What does acupuncture cost? (And does insurance cover it?)
Acupuncture pricing varies widely — $60 at community clinics to $250+ at boutique practices. Insurance coverage has expanded significantly since Medicare started covering it for chronic low back pain in 2020. Here's how to figure out what you'll actually pay.
Acupuncture pricing varies more than most other healthcare services. A session at a community acupuncture clinic may cost $40. A session at a Manhattan boutique fertility-focused practice may cost $250. Both can be fully-licensed practitioners giving real, evidence-based care. Here's how to navigate it.
Typical pricing by setting
Private solo practice (most common): - Initial visit (60–90 min): $120–$250 - Follow-up (45–60 min): $90–$180
Most private practices fall in the $100–$150 per follow-up range. Urban cost-of-living premiums push New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Boston to the higher end; smaller cities and rural areas skew lower.
Integrative or multidisciplinary clinics (often affiliated with a chiropractor, physical therapist, or wellness center): - Follow-ups typically $100–$160
Community acupuncture clinics — lower-cost clinics that treat multiple patients simultaneously in a shared space with recliners (rather than private rooms): - Sliding scale, usually $20–$60 per visit - Same licensed practitioners, same needles, same training - Trade-off: less privacy, often shorter intake, less individual attention
Hospital-based and research programs (increasingly common at academic medical centers): - Variable — sometimes covered by insurance, sometimes out-of-pocket at negotiated rates
Specialty boutique practices (reproductive medicine, sports injury, celebrity clientele): - $180–$300+ per visit - Often include extended time, hands-on bodywork, or additional modalities
What actually affects pricing
- Location. Urban premiums are real.
- Length of visit. A 30-minute "express" session costs less than a 60-minute one.
- Practitioner experience and specialty. Reproductive-focused practitioners, ABORM-certified acupuncturists, and those with 20+ years of practice often charge at the higher end.
- Adjunct services. Moxibustion, cupping, herbal consultation, or nutrition counseling add to the session.
- Package pricing. Most practices offer packages (5-pack, 10-pack) at a 10–20% discount per session.
Does insurance cover acupuncture?
Coverage has expanded significantly in the past decade, but it's still inconsistent. Here's where it stands as of 2026:
Medicare
Yes — for chronic low back pain only. Since 2020, Medicare covers acupuncture for chronic low back pain (defined as pain lasting 12 weeks or more, of unknown origin, not related to surgery or pregnancy). Coverage includes:
- Up to 12 visits in 90 days
- An additional 8 visits if the patient is demonstrating improvement
- Maximum of 20 visits per year
Medicare does NOT cover acupuncture for any other condition (migraines, anxiety, fertility, etc.) at this time.
The practitioner must be an MD, DO, PA, NP, or auxiliary personnel under physician supervision. A significant quirk: regular licensed acupuncturists (L.Ac.) are NOT eligible to bill Medicare directly. In practice, this means patients need a clinic that has a supervising physician on staff, or pay out of pocket.
Private insurance
Coverage varies widely by carrier, plan, and state. A rough summary:
- Plans that commonly cover acupuncture: Aetna, Blue Cross Blue Shield (varies by state), United Healthcare, Cigna, Kaiser — often for pain, sometimes broader
- Typical benefit: 10–20 visits per year with a copay of $15–$50, often with a referral required
- Typical restriction: Must be medically necessary for a covered diagnosis (pain is most commonly covered; "wellness" is usually not)
How to check: 1. Call the member services number on your insurance card 2. Ask: "Is acupuncture a covered benefit under my plan?" 3. If yes, ask: "For what diagnoses? How many visits per year? What's my copay and do I need a referral?" 4. Ask specifically about CPT codes 97810, 97811, 97813, and 97814 — these are the standard acupuncture billing codes 5. Ask whether in-network providers are required (often yes)
If you have a Flexible Spending Account (FSA) or Health Savings Account (HSA)
Yes, acupuncture qualifies. Licensed acupuncture is a qualified medical expense under IRS rules. You can use FSA or HSA funds to pay for it. Your practitioner can provide a receipt with their license information.
Out-of-network reimbursement
Many patients see acupuncturists who don't bill insurance directly, then submit for reimbursement. The process:
- Pay at the time of service
- Request a superbill from your practitioner — this is an itemized receipt with the practitioner's NPI number, your diagnosis code (ICD-10), and the CPT codes for the treatment
- Submit the superbill to your insurance with their out-of-network claim form
- Wait 2–6 weeks for partial reimbursement (typically 50–70% of the allowable amount, after deductible)
Most acupuncturists are used to providing superbills on request. Ask about this before your first visit if it matters.
What patients actually spend
Rough expected out-of-pocket totals for a full course of treatment (8–12 sessions):
| Setting | Per visit | Full course (10 visits) |
|---|---|---|
| Community acupuncture | $30–$50 | $300–$500 |
| Standard private practice | $120–$180 | $1,200–$1,800 |
| Specialty practice | $180–$250 | $1,800–$2,500 |
| In-network with insurance | $15–$50 copay | $150–$500 |
Most courses of treatment for common conditions (back pain, migraines, anxiety, insomnia) need 8 to 12 sessions to evaluate whether acupuncture is working for you. For ongoing maintenance, monthly visits are typical.
Questions to ask before booking
- What is the cost of an initial visit vs. a follow-up?
- Do you offer package pricing?
- Do you accept insurance directly? If not, do you provide superbills?
- Do you offer a sliding scale or community rate?
- Approximately how many sessions would you expect for my condition?
A good practitioner will give you a straight answer on all of these.
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