Itemized  ·  Compare  ·  Keck Hospital of USC vs Children's Hospital Los Angeles

Keck Hospital of USC vs Children's Hospital Los Angeles.

Side-by-side prices for 16 procedures both hospitals publish, plus CMS quality ratings and metro context. Pulled from each hospital's federally-mandated price transparency file. Children's Hospital Los Angeles is cheaper on more procedures (13 vs 1).

Los Angeles, CA
Keck Medicine of USC
4/5 CMS
Cheaper on 1 of 16 procedures
vs.
Los Angeles, CA
CHLA
Cheaper on 13 of 16 procedures

Head-to-head, by procedure.

Procedure Keck Children's Cheaper
Brain MRI without contrast $7,193 $478 Children's ↓
Brain MRI with and without contrast $10,188 $904 Children's ↓
Lumbar spine MRI without contrast $5,213 $478 Children's ↓
Knee/lower-extremity MRI without contrast $6,276 $182 Children's ↓
CT abdomen and pelvis with contrast $10,460 $278 Children's ↓
Abdominal ultrasound, complete $2,868 $18 Children's ↓
Lipid panel $184 $15 Children's ↓
TSH (thyroid stimulating hormone) $10 $52 Keck ↓
Hemoglobin A1c $77 tie
Cataract surgery, one eye $7,774 tie
Echocardiogram, complete with Doppler $6,109 $859 Children's ↓
Lumbar epidural steroid injection $6,232 $624 Children's ↓
Thyroid ultrasound $1,710 $308 Children's ↓
New patient office visit, level 3 $268 $46 Children's ↓
New patient office visit, level 4 $390 $20 Children's ↓
Carotid duplex ultrasound $2,750 $48 Children's ↓

Patient experience.

CMS HCAHPS patient survey, period ending 03/31/2025. Bold = higher score.

Measure Keck Children's
HCAHPS overall star rating 4/5
Would definitely recommend 82%
Hospital rating 9 or 10 of 10 82%
Nurses always communicated well 83%
Doctors always communicated well 82%
Given clear info about recovery 88%
Room and bathroom always clean 75%
Staff always explained meds 65%
Quiet at night, always 61%

Add your insurance.

Cash-pay is one number. With your insurance plan, the actual price differs. Pick your insurer in the comparison tool to see plan-specific rates at both hospitals.

Open comparison →

How to read this comparison.

The cash-pay price is what an uninsured patient would be charged at each hospital. It's the cleanest apples-to-apples comparison because it doesn't depend on your insurance plan.

The CMS rating is the federal quality composite, built from ~50 measures spanning safety, mortality, readmission, patient experience, and timeliness. A 5-star hospital may not be the best at every procedure, and a 3-star hospital can have a strong specific service line. Treat the rating as one input, not the answer.

For your specific insurance plan, prices can shift dramatically. Some hospitals negotiate steep discounts with one insurer and not another. Always check the plan-specific rate before you book.