Itemized  ·  Procedures  ·  Carpal tunnel release

Carpal tunnel release cost.

What carpal tunnel release costs at 108 US hospitals across 53 metros, pulled from the federally-mandated machine-readable files each hospital is required to publish. Cash-pay range: $259 to $13,022 (50× spread). CPT code 29848.

Cheapest cash price
$259
Jefferson Regional Medical Center
Jefferson Hills, PA
vs.
Most expensive cash price
$13,022
Northwestern Memorial Hospital
Chicago, IL

Top 5 cheapest hospitals for carpal tunnel release.

# Hospital Cash price
1
Jefferson Regional Medical Center
Jefferson Hills, PA
$259 to $278
2
Allegheny General Hospital
Pittsburgh, PA
$328 to $351
3
Cedars-Sinai Marina del Rey Hospital
Marina del Rey, CA
$656 to $18,448
4
John H. Stroger Jr. Hospital
Chicago, IL
$946
5
Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Nashville, TN
$1,233

See all 108 hospitals, your insurance, your zip.

Pick your insurance plan, enter your zip, see your estimated out-of-pocket cost. Same data, your view.

Compare carpal tunnel release prices →

What is carpal tunnel release?

Surgery to release pressure on the median nerve at the wrist.

An outpatient surgery (open or endoscopic) to relieve carpal tunnel syndrome — numbness, tingling, weakness in the hand. Recovery 2-6 weeks; common and very shoppable.

Often done at an Ambulatory Surgical Center for substantially less than at a hospital. The published rate is the facility fee. Surgeon and anesthesia are usually billed separately.

Why prices vary this much.

The same carpal tunnel release on the same equipment can cost 50 times more at one hospital than another. Three reasons.

Chargemasters are arbitrary. The "sticker price" hospitals publish was never designed for consumers. It's a starting number for negotiation with insurance companies, with adjustments stacked on top for decades. Almost no one pays the chargemaster.

Negotiated rates are confidential bilateral contracts. Each insurance company negotiates its own rate with each hospital. Aetna at Hospital A might pay 60% of what Cigna pays at the same hospital for the same code. You see one rate; the hospital sees dozens.

Cash pay is a separate thing entirely. Many hospitals offer a "self-pay" or "cash-pay" rate that's dramatically cheaper than what they'd bill insurance, especially for elective imaging. If you have a high-deductible plan, paying cash and filing for reimbursement (or just eating the cost) can be the cheapest path.

What to ask the hospital before you book.

The four questions that surface hidden costs:

1. "Is the price you're quoting me the all-in price, or just the facility fee?" Hospitals often quote the facility fee and bill the radiologist or anesthesiologist separately on a different invoice.

2. "What's the cash-pay rate vs the rate you'd bill my insurance?" Don't assume insurance is cheaper. For high-deductible plans, cash pay is often the better deal.

3. "If I'm uninsured, do you have a financial assistance policy I qualify for?" Federally-tax-exempt hospitals are required to have one, and it can knock 50-100% off the bill for households under specific income thresholds.

4. "If I get a bill and the price is different than what was quoted, what's your dispute process?" Get the answer before you book, in writing if possible. If the bill comes in higher than the quote, you have leverage.

Common questions.

How much does carpal tunnel release cost in 2026?+
Cash-pay prices for carpal tunnel release (CPT 29848) range from $259 to $13,022 across the 108 hospitals in our dataset. The price varies by hospital, payer, and whether you pay cash or use insurance. Cash-pay rates are often dramatically cheaper than the rate insurance would pay at the same hospital, which is one of the more uncomfortable truths in this data.
Why does carpal tunnel release cost so much more at some hospitals than others?+
Three reasons. First, hospital chargemasters (the "sticker price") are largely arbitrary and were never designed for consumers. Second, hospitals in expensive real-estate markets (Manhattan, San Francisco, Boston) carry higher facility overhead. Third, the negotiated rate each insurance company pays is the result of confidential bilateral contracts, so the same procedure on the same machine can cost 5x more depending on which insurance card you hand over.
Is the cash price always the cheapest option?+
Not always, but more often than you'd expect. For carpal tunnel release in our dataset, the cash price beats the negotiated insurance rate at many hospitals, especially for patients with high-deductible plans. Always ask the hospital for both numbers before you decide which to use. If you have a low-deductible plan and the procedure is in-network, insurance is usually still cheaper.
What does the published price include?+
For carpal tunnel release (CPT 29848), the published rate generally includes the procedure itself plus the immediately associated facility and professional fees as the hospital has assigned them. It does NOT include separate physician consultations, follow-up visits, prescriptions, or any complications that require additional treatment. Always ask: "Is this the all-in price, or just the facility fee?"
Where does this data come from?+
Federal law (45 CFR 180.50, the Hospital Price Transparency Rule) requires every US hospital to publish a machine-readable file with their negotiated rates and cash prices. We download those files directly from each hospital, parse them, and present them in a comparable format. No surveys, no estimates, no scraped review sites. The data is current as of the latest publication date for each hospital.