Comprehensive metabolic panel cost.
What comprehensive metabolic panel costs at 148 US hospitals across 68 metros, pulled from the federally-mandated machine-readable files each hospital is required to publish. Cash-pay range: $10 to $3,364 (336× spread). CPT code 80053.
Top 5 cheapest hospitals for metabolic panel.
| # | Hospital | Cash price |
|---|---|---|
| 1 |
Saint Francis Medical Center
Lynwood, CA
|
$10 |
| 2 |
Bellevue Hospital Center
New York, NY
|
$11 |
| 3 |
Kings County Hospital Center
Brooklyn, NY
|
$11 |
| 4 |
Ben Taub Hospital
Houston, TX
|
$11 |
| 5 |
Tampa General Hospital
Tampa, FL
|
$11 to $240 |
See all 148 hospitals, your insurance, your zip.
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Compare metabolic panel prices →What is comprehensive metabolic panel?
Comprehensive metabolic panel (CMP).
A blood test that measures 14 substances: glucose, electrolytes, kidney markers, liver enzymes, and proteins. Routine for annual physicals, chronic disease monitoring, or before surgery.
Note that hospital-billed labs are typically 5-20x more expensive than independent labs. If you're not in the hospital for another reason, asking your doctor to send the order to Quest or LabCorp instead can save you 80%+.
Why prices vary this much.
The same comprehensive metabolic panel on the same equipment can cost 336 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.