Private Orthopedic Surgery: Edmonton, Alberta

Edmonton skyline

Whether you're an active Albertan eager to get back on the slopes, the golf course, or simply want to walk without pain—long wait times can make recovery harder.

This page is a practical guide for anyone interested in private orthopedic surgery in Edmonton—including what's available locally, when travel may be required, and how to navigate your choices.

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What an orthopedic surgeon treats

Orthopedic surgeons diagnose and treat problems involving bones, joints, ligaments, tendons, and muscles. The most common reasons people seek orthopedic care include:

You may want an orthopedic consult if:

  • Pain persists beyond 6–12 weeks despite physiotherapy
  • You have mechanical symptoms (locking, catching, giving way)
  • Symptoms limit work, sport, or sleep
  • Imaging (X-ray/MRI) suggests a surgical problem
  • You’ve already tried conservative treatment and you’re not improving
  • You want a professional second opinion on your situation

Please consult your physician for more guidance.

Public & private context for orthopedic surgery in Edmonton

More than 300,000 surgeries are performed in Alberta each year, including over 13,000 hip and knee replacements. Most orthopaedic surgeries are delivered through the publicly funded Alberta Health Care Insurance Plan (AHCIP).

Private surgical options in Edmonton are currently limited for Albertans. While some services are available privately (certain elective surgeries, ophthalmology, cosmetics), many Edmontonians pursue interprovincial private surgery when local wait times are not workable.

Current regulations: For most surgery types, Albertans must travel out-of-province to access private care—unless the surgeon has fully opted out of AHCIP, in which case they may provide private services to Albertans within the province (note: some of the surgeons listed below have opted out).

Looking ahead: Bill 11 may change these regulations by enabling Edmonton-based surgeons to offer private surgical services to Albertans without opting out of the public system.

Private orthopedic surgeons in Edmonton, AB

Accepting patients from all provinces, including Alberta
AB
MD, FRCSC
Curtis Myden
Surgeon location icon
Edmonton, AB
English
Sees adult patients

Orthopedic surgeon and former Olympian specializing in sports medicine and knee & shoulder reconstruction.

Procedural Expertise:
Accepting patients already diagnosed with osteoarthritis of the hip or knee.
AB
MD, FRCSC
Don Dick
Surgeon location icon
Edmonton, AB
English
Sees adult patients

Senior leader in Alberta’s orthopedic community, with over 30 years of experience, focusing on hip and knee replacement.

Procedural Expertise:
Accepting patients from all provinces
AB
MD, FRCSC
Jesse Slade-Shantz
Surgeon location icon
Vancouver, BC; Kelowna, BC; Calgary, AB; Edmonton, AB
English
Sees adult patients

Orthopedic surgeon with 14 years of experience, specializing in arthroscopic and open surgeries for shoulder, knee, elbow, sports-associated conditions.

Procedural Expertise:
Accepting patients who live outside of Alberta
AB
MD, FRCSC
Paul Leung
Surgeon location icon
Edmonton, AB
English
Sees adult patients

Highly experienced orthopedic surgeon with over 30 years of experience. Regarded as a regional leader in foot and ankle surgery, focused on complex deformities, sports injuries, degenerative conditions.

Procedural Expertise:
Accepting patients from all provinces, including Alberta
AB
MD, FRCSC
Tanner Dunlop
Surgeon location icon
Edmonton, AB
English
Sees adult patients

Orthopedic surgeon with 9 years of experience, specializing in upper extremity surgery (elbow to hand), arthroscopy, sports medicine.

Procedural Expertise:

Frequently asked questions

Can I pay privately for orthopedic surgery in Alberta?

It depends on the procedure and setting. For purely elective, non-essential surgeries (such as cosmetic and ophthalmology), Albertans can pay out of pocket for surgery within Alberta.

But for essential surgeries (e.g. hip replacements, knee arthroscopy, ACL reconstruction, etc.), the answer is generally no. That is why most Albertans who seek private surgery go out-of-province.

The exception is when a surgeon is opted out of AHCIP. Note: some of the surgeons listed above are opted out, look for the "Accepting patients from all provinces."

Can I see a private orthopedic surgeon without a referral?

Yes. Note: the surgeon will likely require medical information and diagnostics (imaging, lab tests, etc.) before the consultation.

Will AHCIP or extended health insurance cover private orthopedic surgery?

Generally, private surgeries performed in Canada are paid for out-of-pocket or via private insurance/ employer benefits.

Provincial plans (like OHIP, MSP, or AHCIP) typically do not cover procedures at private clinics, though some exceptions exist for WCB (Workers' Compensation) claims or specific inter-provincial programs.

Private insurance

Standard extended health benefits (e.g. Sun Life, Manulife) typically do not cover the cost of the surgery itself. However, they often cover related costs such as:

  • Post-op physiotherapy
  • Prescription medications
  • Custom braces or crutches
  • Medical devices (e.g., CPAP after sleep surgery)

Health spending account

If your employer provides a Health Spending Account (HSA) or "flex account," you can often use these funds to pay for the surgery. Unlike standard benefits, HSAs are usually flexible enough to cover CRA-eligible medical expenses, including private facility fees.

Tax Credits (Federal & Provincial)

You may be able to get some financial relief at tax time.

  • Medical Expense Tax Credit (METC): You can generally claim eligible private surgery fees as a medical expense on your federal tax return—learn more about the METC here.
  • Alberta Provincial Credit: Alberta has a parallel medical expense tax credit that can further reduce your provincial tax liability.
    • Note: Travel costs (e.g., mileage, hotels) may also be claimable if you travel more than 40km (for travel expenses) or 80km (for accommodation/meals) to receive medical services not available near your home.

Please consult a tax professional before claiming any private surgery fees on your taxes.

What can I do right now to speed things up?
  • Get appropriate imaging (X-ray for arthritis; MRI for many soft-tissue injuries)
  • Complete a course of physiotherapy and document results
  • Write down symptoms and functional limits
  • Submit a focused intake so the right subspecialist reviews your case
How much does private orthopedic surgery cost in Edmonton?

The costs for orthopedic surgery are substantial.

They vary considerably depending on the procedure, your underlying health conditions, the experience of the surgeon, type of anesthesia, etc., and can cost anywhere from $5,000 to $50,000+.

For an overview on private surgery costs, see our Resources on Private Surgery Costs and Hip Replacement Costs in Alberta.

Why do surgeons charge a consultation fee?

Private surgeons typically charge a consultation fee because a surgical consult involves clinical work before, during, and after the appointment.

A surgical consultation isn’t a “meet and greet.” It’s a formal medical assessment where the surgeon may:

  • review your imaging (e.g., MRI, X‑rays) and relevant medical records,
  • take a detailed history and perform a physical examination,
  • determine whether surgery is appropriate, and explain alternatives, benefits, and risks.

In a private setting, the surgeon generally isn’t billing Alberta Health (AHCIP) for that time, so the consultation fee compensates them for expert assessment and diagnostic decision-making.

Private clinics also cover operating costs that public hospitals don’t fund in the same way, including:

  • administrative staff for intake and coordination,
  • facility costs such as rent, utilities, and specialized equipment,
  • technology such as private EMR systems and secure portals for sharing results.

The consultation fee helps support these resources and the infrastructure required to provide timely, organized care outside publicly funded hospital operations.

Typical wait times for orthopedic surgery in Edmonton

Wait times depend on urgency, imaging, and OR capacity. Two waits matter:

  • Wait 1: referral → specialist consult
  • Wait 2: decision to treat → surgery date

If you’re over 60 with degenerative arthritis, you may be triaged differently than a younger patient with a locked knee or acute ligament injury. The fastest path usually comes from: clear diagnosis + complete imaging + documented failed conservative care.

Edmonton wait times

In Edmonton, there are 30,000+ patients waiting for surgery.

via Wait Times Alberta

Of those patients waiting for surgery, 49% are out of target. That means 49% of patients are waiting for a scheduled surgery longer than is clinically recommended by the Alberta Coding Access Targets for Surgery system.

Percentage of surgeries happening within target—via Wait Times Alberta

For hip and knee replacement surgery, wait times vary considerably. The tenth percentile gets surgery within 5-7 weeks. 50% are seen within 23-29 weeks. And the 90th percentile are seen within 65-74 weeks.

Hip replacement wait times, Edmonton, AB—via Wait Times Alberta
Knee replacement wait times, Edmonton, AB—via Wait Times Alberta