The cost of cervical cancer treatment cannot be generalized. The cost of cervical cancer treatment depends on the patient’s specific condition, disease stage and physical condition, and patients should prefer surgery if they are able to undergo surgery. The cost of simple cervical cancer treatment depends on the hospital’s regulations and all the different drugs, and the chemotherapy at the later stage is very different, which can range from several thousand to hundreds of thousands of dollars for one cycle, depending on their ability. Once the diagnosis of cervical cancer is confirmed, the most appropriate treatment plan should be developed. The formulation of the treatment plan is related to the patient’s age, general condition, the extent of the lesion, and the presence of complications. Therefore, before treatment, patients must undergo a whole-body examination and consider and formulate a treatment plan in conjunction with the functional examination results of various organs and systems. The treatment methods of cervical cancer are generally surgery and radiation therapy. Surgery is mainly for treating patients with early stage of cervical cancer, while radiotherapy is mainly for middle and late stage. In recent years, chemotherapy has been developed at home and abroad as an adjuvant treatment to surgery or radiotherapy, which has achieved certain efficacy. In principle, surgical treatment is limited to early stage patients, i.e. patients with carcinoma in situ, stage I and stage IIA. For those above stage IIA, the effect of surgical treatment is not good, and radiotherapy should be preferred. Radiation therapy is applicable to all stages of invasive cervical cancer, and radiation therapy can also be performed for early stage cancer and in situ cancer that are not suitable for surgery. Standardized radiotherapy for cervical cancer includes two parts: external radiotherapy and intracavitary radiotherapy, which form a reasonable dose distribution in the tumor area. Except for a few early-stage cancers, the combination of intracavitary and extracorporeal radiotherapy is generally required to achieve ideal efficacy and radical cure. The survival rate of cervical cancer after treatment for more than 5 years reaches more than 90% for early stage, about 60% to 70% for middle stage, and about 11% to 50% for late stage (stage III and IV). In conclusion, surgery and radiotherapy are effective treatment measures for cervical cancer, and chemotherapy is an effective adjuvant treatment method, which can be chosen appropriately and satisfactorily according to the early and late stage of the disease, the patient’s general condition and the patient’s will.