Healthcare spending, insurance rates, and estimated procedure costs in Kansas (KS). Per-capita spending is 11% below the national average.
Estimates based on Kansas's cost index of 0.91x applied to national average procedure prices. Insured costs assume typical in-network copay/coinsurance at roughly 35% of the full price. Actual costs depend on provider, facility type, and insurance plan.
| Procedure | Estimated Cost | With Insurance | National Avg |
|---|---|---|---|
| Doctor Office Visit | $228 | $80 | $250 |
| Emergency Room Visit | $2,002 | $701 | $2,200 |
| MRI Scan | $1,206 | $422 | $1,325 |
| CT Scan | $751 | $263 | $825 |
| Childbirth (Vaginal) | $12,285 | $4,300 | $13,500 |
| Childbirth (C-Section) | $20,475 | $7,166 | $22,500 |
| Knee Replacement | $31,850 | $11,148 | $35,000 |
| Hip Replacement | $34,580 | $12,103 | $38,000 |
| Appendectomy | $14,560 | $5,096 | $16,000 |
| Colonoscopy | $2,503 | $876 | $2,750 |
| Dental Cleaning | $114 | $40 | $125 |
| Root Canal | $1,001 | $350 | $1,100 |
Kansas residents spend an average of $8,431 per person per year on healthcare, which is 11% lower than the national average of $9,421. The state's cost index of 0.91 means that a procedure costing $1,000 nationally would cost approximately $910 in Kansas.
Kansas has not expanded Medicaid under the ACA, contributing to an uninsured rate of 9.2%. A coverage gap may exist for adults who earn too much for traditional Medicaid but too little for marketplace subsidies.
For the best price on a planned procedure, compare quotes from at least three facilities. Hospital outpatient departments typically charge 2-3x more than ambulatory surgery centers for the same procedure. Under the CMS Hospital Price Transparency rule, all Kansas hospitals must publish their negotiated rates — use those files to comparison shop.
Data sources: CMS Hospital Price Transparency, Kaiser Family Foundation, Census Bureau ACS, Healthcare.gov marketplace data. Figures are estimates and may differ from actual billed amounts.
The average per-capita healthcare spending in Kansas is $8,431 per year. The cost index is 0.91x the national average, meaning medical procedures cost approximately 9% less than the US average.
Kansas has an uninsured rate of 9.2%, compared to the national average of approximately 8%. Kansas has not expanded Medicaid under the ACA, contributing to a higher uninsured rate.
Top-rated hospitals in Kansas include University of Kansas Medical Center, Ascension Via Christi, Stormont Vail Health. Rankings are based on CMS Hospital Compare quality ratings, patient outcomes, and specialty accreditations.
The average monthly marketplace health insurance premium in Kansas is approximately $455. Actual costs vary based on plan tier (Bronze/Silver/Gold/Platinum), age, household size, and income-based subsidies available through Healthcare.gov.
No, Kansas has not expanded Medicaid under the ACA. This means a coverage gap may exist for adults who earn too much for traditional Medicaid but too little for marketplace subsidies.
Data verified · Source: CMS, KFF, Census Bureau & Healthcare.gov data
Our healthcare economists track procedure costs, insurance coverage, and medical pricing across 40+ countries and major US insurance networks. Data sourced from CMS, FAIR Health, and international health ministry databases.
Explore More Data Tools
For adjacent public-data tools, methodology notes, and network updates, visit DataPeek Facts.