ProcedureRadar vs the Alternatives
The short answer
ProcedureRadar publishes underwriting-grade hospital procedure pricing from federally mandated transparency files. On this page we compare ourselves against four alternatives, Turquoise Health, Serif Health, Payerset, and FAIR Health. Each one genuinely serves a specific buyer better, and we fit mid-market payers, MGAs, and TPAs that need this data at self-serve pricing.
How the Options Compare
| Platform | Who It Fits Best | Where We Fit | Full Read |
|---|---|---|---|
Turquoise Health An enterprise price-transparency data platform. | Fits large health systems and national payers that can clear enterprise procurement. | We fit mid-market teams who want underwriting-grade procedure data on a corporate card. | See Comparison |
Serif Health A payer-negotiated (TiC) rate intelligence platform. | Fits teams whose core need is deep payer-negotiated rate intelligence, not hospital prices. | We fit buyers who want hospital procedure prices with severity data and CIs, self-serve. | See Comparison |
Payerset A payer rates, hospital MRF, and claims platform. | Fits buyers who need payer-negotiated rates and broad all-payer claims coverage. | We fit buyers who want hospital-published prices without a sales cycle or six-figure minimum. | See Comparison |
FAIR Health A nationwide insurance-claims cost benchmark. | Fits actuaries who need a national billed-charge and allowed-amount claims benchmark. | We fit buyers who need hospital-published prices under federal mandate, not claims benchmarks. | See Comparison |
Fits large health systems and national payers that can clear enterprise procurement.
We fit mid-market teams who want underwriting-grade procedure data on a corporate card.
Fits teams whose core need is deep payer-negotiated rate intelligence, not hospital prices.
We fit buyers who want hospital procedure prices with severity data and CIs, self-serve.
Fits buyers who need payer-negotiated rates and broad all-payer claims coverage.
We fit buyers who want hospital-published prices without a sales cycle or six-figure minimum.
Fits actuaries who need a national billed-charge and allowed-amount claims benchmark.
We fit buyers who need hospital-published prices under federal mandate, not claims benchmarks.
Read the Full Comparisons
ProcedureRadar vs Turquoise Health
An enterprise price-transparency data platform.
Read the Full ComparisonProcedureRadar vs Serif Health
A payer-negotiated (TiC) rate intelligence platform.
Read the Full ComparisonWhy You Can Trust These Numbers
Every ProcedureRadar figure on this page comes from federally mandated hospital Machine-Readable Files published under 45 CFR Part 180, the Hospital Price Transparency Rule. We track pricing across the top 100 US metros and have published prices from 2,000+ hospitals, built from 15,000,000+ pricing records with per-record source attribution.
- See how we source and validate data on our methodology page.
- Read the full methodology white-paper for every modeling choice and limitation.
- Download a verified data sample and audit the fields before you commit.
- Review our pricing tiers and what is included at each access level.
- Browse the developer portal for API documentation and integration guides.
By Kevin Monangai, Founder, ProcedureRadar.
We built this page because most vendor comparisons are written so one side always loses. We would rather set ProcedureRadar next to the alternatives, say plainly who each one serves best, and let you decide where a mid-market underwriting need actually fits. For most teams that is a decision they can make, and a price they can approve, in a single 30-minute call.
See the Data for Yourself
Walk through coverage, statistical depth, and API access on a quick call, or provision a key and start pulling data today.
ProcedureRadar surfaces hospital pricing data published under federal transparency rules.
- Turquoise Health public materials (July 4, 2026)
- Serif Health public materials (July 4, 2026)
- Payerset public materials (July 4, 2026)
- FAIR Health public materials (July 4, 2026)
- ProcedureRadar Methodology (July 4, 2026)
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