Itemized  ·  Procedures  ·  TSH (thyroid stimulating hormone)  ·  Los Angeles

TSH (thyroid stimulating hormone) cost in Los Angeles.

What tsh (thyroid stimulating hormone) costs at 10 Los Angeles-area hospitals, pulled directly from each hospital's federally-mandated price transparency file. Cash-pay range: $10 to $178 (18× spread). CPT code 84443.

Cheapest in Los Angeles
$10
Keck Hospital of USC
Los Angeles, CA
vs.
Most expensive in Los Angeles
$178
California Hospital Medical Center
Los Angeles, CA

All Los Angeles-area hospitals.

# Hospital Cash price
1
Keck Hospital of USC
Los Angeles, CA
$10 to $131
2
USC Norris Cancer Hospital
Los Angeles, CA
$10 to $178
3
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
Los Angeles, CA
$13
4
Providence Saint Joseph (Burbank)
Los Angeles, CA
$22 to $155
5
MLK Community Hospital
Los Angeles, CA
$25
6
Children's Hospital Los Angeles
Los Angeles, CA
$52
7
Kaiser Permanente LA Medical Center
Los Angeles, CA
$109
8
California Hospital Medical Center
Los Angeles, CA
$178

See plan-specific prices for your insurance.

Pick your insurance plan, see what each Los Angeles-area hospital negotiated. Estimated out-of-pocket included.

Compare tsh (thyroid) prices →

TSH (thyroid stimulating hormone), nationally.

The Los Angeles numbers above only tell part of the story. The same tsh (thyroid stimulating hormone) can vary 10× across US metros, and even within Los Angeles the published prices span 18 times from cheapest to most expensive.

For the national comparison set, see the TSH (thyroid stimulating hormone) overview page, which covers tsh (thyroid stimulating hormone) prices at every hospital in our dataset.

What to ask before you book.

Is this the all-in price? Hospitals often quote the facility fee and bill the radiologist, anesthesiologist, or specialist separately. Ask for the bundled total.

Cash-pay vs. insurance? Don't assume insurance is cheaper. For high-deductible plans, cash pay often beats the negotiated rate, especially for elective imaging.

Financial assistance? Federally-tax-exempt hospitals must have a financial-assistance policy. It can knock 50-100% off the bill for households below specific income thresholds.