estate costs, physician demand, and market pricing expectations. Mid-size cities and the Midwest and Southeast run closer to national averages. A silicone augmentation priced at $7,000 in Nashville may cost $10,000 to $11,500 in Beverly Hills or Manhattan. Medical tourism to countries such as Mexico, Colombia, and Turkey can reduce costs by 40 to 60 percent, but managing follow-up care, implant device warranties, and potential complications from a distance adds complexity that is difficult to quantify in dollars.
NYC, LA, Miami, SF: 25–40% above national average for equivalent procedures
Mid-size US cities: near national average
Midwest and Southeast: often 10–20% below national average
Medical tourism abroad: 40–60% cheaper; follow-up care and complication support is more complex
Get at least two local quotes before considering out-of-state or international options
Example Calculations
1Saline implants, no lift, cosmetic surgery center
Saline implants at a cosmetic surgery center with no lift sits at the entry-level band. The all-in $5,000–$8,000 covers surgeon fee, the saline device pair (typically $800–$1,200), IV sedation anesthesia, and a licensed outpatient surgical facility.
2Silicone implants, no lift, board-certified plastic surgeon
Inputs
Implant typeSilicone gel implants
Breast liftNo lift
ProviderBoard-certified plastic surgeon
Result
Estimated all-in cost$7,200 – $12,800
Surgeon fee (est.)$2,800–$5,500
Implant + anesthesia + facility$4,000–$7,000
Silicone gel at a board-certified plastic surgeon applies the 20–28% credential premium to the $6,000–$10,000 silicone base: $6,000 × 1.20 = $7,200 (min), $10,000 × 1.28 = $12,800 (max). The full range reflects regional variation and practice overhead.
3Gummy-bear implants, with breast lift, board-certified plastic surgeon
Inputs
Implant typeGummy-bear / cohesive gel implants
Breast liftYes, add breast lift
ProviderBoard-certified plastic surgeon
Result
Estimated all-in cost$12,600 – $20,000
Gummy-bear + ABPS premium$9,600–$15,360
Mastopexy add-on+$3,000–$6,000
Gummy-bear base $8,000–$12,000 × ABPS multiplier 1.20–1.28 = $9,600–$15,360, plus mastopexy add-on $3,000–$6,000 yields $12,600–$21,360 before the $20,000 sanity ceiling, producing a $12,600–$20,000 all-in range. The combined lift-augmentation session demands the most surgical judgment of any configuration.
The total out-the-door cost is the sum of four separately billed components. Fat-transfer procedures substitute a liposuction donor-site cost for the implant device line item. Always request each component as a separate line on the quote before comparing clinics.
Where:
Surgeon fee= 35–55% of total; reflects credentials, case complexity, geographic market
Implant device cost= $800–$2,500 per pair for FDA-cleared saline to cohesive gel devices; $0 for fat transfer
Anesthesia fee= 10–20% of total; nurse anesthetist or board-certified anesthesiologist billed by the hour
Facility fee= 15–35% of total; accredited ambulatory surgical centers charge $900–$3,500 per session
Surgeon-tier premium
Board-certified total = Base cost × 1.20 to 1.28
Board-certified plastic surgeons (ABPS) command a 20–28% premium above cosmetic surgery center pricing for equivalent procedures, reflecting longer specialty training, higher malpractice premiums, and the practice overhead of physician-owned specialty practices.
Where:
Base cost= All-in quote from a cosmetic surgery center for the same implant type, lift option, and anesthesia
1.20–1.28= ABPS credential multiplier; higher end for complex configurations (gummy-bear, fat transfer, combined lift)
Combined augmentation and lift cost
Combo total = (Augmentation base × surgeon multiplier) + Mastopexy add-on
When a breast lift is combined with augmentation in a single session, the mastopexy component is priced as a flat add-on rather than a standalone procedure, because anesthesia and facility fees are shared. This makes same-session combination typically cheaper than two separate procedures.
Where:
Augmentation base= All-in implant-type base range before surgeon tier adjustment
Surgeon multiplier= 1.0 for cosmetic center, 1.20–1.28 for ABPS board-certified plastic surgeon
Mastopexy add-on= Flat addition of $3,000–$6,000 for the breast lift component in the same session
Breast Augmentation Costs in 2026: What You Actually Pay by Implant Type, Lift, and Surgeon
1
What Breast Augmentation Costs in 2026
The figures this calculator produces are informational estimates based on 2026 US market data. As noted in the disclaimer above, actual procedure costs vary significantly by provider, location, individual anatomy, and complications. With that framing established, here is what the US breast augmentation market looks like in 2026: saline implants, the most affordable implant option, cost $5,000 to $8,000 all-in, meaning surgeon fee plus implant device plus anesthesia plus surgical facility. Silicone gel implants run $6,000 to $10,000 all-in. Gummy-bear or cohesive form-stable gel implants carry the highest all-in price at $8,000 to $12,000 because of the higher implant device cost and the precision required for pocket placement. Fat-transfer augmentation, which uses the patient's own harvested fat instead of a prosthetic device, runs $6,000 to $11,000 because it involves two surgical sites: a liposuction donor area and the breast recipient area.
Those ranges represent realistic all-in prices at a cosmetic surgery center or board-certified plastic surgeon's practice, using IV sedation anesthesia in an accredited outpatient surgical center. The wide band inside each range reflects real variation: the geographic market, the surgeon's credentials and case volume, the patient's anatomy and tissue characteristics, the exact implant profile and size chosen, and whether the procedure is primary (first-time) or a revision of previous work. A board-certified plastic surgeon in Beverly Hills charging premium rates for cohesive gel implants is operating in a different cost structure than a high-volume cosmetic center in the South, and the quote you receive will reflect those differences directly.
The most important thing to understand before calling any single clinic is that breast augmentation is nearly always quoted in parts, even when only a single number appears on the estimate. Some practices lead with the surgeon fee alone, which for a straightforward saline augmentation may be $1,800 to $2,500, then add the implant device, anesthesia, and facility costs later in the process. Others bundle all four components upfront. Comparing quotes across multiple clinics requires that you be comparing the same four components. The calculator above applies implant type, lift option, and surgeon tier to a consistent all-in base so that you arrive at consultations with a well-anchored starting number.
Breast augmentation all-in cost by implant type, US, 2026.
Implant Type
All-In Range (2026)
Implant Device Cost (Pair)
Saline implants
$5,000–$8,000
$800–$1,200
Silicone gel implants
$6,000–$10,000
$1,200–$1,800
Gummy-bear / cohesive gel
$8,000–$12,000
$1,800–$2,500
Fat transfer (autologous)
$6,000–$11,000
No device (own fat)
Always request an itemized quote listing surgeon fee, implant device cost (per pair), anesthesia fee, and facility fee separately. A $4,000 surgeon-only quote and an $8,000 all-in quote may represent the same procedure with different billing transparency. Never compare quotes that are not quoting the same components.
2
Implant Types: Saline, Silicone, Gummy-Bear, and Fat Transfer
Saline implants are filled with sterile salt water after insertion, which means they can be placed through a smaller incision and adjusted for volume on the table. The implant shell is silicone, but the filler is saline. FDA-approved for primary augmentation in patients 18 and older in the US, saline implants are the most price-competitive option at $5,000 to $8,000 all-in because the device itself costs $800 to $1,200 per pair wholesale. The tradeoff discussed in consults is that saline implants have a firmer feel than silicone in patients with less native breast tissue, and visible rippling is more common in thin patients. If a saline implant ruptures, the body absorbs the saline harmlessly, and the deflation is immediately apparent — a practical advantage in detecting failure early.
Silicone gel implants cost $6,000 to $10,000 all-in and are FDA-approved for patients 22 and older in the US. The silicone filler feels more similar to natural breast tissue, which is why they are the most commonly chosen implant type in the US market. The device itself costs $1,200 to $1,800 per pair. Because silicone gel can leak silently (unlike saline), the FDA recommends MRI screenings to detect silent rupture: at three years post-implant and every two years thereafter. That ongoing monitoring cost, while separate from the augmentation price, is a real out-of-pocket consideration when evaluating long-term cost of ownership. Gummy-bear or form-stable cohesive gel implants are the premium tier, priced at $8,000 to $12,000 all-in. The device material is a cross-linked silicone gel that maintains its shape under compression. Gummy-bear implants require a larger incision, precise pocket dissection, and orientation markers — technical demands that favor experienced surgeons and justify the board-certified premium for this implant type. Device cost per pair runs $1,800 to $2,500.
Fat-transfer breast augmentation, sometimes called natural augmentation or autologous augmentation, uses the patient's own harvested fat to add volume to the breast without a prosthetic device. The all-in cost of $6,000 to $11,000 covers the liposuction donor procedure (most commonly the flanks, abdomen, or thighs), fat processing, and injection into the breast tissue. Because no implant device is used, there is no implant device line item — but the liposuction donor step adds OR time, a second surgical site, and a second recovery zone. Fat transfer typically achieves modest size increases (roughly half a cup size to one full cup size), and some fat is reabsorbed by the body during healing, meaning final volume settles over months. It is not a substitute for implant-based augmentation when the patient's goal is a significant size change.
Breast implant types by FDA age minimum, device cost, and 2026 all-in range.
Implant Type
FDA Age Minimum
Device Cost (Pair)
All-In 2026
Saline
18+
$800–$1,200
$5,000–$8,000
Silicone gel
22+
$1,200–$1,800
$6,000–$10,000
Gummy-bear / cohesive gel
22+
$1,800–$2,500
$8,000–$12,000
Fat transfer (autologous)
18+
None (own fat)
$6,000–$11,000
Fat-transfer augmentation produces more modest and gradual size increases than implant-based augmentation and requires a liposuction donor site. It is not a drop-in alternative when the patient's goal is a significant volume change. Discuss realistic size expectations with a plastic surgeon before choosing this approach.
3
Breast Lift and Mastopexy: The Cost of Combining Procedures
A breast lift (mastopexy) reshapes and repositions the native breast tissue and nipple-areola complex to address ptosis (drooping) that augmentation alone cannot correct. Adding a mastopexy in the same session as augmentation costs $3,000 to $6,000 more than augmentation alone. That add-on reflects the surgeon's additional time to make and close the mastopexy incisions (typically a periareolar, vertical, or anchor pattern depending on the degree of ptosis), the extended anesthesia time, and the additional complexity of planning two procedures simultaneously. Combined augmentation-mastopexy is one of the more technically demanding cases in plastic surgery because the surgeon must balance tension on two sets of tissues simultaneously: the implant pocket and the skin envelope. The combined approach typically adds 1.5 to 2.5 hours to OR time compared to augmentation alone.
From a pure cost standpoint, combining both procedures in one session is typically $2,000 to $4,000 less expensive than staging them six to twelve months apart, because anesthesia and surgical facility fees run only once. A standalone mastopexy at a board-certified plastic surgeon's practice costs $4,000 to $8,000 all-in; performing it as an add-on to augmentation in the same session reduces the incremental cost to $3,000 to $6,000 because the setup costs are shared. The tradeoff is that a combined session runs longer (three to four hours vs one and a half to two hours for augmentation alone), which increases anesthesia risk and requires the surgeon to be in top form throughout. Some experienced plastic surgeons recommend staging the two procedures for patients who need significant tissue repositioning, so that the augmentation's effect on tissue tension can be assessed before the mastopexy incision pattern is finalized.
Recovery from a combined augmentation-mastopexy is more demanding than recovery from augmentation alone. Patients typically need four to six weeks of restricted upper-body activity rather than the two to three weeks typical of augmentation alone. Post-operative compression garments must accommodate both the implant pockets and the mastopexy incisions. Swelling from both procedures overlaps, which means the final result is not visible until three to six months post-op, longer than the two to three month timeline for augmentation alone. These recovery considerations belong in your planning process even though they do not appear in the dollar estimate this calculator produces.
Breast augmentation with and without breast lift, 2026 all-in ranges.
Procedure Configuration
Estimated All-In Range
OR Time (Approx.)
Augmentation only (saline)
$5,000–$8,000
1.5–2 hours
Augmentation only (silicone)
$6,000–$10,000
1.5–2 hours
Augmentation + breast lift (mastopexy)
$8,000–$18,000
3–4 hours
Standalone mastopexy only
$4,000–$8,000
2–3 hours
Combining augmentation and mastopexy in one session is typically $2,000–$4,000 less expensive than staging them separately because anesthesia and facility fees are shared. However, the combined procedure demands more surgical judgment and a longer recovery. Discuss your specific degree of ptosis and your surgeon's staging recommendation before deciding.
4
Cosmetic Surgery Center vs Board-Certified Plastic Surgeon
The largest single price fork in breast augmentation is the credential gap between a cosmetic surgery center, which may employ physicians who are not board-certified plastic surgeons, and a board-certified plastic surgeon with American Board of Plastic Surgery (ABPS) certification. The credential premium is real and measurable: ABPS board-certified surgeons typically charge 20 to 28 percent more than cosmetic surgery centers for equivalent breast augmentation procedures. On a $7,000 baseline silicone augmentation case, that premium translates to a $1,400 to $1,960 additional cost — reaching $8,400 to $8,960 for the same implant type at a board-certified practice. The premium reflects longer specialty training (a minimum six years of residency and fellowship), higher malpractice insurance premiums, and the practice overhead of a physician-owned specialty practice.
For whom is the premium worth it? For a straightforward saline or silicone primary augmentation in a healthy patient at a stable weight with no prior breast surgery and adequate native tissue coverage, an experienced cosmetic surgery center with a strong track record and a skilled operating physician can be a sound choice even when that physician is not ABPS-certified. The credential premium earns its keep most clearly in four scenarios: gummy-bear or form-stable cohesive gel implants, which require precise pocket creation and device orientation that demand technical mastery; fat-transfer augmentation, which combines two procedures and requires experienced judgment about fat survival and harvest volume; combined augmentation-mastopexy, one of the most technically demanding cases in plastic surgery; and revisionary augmentation to correct prior implant malposition, capsular contracture, or asymmetry from a previous procedure. In each of these, the deeper training and complication-management experience that board certification represents translate directly into procedural decisions that affect the outcome.
Vetting a provider goes well beyond the credential itself. Review before-and-after photographs from the surgeon's actual patients, specifically photos of patients with body proportions, implant goals, and starting tissue characteristics similar to yours. Confirm that the operating surgeon — not a supervising physician elsewhere in the building or a less-credentialed associate — will perform your procedure from incision to closure. Ask how many breast augmentation cases the surgeon performs per year; volume correlates with consistent outcomes for technically demanding procedures like fat transfer and gummy-bear placement. Confirm the implant device brand and model that will be used, and verify its FDA clearance status and the practice's policy on implant replacement if a warranty-covered failure occurs within the device's warranty window.
Breast augmentation provider comparison by credential and cost premium, 2026.
Provider Type
Typical Premium
Credential Matters Most For
Cosmetic surgery center
Baseline
Saline / silicone primary augmentation, high volume
Board-certified PS (ABPS)
20–28% above baseline
Gummy-bear, fat transfer, lift combo, revisions
The initials after a surgeon's name confirm training requirements were met. Their portfolio of before-and-after results on patients with anatomy similar to yours confirms those requirements were applied successfully. Review both before committing to a provider.
5
When to Consult a Licensed Provider
The estimates this calculator produces are starting-point planning figures, not quotes and not medical guidance. Breast augmentation is a surgical procedure with real risks — including capsular contracture, implant malposition, asymmetry, infection, seroma, anesthesia complications, and the ongoing possibility of future implant revision or removal — that no cost estimate can capture. Before any surgical decision, a consultation with a licensed plastic surgeon or qualified cosmetic physician is the only way to determine whether you are an appropriate candidate, which implant type and profile fit your anatomy, what anesthesia approach is indicated for your health history, whether a breast lift is medically indicated alongside augmentation, and what realistic outcomes look like given your tissue characteristics.
When evaluating providers for an initial consultation, prioritize board certification in plastic surgery (American Board of Plastic Surgery, ABPS) for any procedure involving implant devices, fat transfer, or combined mastopexy. Verify that the surgical facility holds AAAHC, JCAHO, or state-equivalent accreditation, which confirms minimum safety and equipment standards. Confirm that a dedicated anesthesia provider — separate from the operating surgeon — will monitor you throughout the procedure. Request to see before-and-after photographs from the surgeon's own patients, specifically for the implant type and size range you are considering. Ask about the practice's revision policy and complication protocol: who covers after-hours calls, how post-op concerns are triaged, and what the policy is if a revision or exchange is needed within the first year.
If cost is a primary factor in your provider selection, explore medical financing options before compromising on surgeon credentials or facility accreditation to reduce upfront cost. The price difference between a $6,500 quote and a $9,000 quote may reflect the difference between an unaccredited office suite and an AAAHC-accredited surgical center, or between a cosmetic center physician with general training and an ABPS-certified specialist with a decade of breast augmentation volume. A complication requiring surgical correction, a capsular contracture requiring implant exchange, or a revision to correct malposition can cost more than the premium you were trying to avoid. The consultation itself — typically $100 to $250, sometimes applied to the procedure if you proceed — is the most cost-effective investment in the process.
This calculator provides cost estimates for informational purposes only — it is not medical advice. Consult a licensed, board-certified plastic surgeon or qualified cosmetic physician before making any surgical decision. Your health, anatomy, and goals require a professional assessment this tool cannot replace.
This calculator is provided for informational and educational purposes only. Results are estimates and should not be considered professional financial, medical, legal, or other advice. Always consult a qualified professional before making important decisions. UseCalcPro is not responsible for any actions taken based on calculator results.