Billionaire entrepreneur Mark Cuban isn’t letting the absurdity of America’s health care costs slide — when a scan can cost more than some used cars.
On Saturday, Cuban resumed his crusade for health care reform by highlighting what he sees as a clear pricing failure. “Explain to me why an insurance company would pay $2500 for an MRI when there’s a center down the street that does it for $350?” He wrote in X.
The question was not accidental. This came during a thread where Cuban was already talking about the massive influence of pharmacy benefit managers and large insurance companies.
Don’t miss:
“I’m all for PBM reform,” he wrote earlier in the day. “But know that the biggest PBMs are owned by the biggest insurance companies … they’re too big to care … the employer, the patient, the state, the hospital, the physician — if they can charge you, they will.”
That’s when the user pushed back, arguing that insurers only pay bills submitted by providers and that they don’t set sky-high prices. Cuban’s response – his rhetorical MRI question – cuts to the complexity with a vague price comparison.
The message was clear: Insurance companies have no incentive to control costs when they profit from a bloated system. And for Cubans, it’s not just inefficient—it’s exploitative.
“They don’t need to be,” Cuban added in a follow-up. “And that’s the point. They raise the price.”
Trend: Americans With Financial Planning Can 4x Their Wealth — Get your personalized plan from CFP Pro
Others quickly gave real-world examples. One person said their MRI was quoted at more than $1,500 with insurance but only cost $275 when paying in cash. Another said their scan was listed between $1,200 and $3,200 with insurance — but only $212 at a local imaging center.
Cuban, who co-founded low-cost pharmacy platform Cost Plus Drugs, has spent the past few years attacking middlemen and opacity in the health care system. His strategy has focused on cutting the layers of bureaucracy that pad prices without delivering value. That same frustration is now aimed squarely at insurers, who he believes continue to reward inflated fees rather than steer patients toward affordable options.
He has pushed Congress to pressure PBMs and insurers to shed their overlapping interests, calling for greater transparency and more consumer benefits.
While his critics may argue that providers set list prices, Cuban isn’t buying that excuse. To him, if insurers are reimbursing ten times the cost of services when lower-cost options exist, they’re part of the problem—not just bystanders.
Also see: Moxy Hotels to $12B in Real Estate – The firm behind NYC’s trendiest properties is letting in individual investors.
And as health care premiums continue to rise across the country, the Cuban-linked disconnect isn’t just rhetoric — it’s a snapshot of why Americans are paying more for less.
Even if you’re not the one paying the full bill for that overpriced scan, you’re still paying for it—through inflated premiums, increased deductibles, and out-of-pocket caps. For high earners trying to build real financial stability, it helps to see how hidden expenses stack up against everything else.
Domain Money connects you with certified financial planners who model real-world scenarios—from surprise medical costs to long-term tax strategy—based on your actual income and expenses. It’s a great way to navigate rising costs without having to look back.
Read Next: Forget Flipping Houses-This fund lets you invest in home equity like Wall Street does
Image: Shutterstock
Unlocked: 5 new trades every week. Click now to get daily top business ideasPlus unlimited access to the latest tools and strategies to gain an edge in the markets.
Get the latest stock analysis from Benzinga:
In this article Mark Cuban asks why insurance pays $2,500 for an MRI when the center down the street charges $350 originally appeared on Benzinga.com.
© 2026 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.
On Monday, trading activity increased at Arch Invest. The family of aggressive growth exchange-traded funds…
Like a comprehensive index at any time S&P 500 Growing 18% in just one year,…
Here's what you'll learn as you read this story:A New Zealand cave has unearthed fossils…
Frozen dessert fast-food chains are favorite stores that consumers enjoy visiting, but the financial crisis…
By Claire Jim, Ken Wu and Scott Murdoch HONG KONG, Feb 4 (Reuters) - Hong…
Just because a stock is on a strong run, doesn't mean you can't add more…