DATA-BACKED GUIDE · UPDATED JULY 2026
Endoscopy vs Surgery to Remove a Swallowed Object: Which Costs Less?
If your pet swallowed something and it is still sitting in the stomach, you may have two ways to get it out. Endoscopy pulls it back up through the mouth with a scope. Open surgery cuts in to remove it. Endoscopy is usually less invasive and can be cheaper, but it only works in a narrow window. Whether it is even an option comes down to what was swallowed, where it is, and how fast you got there.
The quick version
- Endoscopy retrieves objects from the stomach or esophagus without cutting, so recovery is faster and often cheaper.
- Endoscopy only works while the object is still reachable and not stuck in the intestine.
- Once an object moves into the intestine or causes a blockage, open surgery is usually the only option.
- Sharp objects, or ones too large to pull back up, may need surgery regardless.
- Speed is everything, because the sooner you go, the more likely the cheaper option is still on the table.
What people actually paid
The gap: advertised vs actually paid (medians)
People reported paying 143% more than the advertised list price for foreign body surgery.
List prices are advertised prices; paid figures are what people reported, often for different cases and from a small sample so far. Treat the gap as a signal, not a quote.
Real prices, in people's own words
- $1,342“Foreign body ingestion, Cost: $1,342, Reimbursement: $1,074”
- $2,600“When she ate a foreign object and needed endoscopy surgery, Spot reimbursed me $2,340 out of the $2,600 bill.”
- $4,000“Her diagnostic tests and the surgery to remove the object cost about $4,000. Greta's family was reimbursed over $3,500 through their MetLife Pet Insurance policy.”
- $5,920“Meatball ... Foreign Object Removal ... total vet bill of $5,920 ... reimbursement of $4,370 ... reimbursement arrived in under a week after a quick and easy claim submission.”
- $6,400“Ultimately, the bill came to around $6,400, including the removal of 3-4 inches of necrotic intestine.”
- $6,800“This 8-year-old dog living near Denver, CO, ingested a sock and needed an exam and surgery to remove it. MetLife Pet covered $5,400 of the $6,800 bill.”
Genuine amounts posted publicly. We publish the price and the quote, never the person.
Why the price varies so much
The choice, and the price, hinge on where the object is and what it is. An endoscope can only reach the esophagus and stomach, so timing decides whether it is even possible. A smooth coin caught early is a good endoscopy candidate. A sock that has traveled into the intestine is not. The object's shape matters because something sharp risks tearing tissue on the way out and may be safer removed surgically. Not every hospital owns an endoscope or has someone skilled with it, so availability shapes your options. And open surgery costs more because of the incision, longer anesthesia, and longer recovery.
How to pay less
- Get to a vet fast, while the object may still be in the stomach and reachable by scope.
- Ask directly whether endoscopy is possible before agreeing to open surgery.
- Check which nearby hospitals actually have an endoscope and a clinician trained to use it.
- Consider a university teaching hospital, which often has endoscopy and lower prices.
- Line up CareCredit or Scratchpay ahead of time so cost does not delay a time-sensitive decision.
Common questions
Is endoscopy always cheaper than surgery?
Usually, because there is no incision, anesthesia time is shorter, and your pet often goes home the same day. It is not always dramatically cheaper once you add the specialist and equipment, but it typically beats open surgery and is easier on your pet.
Why can't they just always use endoscopy?
Because a scope only reaches the esophagus and stomach. Once an object passes into the intestine, endoscopy cannot get it. Objects that are too big, too sharp, or already causing a blockage also rule it out.
How do I know if my pet is a candidate?
Your vet will use x-rays or other imaging to locate the object and judge its size and shape. If it is still in the stomach, smooth enough to pull up safely, and your pet is stable, endoscopy may be on the table. Getting seen quickly is what keeps that option open.
What happens if endoscopy fails?
Sometimes the object cannot be grasped or is stuck, and the team moves to surgery in the same visit. Ask up front how they handle that so you understand the possible combined cost before you begin.
Does insurance cover either option?
Accident-and-illness plans generally cover foreign body removal whether it is done by endoscopy or surgery, as long as it is not pre-existing. Keep the itemized invoice for your claim.