Labiaplasty typically costs between $5,000 and $9,000 total, though the surgeon’s fee alone ranges from $3,550 to $6,500 according to the American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS). The final number depends on where you live, who performs the surgery, and whether your quote includes all the fees or just the surgeon’s portion.
What the Surgeon’s Fee Actually Covers
The ASPS reports a surgeon’s fee range of $3,550 to $6,500 for 2024, but that number can be misleading. It reflects only what the surgeon charges for performing the procedure. Your total bill also includes anesthesia, the use of the surgical facility, pre-operative lab work, and post-operative follow-up visits. When all of those are factored in, most patients pay somewhere between $5,000 and $9,000.
Price quotes vary in what they include. Some surgeons bundle everything into a single number, while others list each component separately. Before committing, ask whether the quote covers the consultation, anesthesia, facility time, and follow-up appointments. Prescription medications and specialty post-operative supplies are usually billed separately and can add a few hundred dollars to the total.
How Location Changes the Price
Where you have the procedure done is one of the biggest factors in what you’ll pay. Major coastal cities and competitive medical markets charge significantly more than mid-size cities or suburban practices.
- New York City: $6,000 to $9,000
- Los Angeles: $5,000 to $9,000, with high-profile Beverly Hills surgeons charging up to $25,000
- Newark, New Jersey: $4,000 to $6,800
- Chicago: $3,000 to $8,000
- Dallas: $3,000 to $8,500
- Burbank, California: $3,000 to $6,000
The pattern is consistent: coastal metro areas sit at the top of the range, while cities in the South and Midwest tend to start lower. That said, a lower price tag doesn’t automatically mean lower quality, and the most expensive surgeon in a given city isn’t necessarily the best fit. A board-certified plastic surgeon or gynecologist with significant experience performing labiaplasty is what matters most, regardless of zip code.
Insurance Rarely Covers It
Only about 2% of labiaplasties performed each year are covered by insurance. The procedure is almost always classified as cosmetic, which means you’re paying out of pocket. That percentage has stayed essentially flat over the past five years, even as more research has documented functional benefits for patients experiencing chronic discomfort, pain during exercise, or irritation from clothing.
If your labiaplasty is being recommended for a documented medical reason, such as tissue that causes recurring infections, significant pain, or functional impairment, it’s worth submitting a prior authorization request to your insurer. But the reality is that approval rates remain very low, and most patients should plan to self-pay.
Financing and Payment Options
Because insurance coverage is so rare, many plastic surgery practices offer financing through medical credit cards like CareCredit, which is accepted at over 285,000 healthcare locations. These cards often feature promotional financing periods with deferred interest, letting you spread the cost over several months. Some practices also offer in-house payment plans that let you pay in installments before or after the procedure.
If you go the medical credit card route, read the fine print carefully. Deferred interest means that if you don’t pay off the full balance within the promotional window, you could owe interest retroactively on the entire original amount. A standard low-interest personal loan can sometimes be a better deal depending on your credit.
Hidden Costs to Factor In
The sticker price of the surgery isn’t the only expense. Recovery from labiaplasty typically requires several days off work and four to six weeks of avoiding strenuous activity, exercise, and sexual intercourse. Depending on your job and how much paid leave you have, that lost income can be a meaningful addition to the overall cost.
You may also need prescription pain medication, antibiotics, and post-operative supplies like cold packs or specialized undergarments. These items usually run a few hundred dollars total but aren’t always included in the surgical quote. Ask for a line-by-line breakdown so nothing surprises you after the fact.
How to Compare Quotes
Labiaplasty is one of the faster-growing cosmetic procedures in the U.S., with over 10,800 performed in 2024. That growth means more surgeons offer it, which gives you more options to compare. When evaluating quotes, make sure you’re comparing apples to apples. A $4,000 quote that excludes anesthesia and facility fees isn’t cheaper than a $6,500 all-inclusive quote.
Request an itemized estimate from each practice you consult with. The key line items to look for are the surgeon’s fee, anesthesia fee, facility or operating room fee, pre-operative testing, and post-operative visits. If a practice can’t or won’t provide that breakdown, consider it a red flag. Transparent pricing is a basic marker of a well-run surgical practice.

