Private ENT Surgery: Toronto, Ontario

Toronto skyline

This page is a practical guide for patients and caretakers exploring private ENT surgery in Toronto: what kinds of procedures are routinely offered, why OHIP rules effectively block in-province private pay, and where patients typically travel for faster access.

Note: Ontario residents cannot pay privately for surgery within Ontario. For more ENT options, view Vancouver, BCMontréal, QC.

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Private ENT surgeons in Toronto, ON

Accepting 🇨🇦 patients from all provinces
ON
Brian Rotenberg, surgeon profile picture
MD, MPH, FRCSC
Brian Rotenberg
Surgeon location icon
Location
London, ON
Languages
English
Treats
Adult patients
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Expertise
Sleep, Rhinology

A global authority in sleep surgery with 18 years of experience, specializing on nasal and sinus complaints, rhinoplasty, orbit and tear duct surgery, endoscopic sinus surgery, snoring and sleep apnea.

Procedural Expertise:
Accepting 🇨🇦 patients from all provinces
ON
MD, MSc, FRCSC
Allan Vescan
Surgeon location icon
Location
Toronto, ON
Languages
English
Treats
Adult patients
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Expertise
Head & Neck

Head and neck surgeon with 18 years of experience specializing in skull base surgery, rhinology, and endocrine surgery.

Procedural Expertise:

Frequently asked questions

Can I pay privately for ENT surgery in Ontario?

It depends on the procedure and setting. For purely elective, non-essential, or cosmetic surgeries, Ontarians can pay out of pocket for surgery within Ontario:

  • Cosmetic procedures
    • Cosmetic rhinoplasty (nose reshaping for appearance)
    • Otoplasty (ear pinning) in adults for appearance
    • Earlobe repair / reduction (torn, stretched, or gauged lobes)
    • Facelift, neck lift, blepharoplasty (cosmetic), brow lift done by facial-plastics ENTs
    • Chin/cheek augmentation, lip lift
    • Cosmetic removal of benign facial skin lesions
  • Some nose procedures for snoring when there is no documented disease
  • Elective balloon sinuplasty
  • Newer uninsured procedures
    • Hypoglossal nerve stimulation
    • Eustachian tube balloon dilation
    • Balloon sinuplasty
    • Sinus implants
    • ClariFix cryotherapy (for chronic rhinitis)
    • Sialendosocopy (minimally invasive salivary stone/duct treatment)

But for medicaly necessary ENT surgeries where there is an underlying condition (e.g. septoplasty, sinus surgery, tonsillectomy, thyroidectomy, etc.), the answer is generally no. That is why some Ontarians who seek private ENT surgery choose to go out-of-province.

If you are unsure about whether or not the procedure you need is covered, you can reach out to the surgeon through the form on their Surgency profile and get more clarity from them directly.

Can I see a private ENT surgeon without a referral?

Yes and no—you can reach out to any of the private surgeons listed on Surgency without a referral. Their intake teams are happy to answer questions, explain what they treat, share pricing ranges, and walk you through next steps.

However, to book a formal consultation with the surgeon, you'll typically need a referral from your family doctor or nurse practitioner. Don't have one? Many of the clinics can help coordinate a virtual GP appointment to get the referral paperwork sorted. All surgeons listed on Surgency offer virtual initial consultations, so you don't need to travel until you and the surgeon have agreed on a plan.

Before your consultation, expect the clinic to request relevant medical records and recent diagnostic imaging (X-ray, MRI, CT, ultrasound, lab work, etc.). Having these ready speeds up the process and lets the surgeon give you specific guidance on your very first call.

Will OHIP or extended health insurance cover private ENT surgery?

This is general information, please seek professional tax guidance.

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

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

Private insurance

Standard extended health benefits (e.g. Sun Life, Manulife, Green Shield) 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.

Ontario Medical Expense Tax Credit: Ontario has a parallel medical expense tax credit that can further reduce your provincial tax liability. You claim eligible expenses minus the lesser of 3% of your net income or a flat threshold ($2,940 for 2026).

Ontario Seniors Care at Home Tax Credit: If you are a senior with low-to-moderate income, you may also qualify for this refundable credit, which helps with medical expenses that support aging at home.

Travel costs: Mileage, parking, and accommodation may also be claimable if you travel more than 40 km (for travel expenses) or 80 km (for accommodation and meals) to receive medical services not available near your home.

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

Does Surgency charge anything?

Surgency is free for patients, funded by surgeons/surgical providers.

Surgeons and providers—who meet our listing criteria—pay a flat fee to list on the Surgency platform. To maintain objectivity, there are no commissions, referral fees, nor any ranking or recommending one surgeon over another.

Surgency is patient-first. Our goal is to make the process of finding a private surgeon as simple as possible. You choose who to contact. Learn more in our Advertising Policy.

How much does private ENT surgery cost in Toronto?

There's no single price—ENT (ear, nose & throat) surgery covers everything from minor outpatient procedures to complex endoscopic operations, so cost depends heavily on the procedure, whether it's medical or cosmetic, the type of anaesthesia, surgeon experience, the facility, location, and the specifics of your case.

As a general guide, private ENT surgery in Canada commonly ranges from $2,000 to $6,000 for minor outpatient procedures; to $20,000+ for complex sinus surgeries.

The surgeon's fee, anaesthesia, and facility fee make up most of the bill, and complexity is the biggest driver—a short outpatient procedure costs far less than endoscopic surgery under general anaesthesia. Costs tend to be lower in Québec relative to other provinces, and higher in Alberta and Ontario.

Pre-op imaging, medications, and follow-up care may or may not be bundled in, so it's best to ask each clinic for a written, itemized quote before you decide.

This is general information, not a quote—pricing varies by clinic and case.

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.

Most consultation costs range between $200 - $400, however they can be up to 10% of the overall surgery costs. In many cases this fee will get rolled into the total cost of the surgery itself—ask the surgeon.

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.

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.

What is Surgency?

As a family doctor in the public system, I believe transparency is a form of care. I created Surgency to help my patients struggling on long waitlists who wanted to understand all their options for timely medical attention.

Surgency is a free resource designed to empower and educate—helping you understand private pathways and find accredited surgeons within Canada. I hope Surgency brings you clarity.

Dr. Sean Haffey

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What an ENT surgeon treats

ENT surgeons—also called otolaryngologists—diagnose and treat conditions of the ear, nose, throat, head, and neck. The most common reasons people seek ENT care include:

You may want an ENT consult if:

  • Sinus symptoms persist beyond 12 weeks despite medical treatment
  • You snore loudly, gasp at night, or have been told you may have sleep apnea
  • Hearing loss is affecting work, school, or relationships
  • You have a neck mass, persistent hoarseness, or difficulty swallowing
  • Imaging (CT/MRI) or a scope exam suggests a surgical problem
  • You want a second opinion on whether surgery is the right next step

Please consult your physician for more guidance.

Public & private context for ENT surgery in Toronto

An estimated 600,000 surgeries are performed in Ontario each year, with over 250,000 Ontarians on wait lists—tens of thousands of whom are waiting on ENT (ear, nose, and throat) procedures, including septoplasty, sinus surgery, tonsillectomy.

All medically necessary ENT surgeries are delivered through the publicly funded Ontario Health Insurance Plan (OHIP), because private surgical options in Ontario are restricted. Ontario surgeons may not accept payment for medically necessary ENT surgery from Ontario residents.

Unlike most provinces, Ontario effectively prevents its surgeons from "opting out" of OHIP, which would otherwise allow them to see Ontario residents privately within the province. Accordingly, some Greater Toronto residents interested in private-pay ENT surgery choose to travel out-of-province for medically necessary procedures.

Private pay for purely elective surgeries (e.g. cosmetic rhinoplasty, LASIK) is permitted under current regulations.

Current regulations: Ontario maintains some of the stricter regulations around private surgery in Canada. The Commitment to the Future of Medicare Act (CFMA) prohibits physicians from charging patients for OHIP-insured services, and enforcement has historically been rigorous. Unlike BC, QC, or AB, Ontario has seen less legal challenge to these restrictions, and the private ENT surgical landscape remains more constrained.