Liposuction Cost Calculator — 2026 Price Estimator by Area & Surgeon
Get a realistic 2026 all-in estimate for a liposuction procedure by treatment scope, anesthesia type, and surgeon credentials — then connect with board-certified plastic surgeons near you.
Treatment Scope
Anesthesia Type
Surgeon Type
Location
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Get an instant estimate—add your ZIP for local pricing
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?
Liposuction costs $2,500–$16,000 all-in in 2026 depending on scope: a single small area (inner thigh, upper arm) averages $2,500–$5,000, a single large area $4,200–$6,800, multiple zones $8,500–$14,000, and full 360° circumferential $9,000–$16,000. These figures include surgeon, anesthesia, and facility fees.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q
How much does liposuction cost in 2026?
Liposuction costs $2,500 to $16,000 all-in in 2026 depending on the number of areas treated, anesthesia type, surgeon credentials, and location. A single small area (inner thigh, upper arm, or chin) typically runs $2,500 to $5,000; a single large area (full abdomen or back) costs $4,200 to $6,800; multiple zones cost $8,500 to $14,000; and full 360° circumferential reaches $9,000 to $16,000. These are all-in figures including surgeon, anesthesia, and facility fees.
Single small area (inner thigh, upper arm, chin): $2,500–$5,000
Single large area (full abdomen, back, outer thighs): $4,200–$6,800
Multiple areas (2–3 zones): $8,500–$14,000
Full 360° circumferential: $9,000–$16,000
Major metros (NYC, LA, Miami) run 25–40% above national average
Area Scope
All-In Range (2026)
Typical Anesthesia
Single small area
$2,500–$5,000
Local or IV sedation
Single large area
$4,200–$6,800
IV sedation or general
Multiple areas (2–3)
$8,500–$14,000
IV sedation or general
Full 360° circumferential
$9,000–$16,000
General anesthesia
Q
What is included in the all-in liposuction cost?
An all-in liposuction quote covers three main cost components: the surgeon's fee (typically 40–60% of the total), anesthesia (10–20%), and the surgical facility or operating room fee (20–40%). Some clinics bundle all three into a single price; others quote the surgeon fee alone and add anesthesia and facility separately. Always ask for an itemized breakdown, because a $2,000 surgeon-only quote and a $4,500 all-in quote may represent the same procedure.
Surgeon fee: typically 40–60% of total quote
Anesthesia fee: typically 10–20% of total (anesthesiologist or CRNA)
Facility / OR fee: typically 20–40% of total
Post-op compression garments: $100–$300, often billed separately
Pre-op labs and follow-up visits: $150–$500 extra at some practices
Cost Component
Typical Share
Typical Dollar Range
Surgeon fee
40–60%
$1,000–$8,000
Anesthesia fee
10–20%
$500–$2,000
Surgical facility / OR
20–40%
$800–$4,000
Compression garments
varies
$100–$300
Q
Does local anesthesia make liposuction cheaper?
Yes. Tumescent (local) anesthesia eliminates the anesthesiologist fee and usually lowers the facility fee because the procedure can be done in an office setting rather than a licensed surgical center. Patients can save $500 to $1,000 compared to IV sedation or general anesthesia. However, local anesthesia is only appropriate for one or two smaller areas; larger multi-zone or 360° procedures nearly always require IV sedation or general anesthesia for patient comfort and safety.
Local tumescent: no anesthesiologist fee, saves $500–$800
IV sedation (twilight): nurse anesthetist or anesthesiologist, adds $500–$1,000
General anesthesia: full anesthesiologist, adds $800–$1,500 or more
Local anesthesia works best for one or two small areas
Multi-zone and 360° procedures require sedation or general for safety
Q
Is a board-certified plastic surgeon worth the higher cost?
Board-certified plastic surgeons (ABPS) typically charge 20 to 28 percent more than cosmetic surgery centers that employ non-board-certified physicians or mid-level providers. For straightforward single-area liposuction on an ideal candidate, an experienced cosmetic center with a good track record can be appropriate. The credential premium earns its keep for multi-area procedures, 360° contouring, patients with complex anatomy, or revisions of prior work, where surgical judgment and complication management are more demanding.
ABPS board-certified plastic surgeon: 20–28% premium over cosmetic center
Cosmetic surgery center: lower overhead, higher volume, competitive pricing
Board certification matters most for multi-zone and 360° cases
Always verify the injecting surgeon's credentials, not just the clinic's name
Check the surgeon's before-and-after photos for work similar to your goals
Q
How does region affect liposuction prices?
Geography can move the total cost by 25 to 45 percent. Major coastal metros like New York City, Los Angeles, Miami, and San Francisco command the highest prices, driven by commercial rent, physician demand, and market expectations. Mid-size cities and the Midwest and Southeast run closer to national averages. A full-abdomen procedure at $5,000 in Charlotte, NC might cost $7,000 to $8,000 in Manhattan or Beverly Hills. Medical tourism to countries like Mexico, Colombia, and Turkey can halve US prices, but vetting credentials, follow-up care, and complication coverage becomes significantly more complex.
NYC, LA, Miami, SF: 25–40% above national average
Mid-size US cities: near national average
Midwest and Southeast: often 10–20% below national average
Medical tourism abroad: 40–60% cheaper, but adds travel and follow-up risk
Get at least two local quotes before comparing domestic vs. abroad options
Q
Does health insurance cover liposuction?
Standard health insurance does not cover cosmetic liposuction performed for aesthetic reasons. A narrow exception applies when liposuction treats a diagnosed medical condition such as lipedema (a chronic fat-distribution disorder) or is part of reconstructive surgery after significant weight loss or trauma. In those cases, coverage depends on the specific insurer, the diagnosis code, and pre-authorization. Financing through medical lending programs (CareCredit, Alphaeon, Prosper Healthcare Lending) is widely available and commonly runs 12 to 24 months no-interest for qualified borrowers.
Cosmetic liposuction: not covered by health insurance
Lipedema treatment: may qualify for partial coverage with diagnosis and pre-auth
Reconstructive post-weight-loss cases: coverage varies widely by plan
Medical financing available: CareCredit, Alphaeon, Prosper Healthcare Lending
12–24 month no-interest plans widely available for qualified applicants
Example Calculations
1Inner thigh, IV sedation, cosmetic surgery center
Inputs
Area scopeSingle small area (inner thigh)
AnesthesiaIV sedation (twilight)
ProviderCosmetic surgery center
Result
Estimated all-in cost$2,500 – $5,000
Typical surgeon fee$1,200–$2,800
Anesthesia + facility$1,200–$2,200
A single small area like the inner thigh at a cosmetic surgery center with IV sedation sits at the entry-level range for liposuction. The all-in $2,500–$5,000 covers surgeon, twilight sedation, and a licensed outpatient surgical center.
2Full abdomen, general anesthesia, board-certified plastic surgeon
Inputs
Area scopeSingle large area (full abdomen)
AnesthesiaGeneral anesthesia
ProviderBoard-certified plastic surgeon
Result
Estimated all-in cost$5,443 – $9,748
Surgeon fee (est.)$2,800–$5,200
Anesthesia + OR fee$2,600–$4,500
The full abdomen is a large treatment zone that typically requires general anesthesia. Adding a board-certified plastic surgeon's 20–28% premium to the base $4,200–$6,800 range and general anesthesia's 8–12% uplift yields $5,443–$9,748 all-in.
3Three zones (abdomen, flanks, inner thighs), IV sedation, board-certified PS
Inputs
Area scopeMultiple areas (abdomen + flanks + inner thighs)
AnesthesiaIV sedation (twilight)
ProviderBoard-certified plastic surgeon
Result
Estimated all-in cost$10,200 – $17,920
Recovery garment$150–$300 (separate)
Follow-up visitsUsually included
Treating three zones in one session at a board-certified plastic surgeon (20–28% premium) pushes the base $8,500–$14,000 multiple-area range to $10,200–$17,920 all-in. Staging the procedure across two sessions can reduce single-session risk and cost.
Formulas Used
All-in liposuction cost
Total = Surgeon fee + Anesthesia fee + Facility fee
The total out-the-door cost is the sum of three separately billed components. Always ask for each line item; a low headline number often hides high facility or anesthesia fees.
Where:
Surgeon fee= 40–60% of total; scales with area size, zone count, and surgeon credentials
Anesthesia fee= 10–20% of total; $0 for pure tumescent local, up to $1,500 for board-certified anesthesiologist
Facility fee= 20–40% of total; licensed surgical centers charge more than office-based suites
Multi-area scope adjustment
Multi-area total ≈ (Single-area cost × first zone) + (0.6–0.8 × additional zones)
Adding a second or third area does not double the cost because anesthesia and facility fees are already on the clock. Each additional zone typically adds 60–80% of the standalone single-area price.
Where:
First zone cost= Full single-area price including all overhead
0.6–0.8 factor= Marginal cost of adding a zone once anesthesia and OR are already running
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 deeper training and higher malpractice overhead.
Where:
Base cost= All-in quote from a cosmetic surgery center for the same area scope and anesthesia
1.20–1.28= ABPS credential multiplier; higher end for complex multi-area cases
Liposuction Costs in 2026: What You Actually Pay by Area, Anesthesia, and Surgeon
1
What Liposuction 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 in mind, here is what the US liposuction market looks like in 2026: a single small area — inner thigh, upper arm, chin, or knees — costs $2,500 to $5,000 all-in, meaning the surgeon's fee plus anesthesia plus surgical facility. A single large area such as the full abdomen, the back, or the outer thighs runs $4,200 to $6,800. Treating two to three zones in the same session costs $8,500 to $14,000, and full 360° circumferential liposuction of the torso reaches $9,000 to $16,000.
Those ranges represent realistic all-in prices for a board-eligible or board-certified cosmetic surgeon using IV sedation or general anesthesia in a licensed outpatient surgical center. The wide spread inside each band reflects real variation: the region, the exact zone being treated, the patient's BMI and skin elasticity, the volume of fat removed, and whether the session is a primary procedure or a revision. A Manhattan plastic surgeon charging premium rates for an abdomen case is not operating the same cost structure as a high-volume cosmetic center in the Midwest, and the quote you receive will reflect those differences.
The most important thing to understand before you call a single clinic is that liposuction is always quoted in parts even when only one number appears on the estimate. Some practices lead with the surgeon's fee alone — often $1,000 to $3,000 for a small area — and add anesthesia and facility fees later. Others bundle everything. Comparing quotes across clinics means nothing unless you are comparing the same components. The calculator above applies area scope, anesthesia type, and surgeon tier to a consistent all-in base so you arrive at consultations with a defensible anchor.
Liposuction all-in cost by area scope, US, 2026.
Area Scope
All-In Range (2026)
Typical Anesthesia
Single small area
$2,500–$5,000
Local or IV sedation
Single large area
$4,200–$6,800
IV sedation or general
Multiple areas (2–3)
$8,500–$14,000
IV sedation or general
Full 360° circumferential
$9,000–$16,000
General anesthesia
Always request an itemized quote: surgeon fee, anesthesia fee, and facility fee listed separately. A $2,200 surgeon-only number and a $4,800 all-in number may represent the same procedure. Never compare quotes that are not quoting the same components.
2
Anesthesia and Facility Fees: The Hidden 50–100% on Top of the Surgeon's Fee
The surgeon's fee is only the starting point. Anesthesia and surgical facility fees typically add another 50 to 100 percent on top of what the surgeon charges. For a straightforward single-small-area case, the surgeon might charge $1,200 to $1,800, but the anesthesia and OR fee bring the total to $2,500 to $3,500. For a multi-zone case where the surgeon charges $4,000 to $6,000, the overhead fees push the all-in bill to $8,500 to $14,000. This gap is what causes sticker shock when patients receive their first itemized estimate.
Anesthesia type is the most controllable lever on the anesthesia cost line. Tumescent local anesthesia — where a large volume of diluted lidocaine is injected into the treatment area to numb it — eliminates the need for a separate anesthesiologist or CRNA, saving $500 to $1,000 and sometimes allowing the procedure in a physician office suite rather than a licensed surgical center, which further reduces the facility fee. Tumescent liposuction is well-validated for one or two smaller areas and is the standard of care for certain body regions. The trade-off is that patients are awake and must remain still; this is manageable for a single chin or arm but is not appropriate for a full abdomen or multi-zone session where comfort and immobility matter more. IV sedation (twilight) adds a nurse anesthetist or anesthesiologist at $500 to $1,000 and requires a licensed surgical suite. General anesthesia adds $800 to $1,500 in anesthesia costs alone.
Facility fees reflect both the setting and its overhead. Accredited ambulatory surgical centers (ASCs) charge $800 to $2,500 per session. Hospital-based outpatient facilities charge more, often $2,000 to $4,000, but carry the same surgical safety infrastructure. Office-based suites under physician supervision are the lowest-cost option but vary widely in accreditation. Confirming the facility holds AAAHC, JCAHO, or state-equivalent accreditation is a basic safety check that costs you nothing to ask.
Liposuction anesthesia types and estimated cost impact, 2026.
Anesthesia Type
Setting Required
Estimated Add-On Cost
Local (tumescent)
Office suite possible
$0–$300
IV sedation (twilight)
Licensed surgical center
$500–$1,000
General anesthesia
Accredited ASC or hospital
$800–$1,500
Ask whether the facility is AAAHC or JCAHO accredited before you sign a consent form. Accreditation means the facility meets minimum safety and equipment standards that unaccredited office suites are not required to follow. The question is free and the answer matters.
3
Cosmetic Surgery Center vs Board-Certified Plastic Surgeon
The biggest single price fork in liposuction is the difference between a cosmetic surgery center (which may employ physicians who are not board-certified plastic surgeons) and a board-certified plastic surgeon (ABPS). The credential premium is real: board-certified plastic surgeons typically charge 20 to 28 percent more for equivalent procedures, driven by higher malpractice premiums, longer training, and the practice overhead of a physician-owned specialty practice. A single-small-area case priced at $3,000 at a cosmetic center might run $3,600 to $3,840 with an ABPS surgeon.
For whom is the premium worth it? The answer depends on complexity. A healthy patient at a stable weight, seeking straightforward liposuction of one or two modest areas, using a cosmetic center with a long track record, strong reviews, and a skilled operating physician has a defensible choice even when that physician is not board-certified by ABPS. The credential premium becomes more clearly justified for multi-zone procedures, 360° circumferential work, patients with prior liposuction seeking revision, or patients with anatomical variations that demand more surgical judgment. In those cases, the deeper training that ABPS certification represents translates directly into operative decision-making that can prevent asymmetry, contour irregularity, and the cost of correction.
Vetting a provider goes beyond the credential. Look at before-and-after photos showing results on patients with similar body proportions to yours. Confirm the operating physician — not a supervising physician who is elsewhere in the building — will perform your procedure. Ask how many liposuction cases they complete per year; volume correlates with outcome consistency. Confirm the anesthesia provider's credentials, not just the surgeon's. And verify that the quote you receive is valid for your specific case, not a promotional starting-from price that will escalate once the surgeon sees your anatomy.
Liposuction provider types and cost premium, 2026.
Provider Type
Typical Premium
Best For
Cosmetic surgery center
Baseline
Straightforward single-area cases, high volume
Board-certified PS (ABPS)
20–28% above baseline
Multi-zone, 360°, revisions, complex anatomy
The initials after the surgeon's name are not a substitute for reviewing actual before-and-after results. Board certification tells you the surgeon passed rigorous training requirements; their portfolio of cases similar to yours tells you they have applied that training successfully.
4
Multiple Areas, Full 360°, and How Scope Multiplies the Price
Adding a second or third area to the same surgical session does not double the cost, because anesthesia and the OR are already on the clock. Each additional zone typically adds 60 to 80 percent of that zone's standalone cost, because only the surgeon's incremental time is added. This marginal pricing structure is why a two-zone case (abdomen + flanks) often costs $6,500 to $9,500 rather than $8,400 to $12,000 (two single-large-area cases). But it also means a four-zone case can approach or exceed $14,000 to $18,000, as the procedure length increases, anesthesia extends, and revision risk rises.
Full 360° circumferential liposuction — treating the abdomen, flanks, back, and sometimes the upper arms and inner thighs in one arc — is the most comprehensive single-session option and the most expensive, typically $9,000 to $16,000. It requires general anesthesia, an extended OR time (three to six hours), and a surgeon experienced in rotating the patient during surgery. The recovery is also more demanding: weeks of compression garment wear, swelling that takes months to resolve, and a longer period before the final result is visible. Patients who choose 360° should plan four to six weeks of restricted activity and should not schedule this procedure around a fixed deadline.
An alternative worth discussing with your surgeon is staging the procedure: treating the most priority areas in session one and returning for secondary areas after recovery from session one. Staging adds a second round of anesthesia and facility fees but reduces per-session risk (lower anesthesia time, lower fluid volume, lower blood pressure stress) and lets the surgeon assess the first session's results before deciding how much additional work is needed. For complex multi-zone plans, many experienced surgeons prefer staging over a single marathon session.
If your surgeon recommends doing five or more areas in a single session, ask whether staging is safer. Prolonged anesthesia, high fluid volumes, and operator fatigue all increase risk as session length grows. A second session costs more in fees but less in risk.
Single small area (chin, inner thigh, upper arm, knees): $2,500–$5,000
Single large area (full abdomen, back, outer thighs): $4,200–$6,800
Two zones (abdomen + flanks, or thighs + knees): $6,500–$9,500
Three zones (abdomen + flanks + inner thighs): $8,500–$14,000
Full 360° (abdomen, flanks, back, possibly arms or thighs): $9,000–$16,000
Staged multi-session plan: each session adds a new anesthesia + facility set
5
When to Consult a Licensed Provider
The estimates this calculator produces are starting-point planning figures, not quotes and not medical guidance. Liposuction is a surgical procedure with real risks — including infection, contour irregularity, seroma, nerve injury, anesthesia complications, and rare but serious adverse events — that no cost estimate can capture. Before any cosmetic surgery decision, a consultation with a licensed physician is the only way to determine whether you are an appropriate candidate, which areas can safely be treated, what anesthesia approach is indicated for your health history, and what realistic results look like for your anatomy.
When choosing a provider for a consultation, look for board certification in plastic surgery (American Board of Plastic Surgery, ABPS) for comprehensive body-contouring work, or board certification in a related surgical specialty for focused procedures. Verify the surgical facility's accreditation (AAAHC, JCAHO, or state equivalent). Confirm that an anesthesia provider — not just the surgeon — will be dedicated to monitoring you throughout the procedure. Review before-and-after photographs of the surgeon's actual patients with body proportions similar to yours. And ask about the practice's complication protocol: how are post-op concerns handled, who covers after-hours calls, and what is the policy if a revision is needed.
If cost is a deciding factor in your provider choice, consider financing options through medical lending programs rather than compromising on surgeon credentials or facility accreditation to save money. The difference between a $3,000 and a $4,500 quote may represent the difference between an accredited and an unaccredited surgical setting, or between a board-certified surgeon and a physician with general training. A complication or revision can cost more than the original premium you were trying to avoid.
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.