Mumbai
Tier 1
$3,400 - $7,800
Robotic or complex fertility-preserving surgery can raise cost.
Fibroid surgery cost
Plan myomectomy or hysteroscopic fibroid removal with USD ranges by city, fibroid size, number, location, fertility goals, bleeding risk, and hospital stay.
How much does fibroid removal surgery cost in India?
Fibroid removal surgery in India commonly ranges from $2,300 to $7,800 depending on fibroid number, size, location, laparoscopic, hysteroscopic, robotic, or open approach, fertility goals, bleeding risk, and hospital city. The estimate should clearly separate fertility-preserving myomectomy from hysterectomy.
City-wise cost
These ranges are planning bands. A hospital-backed quote should be requested after reports, diagnosis, and fitness details are reviewed.
Tier 1
$3,400 - $7,800
Robotic or complex fertility-preserving surgery can raise cost.
Tier 1
$3,300 - $7,500
Useful for comparing laparoscopic and fertility-focused gynecology teams.
Tier 1
$3,400 - $7,800
Often selected for premium facilities and international coordination.
Tier 1
$3,100 - $7,000
Strong for minimally invasive gynecology and fertility-linked planning.
Tier 1
$2,900 - $6,700
Established option for planned gynecology surgery.
Tier 1
$2,900 - $6,500
Can offer efficient laparoscopic packages.
Major metro
$2,700 - $6,000
Practical for planned myomectomy and recovery stay.
Major metro
$2,600 - $5,800
Often competitive when approach and fibroid map are clear.
Major metro
$2,500 - $5,600
Useful for eastern-region gynecology planning.
Tier 2
$2,300 - $5,200
Good value for selected planned cases with blood-bank backup.
Tier 2
$2,300 - $5,000
Lower stay cost can help when recovery is straightforward.
Tier 2
$2,400 - $5,400
Confirm laparoscopy experience and emergency support.
Tier choice
Many benign fibroid cases can be managed in Tier 2 hospitals with strong gynecology and blood-bank support.
Very large fibroids, repeat myomectomy, severe endometriosis, or IVF-linked cases may need Tier 1 depth.
A cheaper quote may remove the uterus, which is not suitable when fertility preservation is the goal.
Included
Gynecologic surgeon, anesthesia, OT, and planned myomectomy or hysteroscopic removal.
Approach should be written.
Room, nursing, routine medicines, pain control, and monitoring for included days.
Open surgery may need longer stay.
Selected labs and imaging review when bundled.
Anemia correction may be separate.
Routine fibroid tissue pathology when included.
Confirm with the hospital.
Not included
Robotic surgery, dense adhesions, very large uterus, or multiple fibroids can add cost.
Needs fresh estimate.
Transfusion, iron infusions, or severe anemia management.
Common in heavy bleeding cases.
IVF, embryo transfer, fertility medicines, or future pregnancy monitoring.
Separate pathway.
Bleeding, infection, conversion to open surgery, or extended admission.
Risk depends on fibroid map.
Cost drivers
Submucosal, intramural, subserosal, cervical, and broad-ligament fibroids need different approaches.
MRI can help.
Multiple or very large fibroids increase operating time and blood-loss risk.
Ultrasound is not always enough.
Uterus-preserving surgery needs careful reconstruction and future pregnancy advice.
Different from hysterectomy.
Hysteroscopic, laparoscopic, robotic, and open myomectomy differ in equipment and recovery.
Compare like with like.
Low hemoglobin may need correction before surgery and can affect timing.
Share CBC.
Reports
The report checklist is different for each treatment so every cost page avoids generic duplicated content.
A fibroid estimate should be based on fibroid mapping and fertility goals.
Shows size, number, location, uterine cavity involvement, and surgical route.
Heavy bleeding, clots, pain, pressure, hemoglobin, and iron therapy guide urgency.
Pregnancy plans, miscarriages, infertility, IVF plan, and prior embryo transfer affect decision-making.
C-section, myomectomy, endometriosis, or infection history can increase adhesions.
Hospital selection
Ask about laparoscopic, hysteroscopic, robotic, open, and fertility-preserving myomectomy experience.
Approach fit matters.
Confirm blood bank, anemia correction, cell-saver if relevant, and emergency backup.
Important for large fibroids.
If IVF is planned, gynecologist and fertility team should align on timing.
Avoid fragmented care.
Clarify lifting limits, wound care, bleeding signs, and pregnancy waiting period.
Needed before travel.
Patient journey
The surgeon reviews location, size, symptoms, and fertility goal.
Hysteroscopic, laparoscopic, robotic, or open surgery is chosen based on anatomy.
Fibroids are removed, bleeding monitored, and pathology reviewed if needed.
Patients receive guidance on healing, pregnancy timing, and return travel.
Recovery planning
Patients should know what bleeding, fever, pain, or discharge needs urgent review.
Walking, lifting, sex, exercise, and travel timing depend on approach.
Uterine healing and future delivery planning should be discussed when fertility is a goal.
Questions
Not always. Myomectomy can be complex because it preserves the uterus and may involve multiple fibroids or bleeding risk.
Selected planned cases can be suitable if the surgeon, laparoscopy setup, blood bank, and emergency support are strong.
Pelvic ultrasound or MRI, hemoglobin, bleeding history, fertility goals, and prior surgery records are useful.
No. IVF and fertility medicines are separate unless clearly mentioned in a combined plan.
Many patients need 1 to 3 weeks depending on approach, wound review, anemia, and travel clearance.
Yes. Virello can compare fertility goal, approach, city fit, inclusions, and recovery implications.