We built the pricing around the access problem, not around maximizing per-session revenue.
Most Florida patients can't access EECP. Not because it's expensive — because the delivery model is broken. Seven weeks. Daily visits. Most people can't do that.
So we built an alternative, and priced it accordingly. The travel fee is the main cost driver for in-home treatment, and it gets smaller the more patients share it. Couples eliminate it. Clusters cut it in half. In-clinic patients skip it entirely.
The result is a pricing structure where completing the full 35-hour course — the way it's meant to be done — is more accessible than at most clinics. Before insurance even enters the conversation.
Three variables determine what you pay.
- Treatment locationIn-home includes a travel component. In-clinic does not. Couples and clusters reduce the travel cost per person.
- Solo vs. sharedSolo in-home treatment carries the full travel fee. Couples split it. Cluster patients split it further. The per-person cost drops materially with each additional patient in the same visit.
- Session frequencyTwo-a-day protocols (two 1-hour sessions per day) complete the course in under three weeks instead of seven. This reduces total travel events and lowers cost — and for in-home patients, it also reduces the number of days we need to be in your home.
We operate cash-pay. Here's why — and what that means for you.
We made a deliberate decision not to accept insurance reimbursement as payment for EECP treatment. That decision has three reasons.
First, it keeps us nimble. Insurance billing requires us to operate within a narrow set of approved indications. We treat patients with long COVID, cognitive decline, POTS, and other conditions where insurance wouldn't pay us regardless — and we don't want the administrative overhead of a billing system that doesn't serve most of our patients.
Second, it keeps pricing transparent. You know what you're paying before you start. There are no surprise bills, no claim denials, no coordination-of-benefits nightmares.
Third, it keeps us focused. We're not optimizing for reimbursement codes. We're optimizing for patient outcomes.
What about Medicare coverage?
Medicare formally covers EECP for chronic stable angina under National Coverage Determination 20.20. If angina is your primary indication, you may be able to submit our documentation to Medicare for self-reimbursement. We don't handle that process for you, but we'll provide whatever documentation you need to pursue it. Talk to your Medicare supplement or Medicare Advantage plan about the process.
HSA/FSA eligible?
EECP treatment is generally HSA and FSA eligible as a qualified medical expense. We provide documentation for your records. Confirm with your plan administrator.
From first call to final session.
Initial call
15–30 minutes. We talk through your history, your diagnosis, your goals, and whether EECP seems like a reasonable fit. No commitment required.
Clinical screening
We review your records and coordinate with your cardiologist or primary care physician to confirm you're a candidate. We handle most of this for you.
Treatment plan
We agree on the format (in-home, couples, cluster, or in-clinic), the protocol (one-a-day or two-a-day), and the pricing. You get a written summary.
Treatment begins
First session is orientation — equipment setup, ECG lead placement, first run at low pressure to calibrate. Sessions two through thirty-five are the protocol.
Post-treatment follow-up
We check in at 30, 90, and 180 days. We want to know how you're doing. If you want a maintenance protocol, we discuss it then.
Our What to Expect guide walks through every week of treatment — what you'll feel, when you'll feel it, and what's completely normal.
