Get a realistic 2026 estimate for tummy tuck surgery by procedure type, combined liposuction, and surgeon tier — then request itemized quotes from board-certified plastic surgeons near you.
Procedure Type
Add-Ons
Surgeon
Location
Get an instant estimate—add your ZIP for local pricing
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?
A tummy tuck costs $4,000–$20,000+ in 2026 depending on scope: a mini abdominoplasty runs $4,000–$8,000, a full procedure $8,000–$15,000, and an extended fleur-de-lis $12,000–$20,000. The ASPS 2024 national average is about $11,900 all-in including surgeon, anesthesia, and facility fees.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q
How much does a tummy tuck cost in 2026?
Most US patients pay $8,000 to $15,000 for a full tummy tuck in 2026, with a national average around $11,900 according to ASPS data. A mini abdominoplasty runs $4,000 to $8,000 and an extended procedure costs $12,000 to $20,000. These are informational estimates; consult a licensed provider for an actual quote. Board-certified plastic surgeons typically charge 15 to 20 percent more than general cosmetic surgery centers, and adding liposuction adds $2,000 to $4,000.
Mini tummy tuck: $4,000–$8,000
Full abdominoplasty: $8,000–$15,000 (ASPS national average ~$11,900)
Extended / fleur-de-lis: $12,000–$20,000
Combined liposuction add-on: +$2,000–$4,000
Board-certified PS premium: roughly 15–20% above cosmetic center rate
Procedure
Typical All-In Cost
Recovery Time
Mini tummy tuck
$4,000–$8,000
2–3 weeks
Full abdominoplasty
$8,000–$15,000
4–6 weeks
Extended / fleur-de-lis
$12,000–$20,000
6–8 weeks
Full + liposuction
$10,000–$19,000
5–7 weeks
Q
What is included in a tummy tuck cost estimate?
A complete all-in tummy tuck quote covers four line items: the surgeon fee (averaging $6,150 per ASPS 2024 data), the anesthesiologist fee ($1,500 to $2,000 for general anesthesia), the surgical facility or OR fee ($1,500 to $2,500), and ancillary costs such as pre-op labs, compression garment, and post-op visits ($500 to $1,000). Items typically not included are prescription pain medication, physical therapy, revision surgery, and treatment of complications. Always request an itemized written quote from any provider.
Excluded: prescription meds, complications, revision surgery
Q
Is a tummy tuck covered by health insurance?
Cosmetic abdominoplasties are almost never covered by health insurance. A narrow exception is a panniculectomy — surgical removal of a hanging pannus causing chronic skin infections, rashes, or hygiene problems after major weight loss — which may qualify for partial coverage. A panniculectomy does not include muscle repair and is not the same procedure as a tummy tuck. Patients should verify coverage directly with their insurer before scheduling. Common financing options include CareCredit, Prosper Healthcare Lending, and in-office payment plans.
Cosmetic abdominoplasty: almost always not covered
Panniculectomy (functional): may qualify for partial coverage
Panniculectomy vs tummy tuck: no muscle repair in a panniculectomy
Verify coverage directly with your insurer before booking
Common financing: CareCredit, Prosper Healthcare Lending, in-office plans
Procedure
Insurance Coverage?
Typical Out-of-Pocket
Cosmetic abdominoplasty
No
$8,000–$15,000
Panniculectomy (functional)
Possible
$5,000–$12,000 after coverage
Tummy tuck + liposuction
No
$10,000–$19,000
Q
What factors affect tummy tuck pricing the most?
Procedure scope is the single biggest driver: a mini tummy tuck costs roughly half of a full abdominoplasty because it skips the upper-abdomen muscle repair and belly-button repositioning. Surgeon credentials come second — board-certified plastic surgeons (ABPS) charge 15 to 20 percent more than cosmetic surgery centers. Geographic market is third: Miami, Los Angeles, and New York City practices price 25 to 40 percent above the national average. Adding liposuction in the same session also raises the total but typically costs less than two separate bookings.
Procedure scope (mini vs full vs extended): biggest cost driver
Surgeon credentials: ABPS 15–20% premium over cosmetic center
Geographic market: major metros 25–40% above national average
Combined lipo add-on: +$2,000–$4,000 but cheaper than two separate procedures
Facility type: accredited surgery center vs hospital OR adds $500–$1,500
Q
How does a mini tummy tuck differ from a full abdominoplasty?
A mini tummy tuck uses a shorter incision below the navel, does not reposition the belly button, and does not repair the upper abdominal muscles. It suits patients near their ideal weight with mild skin laxity limited to the lower abdomen. A full abdominoplasty uses a hip-to-hip incision, repositions the navel, and tightens the rectus abdominis muscles from sternum to pubis — the muscle repair that corrects diastasis recti. The full procedure costs roughly twice as much and requires four to six weeks of recovery versus two to three for the mini.
Mini: shorter incision, no navel move, no upper muscle repair
Full: hip-to-hip incision, navel repositioned, full rectus muscle repair
Mini best for: mild lower-abdomen laxity, near ideal weight
Full best for: post-pregnancy, significant weight loss, diastasis recti
Recovery: mini ~2–3 weeks; full ~4–6 weeks; extended ~6–8 weeks
Example Calculations
1Mini tummy tuck, no lipo, board-certified PS
Inputs
Procedure typeMini tummy tuck
Combined liposuctionNo
SurgeonBoard-certified plastic surgeon
RegionNational average
Result
Typical all-in estimate$4,000 – $7,500
Surgeon fee portion~$2,500–$4,500
Anesthesia + facility~$1,500–$3,000
A mini abdominoplasty targets only the skin below the navel. At a board-certified plastic surgeon, the all-in national estimate lands at $4,000 to $7,500, with the surgeon fee making up roughly 55 to 60 percent of the total.
2Full abdominoplasty, no lipo, cosmetic surgery center
Inputs
Procedure typeFull abdominoplasty
Combined liposuctionNo
SurgeonCosmetic surgery center
RegionNational average
Result
Typical all-in estimate$6,800 – $11,900
Board-certified PS equivalent$8,000–$14,000
ASPS national average (all providers)~$11,900
A full abdominoplasty at a cosmetic surgery center runs roughly 15% below a board-certified plastic surgeon's rate. The ASPS national average of ~$11,900 blends both provider tiers; this estimate reflects the lower-cost tier of the market.
3Full abdominoplasty, with liposuction, board-certified PS
Inputs
Procedure typeFull abdominoplasty
Combined liposuctionAdd liposuction
SurgeonBoard-certified plastic surgeon
RegionNational average
Result
Typical all-in estimate$10,000 – $18,000
Liposuction add-on+$2,000–$4,000
Base procedure cost$8,000–$14,000
Combining liposuction with a full abdominoplasty in one session adds $2,000 to $4,000 to the quote but typically saves $1,500 to $3,000 versus two separate bookings, since one anesthesia block and one facility fee covers both procedures.
Most plastic surgery practices quote a bundled all-in price, but the split is roughly: surgeon fee 50–55%, anesthesia 13–17%, facility 13–20%, ancillary costs 4–9%. The ASPS 2024 average surgeon fee of $6,150 represents only the surgeon's portion of the total.
Where:
Surgeon fee= Averages $6,150 nationally (ASPS 2024); higher in major metros and for ABPS-certified surgeons
Anesthesia fee= Typically $1,500–$2,000 for general anesthesia, billed per hour by the anesthesiologist
Facility fee= Accredited outpatient surgery center $1,500–$2,000; hospital OR up to $2,500 or more
Savings = Sum of separate procedure costs − combined-session total
When two procedures share one anesthesia block and one OR session, the combined booking almost always costs less than the sum of two separate procedures. Combining liposuction with a tummy tuck in one session typically saves $1,500 to $3,000 versus scheduling each independently.
Where:
Separate-session overhead= Each standalone booking incurs a full facility fee and anesthesia charge
Combined-session overhead= One anesthesia block and one facility fee are split across both procedures in a single visit
Tummy Tuck Costs in 2026: What You Pay for Mini, Full, and Extended Abdominoplasty
1
What a Tummy Tuck Costs in 2026
The figures throughout this guide are informational cost estimates designed to help you prepare for the financial side of surgery. They are not medical advice, diagnoses, or binding quotes from any provider. As the disclaimer at the top of this page notes, actual costs vary by provider credentials, facility type, your individual anatomy, the complexity of your case, and any complications that arise. Use these estimates to set a realistic budget and to ask better questions before your consultations — not to make a booking decision on their own.
With that framing in place: in 2026, a tummy tuck in the United States typically costs $8,000 to $15,000 for a full abdominoplasty, the most common procedure. The American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS) reported a national average surgeon fee of $6,150 for abdominoplasty in 2024, and when the anesthesiologist fee, the surgical facility cost, and ancillary costs are added, the all-in total averages about $11,900. A mini tummy tuck — which targets only the lower-abdomen skin below the navel without repositioning the belly button or repairing the upper muscles — typically costs $4,000 to $8,000. At the other end, an extended or fleur-de-lis abdominoplasty that also removes excess skin from the flanks costs $12,000 to $20,000.
The spread within each range is wide because three independent variables compound one another: the scope of the procedure itself, the surgeon tier, and the geographic market. A board-certified plastic surgeon credentialed by the American Board of Plastic Surgery (ABPS) typically charges 15 to 20 percent more than a general cosmetic surgery center for the same operation. A practice in Miami, Los Angeles, or New York City routinely prices 25 to 40 percent above the national median. And adding liposuction to contour the waist or flanks during the same session adds $2,000 to $4,000 but usually costs less than scheduling liposuction separately, because a single anesthesia block and one facility booking covers both procedures.
Tummy tuck cost by procedure type, all-in estimates including surgeon, anesthesia, and facility, US 2026.
Procedure
Typical All-In Cost
Scope
Mini tummy tuck
$4,000–$8,000
Lower abdomen only; no navel repositioned
Full abdominoplasty
$8,000–$15,000
Full abdomen, muscle repair, navel repositioned
Extended / fleur-de-lis
$12,000–$20,000
Abdomen plus flanks; maximum skin removal
Full + liposuction
$10,000–$19,000
Full abdominoplasty with waist or flank contouring
The ASPS average surgeon fee of $6,150 is just one line item. Always ask for an all-in quote that explicitly covers the surgeon fee, the anesthesiologist, the facility or OR charge, pre-op labs, and the compression garment. A quote that looks significantly lower than the range above almost always omits one of those components.
2
What Drives the Final Price of Abdominoplasty
Procedure scope is the most powerful cost lever available to patients. A mini tummy tuck is a fundamentally different operation from a full abdominoplasty: shorter incision, no navel repositioning, and no repair of the rectus abdominis muscles. Skipping those steps cuts both the OR time and the surgeon fee by roughly half. The moment a surgeon determines that the patient needs upper-abdomen muscle repair — for example, to correct diastasis recti after pregnancy — the procedure upgrades to a full abdominoplasty and the cost jumps accordingly. Patients who ask their surgeon to assess their muscle separation before committing to a procedure type are making the single most financially impactful decision available to them at the consultation.
Surgeon credentials and experience are the second biggest driver. Board-certified plastic surgeons credentialed by the American Board of Plastic Surgery complete at least five or six years of postgraduate surgical training following medical school, with a mandatory body-contouring rotation. Cosmetic surgery centers may employ physicians trained in other specialties — ranging from family medicine to OB-GYN — who have completed additional cosmetic-surgery courses. The credentials, hands-on case volume, and complication-management experience can vary significantly between those pathways. The ABPS premium of 15 to 20 percent per procedure reflects that difference in training depth, and whether it is worth paying depends on the complexity of the specific case.
Geographic market stacks on top of everything else. A board-certified plastic surgeon practicing in New York City or Los Angeles operates in a market where practice overhead, nurse wages, facility lease costs, and patient willingness to pay all run substantially above the national median. The same surgeon relocating to a midsize city in the Midwest or Southeast would routinely quote 20 to 35 percent less for an identical procedure. When you are comparing quotes from different sources — an online directory, a national chain, and a local independent practice — normalize for location before drawing any conclusion about whether one price is high or low.
The role of combined procedures deserves separate consideration because it affects cost in two directions simultaneously. Adding liposuction to a tummy tuck raises the session total by $2,000 to $4,000. But because only one anesthesia block and one facility session covers both operations, the combined booking almost always costs $1,500 to $3,000 less than scheduling the two procedures separately on different dates. Patients who are considering both should always ask their surgeon to quote a combined-session price alongside the individual-procedure prices.
Never compare tummy tuck quotes without verifying that each includes the same line items. Two surgeons may quote $9,000 and $13,000 for a "full tummy tuck" but differ on whether the anesthesiologist, the facility, and the post-surgical compression garment are included. Get an itemized written breakdown before making any side-by-side comparison.
Procedure scope: mini vs full vs extended is the single biggest cost variable
Surgeon tier: ABPS board-certified plastic surgeon vs cosmetic surgery center (15–20% premium)
Geographic market: major metros (NYC, LA, Miami) run 25–40% above national average
Combined liposuction: +$2,000–$4,000, but typically $1,500–$3,000 cheaper than two separate bookings
Facility type: accredited outpatient surgery center vs hospital OR ($500–$1,500 difference)
Anesthesia type: general anesthesia costs more than twilight sedation; most full tummy tucks require general
Pre-op health: cardiac clearance, additional labs, or a pre-surgical weight-loss requirement add ancillary costs
3
Cosmetic Surgery Center vs Board-Certified Plastic Surgeon
Understanding the provider landscape helps you evaluate quotes and set expectations accurately. In the US cosmetic surgery market, two main provider types perform abdominoplasty: cosmetic surgery centers — which may be staffed by physicians trained in other specialties who have completed additional cosmetic training courses — and board-certified plastic surgeons credentialed by the American Board of Plastic Surgery (ABPS). The training pathways are substantially different, and that difference matters most in complex cases.
ABPS certification requires completing an approved plastic surgery residency of at least five years following medical school, plus a written and oral board examination. The certification is procedure-specific and includes dedicated training in abdominoplasty, flap reconstruction, diastasis repair, wound management, and complication treatment — including managing seromas, hematomas, wound dehiscence, and contour irregularities. Cosmetic surgery training programs, by contrast, vary widely in length, case volume, and supervised hands-on experience. Some programs are rigorous; others consist of brief courses with limited case exposure. Checking a surgeon's credentials at abplasticsurgery.org takes less than a minute and removes all ambiguity.
From a pure cost perspective, ABPS-certified plastic surgeons charge a premium of 15 to 20 percent over general cosmetic centers. For a full abdominoplasty, that translates to roughly $1,200 to $2,800 more in the surgeon fee line item, depending on geographic market. Whether that premium is worth paying depends on the specific clinical situation. For straightforward cases in patients near their ideal weight, with mild-to-moderate skin laxity and no prior abdominal surgery, a skilled cosmetic surgeon with substantial experience can produce a good result. For patients with significant diastasis recti, previous cesarean deliveries, prior hernia repair, or substantial excess skin, the complexity of the muscle repair and the risk profile of the operation make ABPS training directly relevant to the outcome.
Provider type comparison for tummy tuck surgery, US 2026.
Criterion
Cosmetic Surgery Center
Board-Certified Plastic Surgeon
Training pathway
Varies; additional cosmetic courses
ABPS residency 5+ years, board exams
Credential verification
State medical board only
abplasticsurgery.org + state board
Typical surgeon fee premium
Baseline (0%)
+15–20% vs cosmetic center
Full abdominoplasty range
$6,500–$12,000
$8,000–$15,000
Best for
Straightforward cases, budget-focused
Complex anatomy, diastasis, revisions
The "board-certified" label in cosmetic surgery marketing is not regulated. Only ABPS certification — verifiable at abplasticsurgery.org — confirms plastic-surgery-specific residency training. Confirm any surgeon's credentials before booking, regardless of how the practice markets itself.
4
When to Consult a Licensed Provider
The cost estimates in this calculator are a planning tool, not a substitute for a consultation with a licensed medical professional. Before making any decision about abdominoplasty, schedule in-person consultations with at least two board-certified plastic surgeons. A consultation allows the surgeon to evaluate your specific anatomy — skin laxity, degree of diastasis recti, prior abdominal surgeries, current body weight and weight stability, and overall health status — all of which directly determine which procedure is appropriate for your case, what a realistic outcome looks like, and what the true all-in cost will be. No online calculator or cost guide can replicate that clinical assessment.
Schedule a consultation sooner rather than later if you have questions about candidacy, recovery, or how your health history affects your risk profile. Tummy tuck surgery carries real surgical risks: infection, seroma formation, hematoma, delayed wound healing, contour irregularities, and anesthesia-related events. Your current medications, prior surgeries, and chronic conditions affect those risks in ways that require physician review. Most surgeons also recommend waiting at least six to twelve months after reaching a stable weight before scheduling, and women planning future pregnancies are typically advised to defer surgery until their family is complete.
Use the estimate from this calculator to arrive at your consultations with realistic financial expectations. Ask each surgeon for an itemized all-in written quote, confirm who will actually perform the procedure and their specific credentials, ask about the revision and touch-up policy, and verify that the surgical facility is accredited. Price is one input in this decision, but surgeon experience with your specific procedure type and facility accreditation are the factors that most reliably predict a safe result.
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.