Patients ask me about bunion surgery costs constantly. The honest answer is that where you live matters almost as much as what procedure you need. I reviewed current pricing data across four locations — San Francisco, New York City, Mississippi, and London — and the spread is significant.
The Numbers
| Location | Price Range (USD) | Key Detail |
|---|---|---|
| San Francisco, CA | $5,000 – $11,000 | UCSF and Stanford drive premium pricing 1 |
| New York City, NY | $3,500 – $13,400 | Manhattan facility fees push the ceiling 2 |
| Mississippi | $1,800 – $7,300 | Lowest costs in the country 3 |
| London, UK (Private) | $5,100 – $8,300 (£4,000 – £6,500) | Comparable to mid-range San Francisco 4 5 |
| London, UK (NHS) | $0 | Free, but expect 18+ months wait 6 |
What Drives the Gap
San Francisco runs $5,000 to $11,000 for private bunion surgery 1. That reflects Bay Area real estate, high operating-room overhead, and a concentration of fellowship-trained specialists at institutions like UCSF. California’s average osteotomy cost sits at $2,587 — 25% above the national mean of $2,078 3.
New York tops that. Manhattan centres charge up to $13,400 all-in, largely because of hospital-based facility fees and anaesthesia premiums 2. The state average for arthrodesis is $9,403, nearly $900 above the national figure 3.
Mississippi is the other extreme. An osteotomy averages $1,800, an exostectomy $6,816 — the lowest in the country 3. Lower overhead, lower labour costs, fewer competing specialists. The trade-off is fewer surgeons offering minimally invasive techniques.
London private clinics charge £4,000 to £6,500 per foot (roughly $5,100 to $8,300), which lands squarely in San Francisco’s mid-range 4 5. The NHS covers bunion surgery at no cost, but current orthopaedic wait times average 18+ months for routine cases 6 8. That backlog is pushing more UK patients toward private care.
Quality
San Francisco and New York offer the deepest bench of fellowship-trained foot-and-ankle surgeons in the US. UCSF runs one of the top orthopaedic research programmes in the country, and HSS in New York is consistently ranked first nationally for orthopaedics 1. Mississippi has capable surgeons, but fewer academic centres and limited access to newer techniques like Lapiplasty or percutaneous osteotomy.
London’s private sector is strong. Multiple clinics offer minimally invasive keyhole surgery with reported success rates above 95%, same-day weight-bearing, and no-screw fixation methods 4. NHS care is clinically sound but patients have less control over which surgeon operates or which technique is used.
Wait Times
| Location | Typical Wait (Consultation to Surgery) |
|---|---|
| San Francisco | 4 – 8 weeks |
| New York City | 4 – 8 weeks |
| Mississippi | 2 – 6 weeks |
| London (Private) | 1 – 4 weeks |
| London (NHS) | 18+ months |
In the US, the bottleneck is surgeon scheduling, not system capacity. Most patients are on the table within two months 7. London private clinics are actually faster — one to four weeks in many cases 5. The NHS is a different story entirely. The 18-week constitutional target has not been met in orthopaedics for years, and the real median sits closer to 49 weeks, with many patients waiting well beyond that 8.
My Take
If cost is the primary concern, Mississippi and similar low-cost states offer real savings — roughly 50–60% less than San Francisco or New York for the same procedure categories. The quality is adequate for straightforward cases, though I would steer complex or revision cases toward a high-volume academic centre.
For patients in the UK, the private route in London is competitively priced against major US cities and gets you into surgery fast. The NHS path is free but the wait is punishing — and bunions do not improve on their own while you sit on a list.
San Francisco and New York remain the gold standard for surgical expertise and access to the latest techniques. You pay for that, but in orthopaedic surgery, outcomes correlate strongly with surgeon volume and institutional support.
The bottom line: know your numbers, verify your surgeon’s case volume, and do not let geography alone dictate your decision.
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