A mommy makeover combines multiple cosmetic procedures, typically breast surgery and abdominal contouring, into a single surgical plan. This guide covers what's available in Oklahoma City, realistic pricing, surgeon credentials to verify, and what recovery actually requires when you're managing postoperative care at home.
The term refers to a customized combination rather than a single standardized procedure. Most commonly, patients pursue breast augmentation, breast lift, or breast reduction paired with abdominoplasty (tummy tuck). Some add liposuction or flank contouring. The medical rationale is practical: combining procedures reduces total anesthesia time, requires one surgical facility fee, and spaces recovery into one block rather than staging surgeries months apart.
Board certification matters more here than elsewhere in elective surgery. The American Board of Plastic Surgery (ABPS) certification means the surgeon completed five years of general surgery residency plus two or three years in plastic surgery, passed written and oral exams, and maintains continuing education. Verify certification directly on the ABPS website; "board-eligible" means the surgeon has not yet passed the exam.
Plastic surgeons in Oklahoma City operate primarily through two hospital systems: OU Medical Center (affiliated with University of Oklahoma College of Medicine) and Integris Health. Some surgeons also use Mercy and Saint Anthony hospitals for facility access.
Pricing for a combined mommy makeover in Oklahoma City typically ranges from $12,000 to $18,000 before anesthesia and facility fees. An abdominoplasty alone runs $8,000 to $12,000; breast augmentation adds $5,000 to $8,000; a breast lift adds $6,000 to $9,000. Combined, most patients pay total facility and anesthesia costs between $3,000 and $5,000 additional. Bundling procedures reduces the per-procedure cost but not the facility overhead.
Insurance does not cover cosmetic surgery. However, if the breast procedure qualifies as reconstructive (correction of asymmetry significant enough to cause physical symptoms, or reconstruction after prior surgery), some insurance may cover the breast portion; the abdominal surgery remains the patient's expense.
The Integris Health surgical centers in northwest Oklahoma City (near the Edmond border) and the OU Medical Center complex in central Oklahoma City represent the two primary facility settings. Integris facilities typically accommodate same-day discharge for combined procedures; OU Medical Center offers both same-day and overnight observation depending on the surgeon's protocol and patient factors.
Recovery at home in the Oklahoma City area means planning for temperature control during summer months. Post-operative swelling increases in heat; AC access is practical, not luxury. Driving is unsafe for three to four weeks after a combined procedure (pain medication and the physical mechanics of steering both compromise safety).
Request before-and-after photos specific to mommy makeover patients, not isolated breast surgery or tummy tuck cases. Ask about complication rates: seroma (fluid collection), infection, and numbness are common minor complications; nipple sensation loss or inability to breastfeed again are less common but serious. A surgeon who has performed 100+ combined procedures can cite these figures; one who says "complications are rare" without numbers is avoiding precision.
Ask what happens if you develop complications postoperatively. Does the surgeon revise hematomas or seromas at no charge if they occur within the normal healing window? Some surgeons include this in their fee; others charge separately. Ask what pain medication protocol the surgeon uses postoperatively. Some prescribe opioids routinely; others rely on multimodal (non-opioid combination) pain management. Both approaches work, but your tolerance for opioids and any family history of substance use should inform this conversation.
Interview two or three surgeons. The difference in personality and communication clarity often matters more to long-term satisfaction than a 0.5-inch variation in how one surgeon marks the incision.
Expect to take three weeks off work if your job is sedentary, four to six weeks if it involves lifting or standing for long periods. Household help for four weeks is not optional; you cannot lift more than 10 pounds (a gallon of milk), and bending at the waist strains the abdominal repair.
Compression garments (surgical bra and abdominal binder) run $200 to $400 combined and are necessary, not comfort items. Lymphatic drainage massage, sometimes recommended by surgeons, costs $75 to $125 per session and is not covered by insurance even if your surgeon refers you.
Return to exercise: walking within days is encouraged; jogging or gym work resumes around week six; heavy weight training around week ten.
Care Credit and Prosper Healthcare Finance are the most common third-party financing options offered by Oklahoma City surgeons. APR varies; many offer 0% APR for 12 to 24 months if you pay in full by the promotional period. Calculate the monthly payment before signing. A $15,000 procedure financed at 0% for 24 months is $625 monthly; many patients underestimate this burden.
Medical tourism is sometimes cheaper in Mexico or Thailand, but if a complication occurs, managing revision surgery across state or national borders complicates care. If you choose a surgeon outside Oklahoma City, confirm they will accept responsibility for complications that may require revision with another surgeon.
Contact two or three surgeons' offices for consultations. Bring a list of specific questions about their infection rate, revision policy, and postoperative pain management approach. Ask to speak with a patient reference (not someone chosen by the office; ask to call a random recent patient from the surgeon's records). Most importantly, confirm board certification before you schedule the consultation itself.
A mommy makeover is elective, permanent surgery. The decision hinges on choosing a surgeon you trust, understanding realistic costs and recovery demands, and arranging household support for the weeks immediately after surgery.
