Breast Reduction Insurance Coverage

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Learn how insurance coverage works for breast reduction surgery, what criteria most providers require, and how our team can help with the approval process.


Insurance for Breast Reduction Surgery

Breast reduction insurance coverage in Connecticut

Breast reduction is one of the few plastic surgery procedures that insurance companies regularly cover. If your breast size is causing documented physical symptoms, your insurance may classify the procedure as medically necessary and cover part or all of the cost.

This page walks you through everything you need to know, such as what qualifies as medical necessity, what documentation is needed, how pre-authorization works, and what the Connecticut Breast Reduction Center team does to help you through the process from start to finish.

Breast Reduction Insurance

How Our office works with insurance

The Connecticut Breast Reduction Center accepts many commercial insurance plans that include out-of-network benefits. Our team manages the entire insurance process for you. Here’s what that looks like.

Documentation

Our team gathers all required records, letters, photos, and measurements on your behalf.

Submission

We compile and submit the full pre-authorization package directly to your insurance company.

Appeals

If a claim is denied, we will file an appeal with additional evidence to fight for your coverage.

What “out-of-network benefits” means for you

Dr. Reilly is an out-of-network provider, which means he is not contracted directly with any specific insurance plan. However, many commercial insurance plans include out-of-network benefits that still cover the surgical cost. Our team will help you verify whether your plan includes these benefits during your consultation.

Does your breast reduction qualify for insurance coverage?

Insurance companies classify breast reductions as either cosmetic (not covered) or medically necessary (covered). Most patients with symptoms qualify as medically necessary.

Breast reduction patients often report some of these symptoms, which we’ll document during your consultation:

  • Chronic back pain: Persistent pain in the upper or lower back that has been documented by a physician and has not responded to other treatments.
  • Neck and shoulder pain: Ongoing strain in the neck and shoulders caused by the weight of the breasts pulling on the upper body.
  • Shoulder grooving: Visible, permanent indentations in the shoulders from bra straps digging into the skin under the weight of the breasts.
  • Skin irritation and rashes: Chronic rashes, chafing, or fungal infections in the crease beneath the breasts that don’t respond to topical treatment.
  • Numbness or nerve pain: Tingling, numbness, or pain in the hands or arms caused by breast weight putting pressure on nerves.
  • Posture problems: Difficulty standing or sitting upright because the weight of the breasts pulls the body forward.
  • Restricted physical activity: Inability to exercise, participate in sports, or perform daily tasks comfortably due to breast size.
  • Headaches: Chronic headaches related to posture & body tension caused by breast weight.

If several of these apply to you and have been ongoing, there’s a good chance your breast reduction may qualify for insurance coverage in Connecticut.

How We Work with insurance companies

Insurance approval for breast reduction is something we help patients with every day. You don’t need to figure out the paperwork or requirements on your own. We know what insurers look for and handle the heavy lifting on your behalf.

1. We document your symptoms

Insurance companies want to see that your symptoms are chronic, not temporary. Medical records from your primary care doctor, orthopedist, dermatologist, or physical therapist that show ongoing symptoms related to breast size are essential. The longer your symptoms have been documented, the stronger your case.

2. We calculate the minimum tissue removal

Many insurance companies use the Schnur sliding scale to determine whether a breast reduction qualifies as medically necessary.

The idea is straightforward: the larger your body frame, the more tissue must be removed for the procedure to qualify.

Not every insurance company uses this exact scale, and some have their own thresholds (often 500 grams per breast as a general cutoff). Our CT Breast Reduction Center team knows how each insurer handles this and will present your case accordingly.

3. We help gather supportive referrals

Your insurance company may require a letter of medical necessity from our breast reduction surgeon, along with supporting documentation from your primary care doctor or other treating physicians. These letters connect your symptoms directly to your breast size and explain why surgery is the appropriate next step.

4. We take clinical photos and measurements

Our office takes standardized clinical photos and detailed measurements during your breast reduction consultation. These are submitted as part of the pre-authorization package to visually document the severity of your condition.

The pre-authorization process step by step

Pre-authorization is the process of getting your insurance company’s approval before surgery is scheduled. Our team helps manage this for you. Here’s how it works.

Consultation with Dr. Reilly

During your initial visit, he examines you, reviews your symptoms, takes measurements and clinical photos, and discusses the surgical plan. The team collects your medical records, referral letters, and any evidence of failed conservative treatments. If anything is missing, they’ll tell you exactly what’s needed and where to get it.

We submit to insurance

We submit the pre-authorization request and your insurance company reviews the submission. Turnaround times vary, but most decisions come back within a few weeks.

Insurance approval

After your surgery is approved, you’ll receive confirmation of what’s covered and we will then move ahead with breast reduction surgery day.

Common insurance questions

Here are a few of the questions patients ask most about insurance coverage.

We work with patients who have commercial insurance that includes out-of-network benefits. The team can help you verify your coverage during your consultation.

Most insurance companies respond within two to four weeks. Some may take longer, especially if they request additional documentation.

Self-pay is a strong option too, and financing through Cherry or CareCredit makes it manageable.

Some insurance plans require a referral before seeing a specialist. Check your plan’s requirements and bring a referral to your consultation if needed.

The Schnur sliding scale is a formula that compares the amount of breast tissue to be removed to your body surface area. Many insurance companies use it to determine whether a breast reduction meets the threshold for medical necessity.

No. Insurance only covers breast reduction when it’s classified as medically necessary due to documented physical symptoms.

In most cases yes, with some parameters. Insurance requires a minimum amount of tissue to be removed, and Dr. Reilly works within that to match the size you’re aiming for.

It can, if the teen meets the same medical necessity criteria as an adult patient. Breasts must be fully developed, and symptoms must be well-documented. Our team handles the insurance process the same way for teen patients.

Find out if your insurance covers breast reduction

Schedule your free consultation with the Connecticut Breast Reduction Center. The team will review your symptoms, verify your insurance benefits, and walk you through the entire process from documentation to approval.

Get in Touch!

Do you have questions, or are you ready for a consultation? Fill out the form, and our team will reach out to schedule your visit.

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