Cost & Medical Disclaimer: Prices listed are U.S. estimates based on publicly available data and hearing health industry surveys as of 2024–2025. Actual costs vary by location, provider, hearing aid brand, and your individual hearing needs. This article was reviewed by Dr. Susan Chen, AuD for medical accuracy. This content is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional audiology advice. Always consult a licensed audiologist or hearing healthcare provider for diagnosis and treatment decisions.

A mastoidectomy is one of the bigger-ticket ear surgeries you can face, with total charges that can hit $50,000 before insurance touches it. That number scares people. But the out-of-pocket reality for an insured patient is usually a small fraction of that. Let’s break down where the money actually goes.

The surgery removes infected or diseased air cells in the mastoid bone — the bony bump behind your ear. It’s most often done to clear a cholesteatoma or a chronic infection that won’t respond to medication.

Why the Price Range Is So Wide

Three things drive the total: the type of mastoidectomy, the facility, and whether your surgeon does anything else at the same time.

  • A simple (cortical) mastoidectomy clears infected cells and is the least involved.
  • A canal-wall-up procedure preserves the ear canal wall.
  • A canal-wall-down or radical mastoidectomy removes more bone and takes longer — pushing costs up.
  • Adding a tympanoplasty to rebuild the eardrum, or an ossicular reconstruction to repair the hearing bones, layers on more.

Cost Breakdown

ComponentCost (No Insurance)
ENT consultation$200–$450
CT scan of the temporal bone$500–$3,000
Surgeon’s fee$3,000–$10,000
Anesthesia$1,000–$3,000
Facility / operating room$8,000–$30,000
Simple mastoidectomy (total)$15,000–$30,000
Mastoidectomy + tympanoplasty (total)$25,000–$50,000+
Post-op visits & cleaning$100–$300 each

The facility fee is the giant in the room. The same surgery costs far less at an outpatient surgical center than at a major hospital — sometimes a 30% to 50% difference for the facility portion alone.

Key Takeaway

Total mastoidectomy charges run $15,000–$50,000, but with insurance most patients pay $1,500–$6,000 out of pocket after deductible and coinsurance. The facility fee is the biggest variable — ask whether an outpatient surgical center is an option.

What Insurance Pays

A mastoidectomy is medically necessary surgery, so it’s covered by standard health insurance — not the limited rules around hearing aid coverage. After your deductible, you’ll owe coinsurance (commonly 10%–30%) up to your annual out-of-pocket maximum. For many insured patients that max caps the damage at a few thousand dollars no matter how high the gross charges run.

Always get pre-authorization. The American Academy of Otolaryngology classifies chronic ear disease and cholesteatoma as conditions requiring surgical management, which helps justify medical necessity to your insurer.

Hearing Before and After

Mastoid disease can damage hearing, and surgery doesn’t always restore it fully. Your surgeon will order a hearing test before the operation and again afterward to measure the result. If permanent loss remains, you may end up exploring a hearing aid or, in severe cases, a cochlear implant. Budget for that possibility — it’s part of the true cost of mastoid disease, not just the surgery itself.

⚠ Watch Out For

Don’t delay surgery for a diagnosed cholesteatoma to save money. It’s a growing mass that can erode the hearing bones, the balance organs, and even the bone protecting the brain. A delay can turn a single $20,000 surgery into multiple operations plus permanent hearing loss — vastly more expensive in every sense.

How to Lower Your Bill

  • Choose an outpatient surgical center if your surgeon offers it and your case is straightforward.
  • Confirm everyone is in-network — surgeon, anesthesiologist, and facility. An out-of-network anesthesiologist is a classic surprise bill.
  • Ask for an itemized estimate and a cash-pay rate if you’re uninsured; hospitals often discount 30%–60% for prompt self-pay.
  • Bundle pre-op imaging through your insurer’s preferred imaging center, not the hospital’s, which usually charges far more for the same CT.

Bottom Line

A mastoidectomy carries an intimidating sticker price, but the number that matters is your out-of-pocket share — typically $1,500–$6,000 with insurance, capped by your plan’s out-of-pocket maximum. The surgery is medically necessary when you have chronic infection or cholesteatoma, so coverage is rarely the fight. Focus your cost-control energy on the facility choice and staying in-network, and don’t postpone surgery your ENT says you need.

Frequently Asked Questions

HearingAidCostGuide Editorial Team

Hearing Health Writer

Our writers collaborate with licensed audiologists to ensure all cost and health-related content is accurate, current, and useful for Americans navigating hearing aid and audiology expenses.