Eyelid
Eyelid Surgery Cost & Insurance
What blepharoplasty and ptosis repair really cost in the U.S. — the fee components, typical price ranges, the cosmetic-vs-functional line that decides insurance coverage, and financing options.
Eyelid
What blepharoplasty and ptosis repair really cost in the U.S. — the fee components, typical price ranges, the cosmetic-vs-functional line that decides insurance coverage, and financing options.
“How much does eyelid surgery cost?” is usually the second question patients ask — right after “will it help?” The honest answer is a range, because the price of blepharoplasty, ptosis repair, and related procedures depends on what is being corrected, who is doing the surgery, where it is performed, and — most importantly — whether the operation is cosmetic (you pay) or functional (insurance may pay). This guide walks through each piece so the quote you receive at a consultation makes sense.
The figures on this page are broad U.S. patterns drawn from published national data — they are not quotes. Every practice sets its own fees, and the only number that applies to you is the itemized estimate from Dr. Hartstein’s office after an examination.
A single “price” for eyelid surgery actually bundles several separate charges. When you compare quotes, make sure each covers the same things:
With those components combined, typical total out-of-pocket costs for cosmetic eyelid procedures in the United States fall in these broad ranges:
| Procedure | Typical total (U.S.) |
|---|---|
| Upper blepharoplasty (both upper lids) | $3,000–$6,000 |
| Lower blepharoplasty (both lower lids) | $4,000–$8,000 |
| Upper + lower combined (four lids) | $6,000–$12,000 |
| Ptosis repair (self-pay, both lids) | $3,000–$6,000 |
| Brow lift (varies widely by technique) | $4,000–$12,000 |
Large metropolitan markets on the coasts routinely run above these ranges; smaller markets often come in below them. Combining procedures in one session usually costs less than doing them separately, because anesthesia and facility fees are shared.
Two quotes for “the same” operation can differ by thousands of dollars for legitimate reasons:
The single biggest factor in what eyelid surgery costs you is whether it is classified as cosmetic or functional. The operation may be identical — the classification is about why it is being done:
Whether your case can qualify as functional is a clinical determination made at examination — and it follows specific, documentable criteria that differ slightly for excess skin versus a drooping lid margin. We cover each in depth:
Insurers cover eyelid surgery when it treats a documented functional problem, not appearance. In practice that means three things must line up: symptoms (difficulty reading, driving, or seeing overhead), examination findings (skin resting on the lashes, or a lid margin drooping toward the pupil), and objective testing (a taped-versus-untaped visual-field test showing the obstruction is real and correctable, plus photographs). When ptosis repair or functional blepharoplasty is combined with cosmetic surgery in the same session, the cosmetic portion is billed separately — insurance pays only for the covered part. Details, including Medicare’s rules and the appeal process, are in the insurance-coverage guide.
For purely cosmetic procedures, most practices offer more options than a lump-sum payment: staged scheduling (upper lids now, lower later), in-office payment plans, and third-party healthcare financing with promotional interest terms. Health savings accounts (HSA/FSA) generally cannot be used for cosmetic surgery but often can for documented functional procedures — the rules are specific and worth understanding before you commit. See Financing Eyelid Surgery for the full picture.
Eyelid skin is measured in millimeters, sits directly over the eye, and shows every asymmetry. The most expensive eyelid operation is the one that has to be done twice: correcting an over-resected lid, a hollowed upper sulcus, or a retracted lower lid costs far more — in dollars and in tissue — than the original surgery. When quotes differ, ask why before assuming the lower one is the better deal. A surgeon’s results, training, and revision policy are part of what you are buying.
Get a real number, not an internet estimate
The only accurate quote comes from an examination. Find an ASOPRS-trained oculoplastic surgeon near you for an evaluation and an itemized estimate — including whether your case may qualify for insurance coverage.