Mumbai
Tier 1
$6,000 - $18,000
Complex fusion, revision, navigation, and ICU can raise the range.
Spine surgery cost
Plan spine surgery in India with USD ranges for decompression, fusion, fixation, disc surgery, stenosis, spondylolisthesis, fracture, and complex revision cases.
How much does spine surgery cost in India?
Spine surgery in India commonly ranges from $4,500 to $18,000 depending on diagnosis, number of levels, implants, navigation, neuromonitoring, ICU need, hospital city, and whether surgery is simple decompression or complex fusion. Tier 2 cities can work for selected stable cases, while deformity, revision, tumor, infection, or spinal cord-risk cases need deeper spine and ICU backup.
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
$6,000 - $18,000
Complex fusion, revision, navigation, and ICU can raise the range.
Tier 1
$5,800 - $17,500
Useful for comparing spine surgeons and advanced technology options.
Tier 1
$6,000 - $18,000
Often selected for premium spine programs and international coordination.
Tier 1
$5,600 - $16,500
Strong for imaging-led planning and neuro-spine backup.
Tier 1
$5,300 - $16,000
Established destination for spine surgery and rehabilitation pathways.
Tier 1
$5,200 - $15,500
Can offer tertiary spine care with efficient packages.
Major metro
$5,000 - $14,500
Practical for selected planned spine procedures.
Major metro
$4,900 - $14,000
Often competitive when levels and implants are clear.
Major metro
$4,800 - $13,500
Useful for eastern-region spine care comparison.
Tier 2
$4,500 - $12,500
Good for selected stable cases after confirming implant and ICU readiness.
Tier 2
$4,500 - $12,000
Lower local cost can help when case complexity is controlled.
Tier 2
$4,700 - $13,000
Confirm spine surgeon experience, implants, imaging, and emergency backup.
Tier choice
Single-level disc or stenosis surgery may fit Tier 2 cities if spine expertise and implants are reliable.
Myelopathy, deformity, revision, tumor, infection, or long fusion often needs Tier 1 spine and ICU depth.
A lower quote is unsafe to compare unless number of levels, implant list, and technology assumptions are visible.
Included
Surgeon, anesthesia, OT, decompression or fusion procedure, and quoted implants.
Levels and implant list must be clear.
Room or ICU stay, nursing, routine medicines, pain control, and monitoring for included days.
Complex cases may need longer stay.
Basic post-op X-ray or standard tests when included.
Advanced navigation or CT may be separate.
Initial physiotherapy, brace guidance, walking support, and transfer training.
Ongoing rehab may be extra.
Not included
Robotic guidance, navigation, O-arm, or intraoperative neuromonitoring when not included.
Important in complex cases.
Additional screws, rods, cages, grafts, or extension of fusion during surgery.
Can change final bill.
Dural tear, infection, nerve monitoring issue, ICU, transfusion, or extended admission.
Risk varies by diagnosis.
Hotel, attendant, brace, walker, physiotherapy, and local follow-up after discharge.
Plan outside package.
Cost drivers
Single-level decompression costs less than multi-level fusion or long-segment fixation.
MRI and X-rays define levels.
Screws, rods, cages, grafts, and special fixation systems add cost.
Ask for implant list.
Navigation, robotic guidance, O-arm, and neuromonitoring may improve safety in selected cases but add cost.
Clarify need.
Weakness, myelopathy, spinal cord compression, tumor, or infection increases monitoring needs.
ICU may be needed.
Failed prior surgery, infection, scar tissue, or broken implants make surgery more complex.
Prior records matter.
Reports
The report checklist is different for each treatment so every cost page avoids generic duplicated content.
Spine estimates depend on whether symptoms match imaging and how many levels need treatment.
DICOM images and reports help surgeons review disc, stenosis, cord compression, and nerve root involvement.
Flexion-extension X-rays, scoliosis films, or CT help assess instability, deformity, fracture, and bone detail.
Leg or arm pain pattern, numbness, weakness, walking distance, and bladder symptoms guide urgency.
Physiotherapy, injections, medicines, prior surgery, implant notes, and infection history change planning.
Hospital selection
Ask about experience with the exact diagnosis, levels, revision status, and neurological risk.
Specialty fit matters.
Confirm screws, cages, rods, grafts, navigation, robotic support, and neuromonitoring if planned.
Line items matter.
Complex cases need neuro monitoring, ICU, blood bank, and emergency imaging.
Important for cord-risk cases.
Brace, walking, stairs, physiotherapy, and travel clearance should be planned before discharge.
Recovery affects journey.
Patient journey
The spine surgeon checks whether symptoms and imaging point to the same level.
The team clarifies decompression, fusion, fixation, navigation, monitoring, and levels treated.
The patient compares surgeon experience, implant availability, ICU, rehab, and cost.
Walking, brace use, wound review, and flight timing are planned before return.
Recovery planning
Patients should know sitting, walking, brace, bending, lifting, and stair instructions.
Pain may improve quickly, while numbness or weakness may recover slowly or incompletely.
Exercises, precautions, warning signs, and follow-up imaging should be shared with local providers.
Questions
Cost depends on diagnosis, levels treated, implants, navigation, neuromonitoring, ICU need, city, and revision complexity.
Selected stable cases can be suitable in Tier 2 hospitals, but complex cord-risk, revision, tumor, infection, and deformity cases often need Tier 1 depth.
It should be confirmed in writing. Screws, rods, cages, grafts, and extra levels can change the final bill.
No. It may help selected complex cases, but the need depends on anatomy, levels, surgeon preference, and safety goals.
MRI images, X-rays, CT if available, symptom history, weakness details, prior treatment, and medical fitness records are useful.
Simple procedures may need a shorter stay, while fusion or complex cases often need extra days for walking, wound review, and travel clearance.
Yes. Virello can compare levels, implant assumptions, city fit, hospital capability, inclusions, and rehab needs.