Medical Bills · your rights, and the outs

That bill is the opening offer, not the final number.

Medical bills are negotiable, often wrong, and frequently forgivable — most people just pay (or panic) because nobody told them their rights. Here's the order to work it. Not legal or medical advice — a sourced map. Don't put a medical bill on a credit card before you've tried the steps below.

1

Get the itemized bill & check it

Ask for the fully itemized bill (not the summary). Billing errors and duplicate charges are common. Match it against your insurer's Explanation of Benefits. Don't pay a number you haven't verified.

2

Ask for charity care / financial assistance

Every nonprofit hospital in the U.S. is legally required to have a written Financial Assistance Policy offering free or steeply discounted care to eligible patients — but they rarely advertise it. Ask by name: "What's your charity care / financial assistance policy, and how do I apply?" (Many for-profit hospitals have one too.)

Help applying, free: Dollar For (a nonprofit that helps you get hospital bills forgiven). Rights overview: CFPB.

3

Know the No Surprises Act

Since 2022, the No Surprises Act protects you from many surprise out-of-network bills — like an out-of-network ER, or an out-of-network doctor at an in-network hospital. If you're being "balance-billed" for one of those, push back; you may not owe it.

What it covers: cms.gov/nosurprises.

4

Negotiate & set a payment plan

Call billing, say plainly you can't pay it in full, and ask for a discount (cash-pay / prompt-pay rates can be far lower) and an interest-free payment plan. The sooner you call, the more they'll work with you. Get any agreement in writing before you pay a cent.

Can't pay at all? CFPB: what to do.

Two rules that save people thousands. (1) Apply for charity care before you pay or borrow — you can't get back money you already handed over, and a credit card turns a forgivable bill into permanent debt. (2) Never ignore it, never panic-pay it — call, verify, ask, negotiate, in that order. Per the Inference Clause, the rights and programs here are real and cited; confirm specifics with the hospital and your insurer. Education, not legal or medical advice.