Registry & Celebrations
The Cost of Having a Baby With Insurance: Estimating Out-of-Pocket
Insurance covers most of the bill — but your actual out-of-pocket depends on your plan's deductible, delivery type, and whether every provider is in-network. Here is how to do the math before your due date.
Clinically reviewed · June 2026
For families with employer-sponsored insurance, having a baby costs an average of $2,743 out of pocket — covering prenatal care, delivery, and postpartum. Vaginal births run slightly less ($2,563) and C-sections slightly more ($3,071), but your plan's deductible and out-of-pocket maximum are the real variables that determine what you'll actually pay.
The United States has some of the highest birth-related hospital charges in the world, but insurance reshapes the math dramatically. Knowing how that math works — and making a few moves before your due date — can save your family hundreds to thousands of dollars and prevent genuine surprises at the billing window.
What does the average insured delivery actually cost?
The most rigorous recent data comes from the Peterson-KFF Health System Tracker's September 2025 brief, which analyzed 2021–2023 claims for women enrolled in employer-sponsored health plans. Across the full pregnancy episode — prenatal care through delivery and postpartum — the numbers break down like this:
| Delivery Type | Total Healthcare Costs | Insurance Paid | Patient Out-of-Pocket |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vaginal delivery | $15,712 | $13,149 | $2,563 |
| Cesarean section | $28,998 | $25,927 | $3,071 |
| All deliveries (average) | $20,416 | $17,674 | $2,743 |
The small out-of-pocket difference between a vaginal birth ($2,563) and a C-section ($3,071) — just $508 — surprises most families. C-sections generate nearly twice the total billed charges, but the higher cost pushes most patients through their deductible and toward their plan's annual out-of-pocket maximum, which caps personal liability. Approximately 32.3% of U.S. deliveries are by cesarean section, per 2023 CDC data included in the same Peterson-KFF brief.
For comparison, families without insurance face a very different picture. ValuePenguin analysis updated January 2026 found that uninsured vaginal delivery charges range from approximately $13,000–$18,000, while C-section charges range from $22,600 to over $32,000 depending on complications and geography. Alaska carries the highest median delivery cost at $29,152; Mississippi the lowest at $9,847.
Over four in ten U.S. births are covered by Medicaid, which charges little or nothing for pregnancy-related services. If your household income is at or below 138% of the federal poverty level, check your Medicaid eligibility through your state's marketplace — coverage can begin immediately during pregnancy regardless of the annual enrollment window.
How do deductibles and out-of-pocket maximums actually work for maternity?
Your plan's deductible and annual out-of-pocket maximum are the two numbers that most directly determine what you'll pay. Here is how they interact with a pregnancy:
The deductible. Most employer plans require you to pay a set amount — commonly $1,500–$6,000 for an individual — before insurance begins sharing costs. Labor and delivery will almost certainly push you through your full deductible in one admission if you haven't met it already through prenatal care. Families with high-deductible health plans (HDHPs), where individual deductibles commonly run $3,000–$6,000, should budget to pay that full amount as part of delivery costs.
Coinsurance after the deductible. Once the deductible is met, you typically pay a percentage of remaining charges — often 20–30% — until you reach the out-of-pocket maximum. For 2025, the ACA-mandated individual out-of-pocket maximum is $9,200 (rising to $10,600 in 2026). After that threshold, the insurer pays 100% of in-network covered services for the rest of the year.
What the ACA covers at zero cost. Under the ACA's preventive services mandate, in-network prenatal care is covered without any cost-sharing — no copay, no deductible applies — for routine checkups, gestational diabetes screening, preeclampsia screening, and a breast pump. Lab work beyond the standard panel, additional ultrasounds, genetic screening, and specialist referrals do apply to your deductible and coinsurance. Confirm each service's classification with your insurer before assuming it is zero-cost.
The year-end timing trap. If your delivery falls near December 31, you may meet your deductible twice — once for prenatal care in the current year and again when delivery falls in the new benefit year. Families whose due dates are in January or February should plan for this scenario and, where possible, discuss timing with their provider.
Which plan tier actually saves money when you know you're having a baby?
Many families choose a Bronze or Silver plan during open enrollment to keep monthly premiums low — which is sound strategy when healthcare use is unpredictable. When a delivery is certain, the calculation reverses. ValuePenguin's analysis illustrates this clearly: a Platinum-tier plan's total cost — monthly premiums for the year plus estimated delivery out-of-pocket — came to approximately $12,699 for a standard vaginal delivery. The same delivery on a Bronze-tier plan totaled approximately $15,981. The Bronze plan's lower premium was entirely offset by its higher deductible and coinsurance. If you are pregnant and have an upcoming open enrollment or a qualifying life event, model the full-year cost across plan tiers rather than choosing by premium alone.
For families with income at or below 250% of the federal poverty level, Silver Marketplace plans unlock cost-sharing reductions that can materially lower both deductibles and copays — making Silver functionally competitive with Platinum for lower-income households.
Five steps to estimate your personal out-of-pocket cost before delivery
The average figures above are useful benchmarks, but your actual bill will depend on your specific plan and providers. These five steps get you to a reliable personal estimate:
- Verify in-network status for every provider. Confirm that your OB-GYN, the delivery hospital, and — critically — the anesthesiologist group are all in-network before you schedule. Out-of-network anesthesiology at an in-network hospital is one of the most common sources of surprise maternity bills, and while the No Surprises Act provides some protection for emergency services, elective in-network care planning is your strongest defense.
- Request a good faith estimate from the hospital. Under the No Surprises Act, hospitals and providers must give you a written cost estimate before scheduled care. Request one from your delivery hospital in the third trimester. Note that the No Surprises Act does not apply to freestanding birth centers — if you plan a birth center delivery, ask for their self-pay or insurance schedule directly.
- Calculate your remaining deductible at delivery time. Call your insurer or log into your member portal to see how much of your annual deductible you have already met through prenatal care. The difference between that amount and your plan's full deductible is your likely first payment at delivery. Add your coinsurance percentage of remaining charges up to the out-of-pocket cap.
- Plan a separate budget for your newborn's deductible. Once born, your baby must be enrolled within 30 days and carries a separate deductible and out-of-pocket maximum. Peterson-KFF data found that NICU hospitalization averaged $3,021 out of pocket for the infant — a figure worth having in reserve even if a NICU stay is not anticipated.
- Open or maximize an HSA or FSA. If your plan is HSA-eligible, contribute the maximum allowed ($4,300 individual / $8,550 family in 2026 for HSAs). Prenatal copays, deductibles, coinsurance, breast pump supplies, and many over-the-counter pregnancy items are eligible HSA/FSA expenses. Pre-tax dollars in these accounts effectively discount your out-of-pocket costs by your marginal tax rate.
This article provides general financial and insurance information for educational purposes only. It is not a substitute for personalized guidance from your health insurer, employer HR department, or a licensed financial advisor. Insurance rules and ACA regulations change annually — verify current thresholds directly with your plan for the benefit year you are planning.
Frequently asked
What is the average out-of-pocket cost to have a baby with employer insurance in 2025?
According to the Peterson-KFF Health System Tracker's September 2025 brief — which analyzed 2021–2023 insurance claims — women enrolled in employer-sponsored health plans paid an average of $2,743 out of pocket for the full pregnancy episode, including prenatal care, delivery, and postpartum care. The insurer covered the remaining $17,674 of the $20,416 average total. This figure is a national median; your personal cost will depend on your deductible, coinsurance rate, and whether all providers are in-network.
This is general information, not medical or financial advice — speak with your insurer and HR department for a personalized estimate.
Does it cost more out of pocket to have a C-section than a vaginal birth with insurance?
Somewhat, but less than most families expect. Peterson-KFF data shows that vaginal deliveries average $2,563 out of pocket while cesarean sections average $3,071 — a difference of just $508, despite C-sections generating nearly twice the total billed charges ($28,998 vs. $15,712). The gap stays small because high-cost hospitalizations — like a C-section — push most patients through their deductible and toward their plan's annual out-of-pocket maximum, capping personal liability. Approximately 32.3% of U.S. deliveries are by cesarean section, per 2023 CDC data. The actual difference you experience will depend on where your deductible stands at the time of delivery.
What prenatal costs does the ACA require insurance to cover without cost-sharing?
Under the Affordable Care Act's preventive services mandate, in-network prenatal care is covered without any cost-sharing — no copay, no coinsurance, no deductible — for most employer and marketplace plans. This includes routine prenatal checkups, gestational diabetes screening, preeclampsia screening, and a breast pump, according to HealthInsurance.org. However, certain costs fall outside this protection: lab work ordered beyond the standard panel, additional ultrasounds (beyond the anatomy scan), genetic carrier screening, and any specialist consultations typically apply to your deductible and coinsurance. Always confirm a service is classified as "preventive" by your plan before assuming it is zero-cost.
What is a good faith estimate and how do I use it for childbirth?
A good faith estimate (GFE) is a written cost projection that U.S. hospitals and providers are required to furnish under the No Surprises Act before you receive scheduled care. For maternity care, you can request a GFE from your delivery hospital covering the estimated charges for labor, delivery, and any anticipated services. This helps you compare what the facility will bill against your plan's benefits — and calculate your likely out-of-pocket exposure before your due date, rather than receiving a surprise bill afterward. HealthInsurance.org notes that the No Surprises Act does not apply to freestanding birth centers, so GFE protections are hospital- and clinic-based. Request the estimate early in the third trimester while you still have time to make plan changes.
Does my newborn have a separate deductible from mine?
Yes — and this catches many families off guard. After birth, your newborn must be enrolled in your health plan within 30 days. Once enrolled, the baby is treated as a separate insured member with their own deductible and annual out-of-pocket maximum. That means any NICU care, pediatric hospitalization, or well-baby visits in the newborn period will count toward the infant's deductible, not yours. Peterson-KFF data found that NICU hospitalization averaged $77,992 in total healthcare costs and $3,021 out of pocket for the infant. Building a separate financial buffer for a potential newborn hospitalization — in addition to your own delivery deductible — is a prudent planning step.
Is a Platinum or Bronze plan cheaper overall when you know you're having a baby?
Counterintuitively, a higher-premium Platinum or Gold plan often costs less in total when you know a delivery is coming. ValuePenguin analysis found that a Platinum-tier plan's total cost — premiums plus delivery out-of-pocket — came to approximately $12,699 for a standard vaginal delivery, compared to $15,981 for a Bronze-tier plan. The Bronze plan's lower premium is more than offset by its higher deductible and coinsurance. If you are pregnant and shopping during open enrollment or a qualifying life event, model the full-year cost (monthly premiums × 12 + estimated out-of-pocket) across plan tiers rather than choosing based on premium alone.