Cost is one of the most common worries, and a fair one. This guide walks through the funding routes that may be open to you, how to approach them, and the questions worth asking, so you can make an informed decision.
There is no single system for funding a prosthesis, what is available depends on where you live, how you lost the finger, and your circumstances. The good news is that there are usually several routes worth exploring, and you do not have to work them out alone. Below are the main avenues, what each involves, and how to approach them.
If your finger loss resulted from an accident or an insured event, your health or accident insurance may cover a prosthesis in part or full. Policies differ, so it's worth asking specifically whether prosthetics, cosmetic or functional, are covered.
If the loss happened at work, occupational injury compensation in your country may cover rehabilitation and prosthetics as part of your recovery. This is often one of the first routes worth pursuing.
Some public health systems fund prosthetics in certain circumstances. Coverage, criteria and waiting times vary widely by country and region, so it's worth asking your treating clinician or local health service what applies.
Limb-difference, trauma and disability charities sometimes help with costs, or can point you to funding you might not otherwise find. Even where they don't fund directly, they often know the landscape.
If you're approaching an insurer, a few specific questions help you get a clear answer rather than a vague one:
When you speak with a clinician, these questions help you understand both the cost and what you're getting for it:
It helps to know what a custom prosthesis actually includes, because it's more than an object. You're paying for the design and manufacture of a device made specifically for you, medical-grade materials and finishing, and a registered clinician's time to assess, measure, colour-match, fit and support you. With a quality-assured provider, you're also protected by a quality check and a remake policy, so you're not left paying again for a result that falls short. For more on how pricing works, see our cost guide and funding guide.
Only you can judge whether a prosthesis is worth it for you. What many people describe valuing is not the device itself but the confidence of a hand that looks whole again, in daily life, at work, and in photographs. Choosing a quality-assured route protects the money you spend, which is why it's worth understanding the funding options properly rather than choosing on price alone.
Register your interest and we'll connect you with a registered clinician who can discuss cost, funding and what's realistic for you. If there isn't one in your area yet, we'll keep you informed.
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