HospitalPricer

Lipid panel cost in North Carolina

← All Lipid panel prices · All North Carolina hospital prices →

iDirect answer

Based on published hospital price files, 4 hospitals in North Carolina across 3 cities disclose lipid panel pricing — cash prices from $76.76 to $76.76. This is public hospital price transparency data, not a guaranteed estimate of your bill.

3
Hospitals
5
Prices shown
$76.76
Lowest cash
$76.76
Highest cash
lipid panel in North Carolina cash price3 disclosed · 3 hospitals
$76.76median ~$76.76$76.76

Cash price by city

Reflects your current filters.

Cash price by city$76.76$76.76
  • Raleigh · 2 hospitals$76.76
  • Cary · 1 hospital$76.76

5 prices shown.

ServiceHospitalCodeList priceCash priceNegotiated rangeAllowed (median)
HC LIPID PANEL - BUNDLED CHARGE
Inpatient & outpatient
AdventHealth Polk80061
HCPCS
$128
HC LIPID PROFILE BY NMR - NMR LIPOMED PROFILE - ARUP
Inpatient & outpatient
AdventHealth Polk80061
HCPCS
$128
HC Lipid Panel
Inpatient
WakeMed Raleigh Campus and North Hospital80061
CPT
$202$76.76$47.25 – $182
HC Lipid Panel
Inpatient
WakeMed Cary Hospital80061
CPT
$202$76.76$47.25 – $182
HC Lipid Panel
Inpatient
WakeMed Mental Health & Well Being Hospital - Wakebrook80061
CPT
$202$76.76

Lipid panel prices by city in North Carolina

Lipid panel in North Carolina — FAQ

How much does lipid panel cost in North Carolina?
4 hospitals in North Carolina across 3 cities publish lipid panel prices on HospitalPricer. Published cash prices range from $76.76 to $76.76 across 4 hospitals. These are prices hospitals publish, not your final bill. This is public hospital price transparency data, not a guaranteed estimate of your bill.
Which North Carolina hospitals publish lipid panel prices?
Use the table below to see each North Carolina hospital that discloses a price for lipid panel — with its cash, list, and insurance-negotiated rates side by side. Coverage expands as more hospital files are verified.
Is this what I'll pay for lipid panel in North Carolina?
No. Published prices are a starting point for comparison, not a personalized quote. What you actually pay depends on your insurance, the exact services performed, and the care setting. A blank price means the hospital didn't publish one — never that it is $0.