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Negotiating Medical Bills in the USA — Charity Care, Itemized Bill, Balance Billing

Medical bills in the USA are often SIGNIFICANTLY NEGOTIABLE, with the first question always being to request an ITEMIZED BILL (line item for each procedure with CPT codes).

Why US Medical Bills Are So Expensive and Negotiable

The US system has a "chargemaster" — a list of hospital prices. These are "list prices" — several times higher than what is actually charged to insurance companies or Medicare.

Example:

  • Chargemaster: $5,000 for a standard ER visit
  • Medicare paid: ~$700 for the same
  • Insurance negotiated: ~$1,200
  • Self-pay with negotiation: ~$1,500-2,000
  • Uninsured without negotiation: $5,000 invoice

This is a dramatic difference — and it is negotiable.

Step 1: Itemized Bill — KEY

What It Is

Itemized bill (UB-04 form or hospital itemized statement) shows:

  • Each procedure separately with CPT code (Current Procedural Terminology)
  • Each medication, equipment
  • Each doctor / facility charge
  • The cost of each item

Why You Need It

  • Federal law (example: Affordable Care Act) — hospitals MUST provide it
  • ~80% of medical bills have ERRORS (audit studies)
  • Negotiation impossible without detail
  • Insurance dispute requires it

How to Request

Call the billing department:

"I would like to request a fully itemized bill for my hospital stay/visit on [date]. Please send via mail and email to [address]."

Must be provided within 30 days of request.

Step 2: Audit for Errors

Common Medical Billing Errors

  • Duplicate charges — same procedure billed twice
  • Upcoding — procedure billed as more complex than performed
  • Unbundling — services that should be one bundle billed separately
  • Wrong CPT code — different procedure billed
  • Phantom services — billed for service never received
  • Wrong room type — private room charge when semi-private
  • Length of stay — billed for extra day
  • Drugs not received
  • Equipment not used

Audit Yourself

  1. Compare itemized bill with personal notes (date of visit, procedures, drugs)
  2. Compare with medical records (request hospital medical records, free)
  3. Look up CPT codes online — verify what procedures were billed
  4. Check duplicate items
  5. Flag anything suspicious

Audit Professionally

Medical bill audit services (Healthcare Bluebook, CoPatient, Equian) — find errors for a fee or % savings.

Step 3: Financial Assistance Policy (FAP)

Federal Requirement

26 USC 501(r) requires that all non-profit hospitals have a Financial Assistance Policy. Most US hospitals are non-profit.

Typically Covers

  • Full write-off for income < 200% FPL (~$30k/single, $62k/family of 4)
  • Sliding scale 50-95% reduction for 200-400% FPL
  • AGB cap (Amounts Generally Billed) — no more than the average insurance/Medicare pays

How to Apply

  1. Call billing department or financial counselor at the hospital
  2. Request a Financial Assistance Application
  3. Complete — income (paystubs, W-2, 1040), assets, family, housing
  4. DO NOT ask about immigration status — only about income
  5. Submit within 30-60 days
  6. Decision in 30-90 days
  7. You can apply RETROACTIVELY — even a year after visit (each hospital has its own deadlines)

Required Documents

  • Pay stubs for the last 2-3 months
  • Federal tax return (1040) for the last 1-2 years
  • Bank statements for 1-3 months
  • Proof of residence
  • Government ID
  • Hospital bills

Common Eligibility

Income vs FPLTypical FAP Reduction
< 100% FPL100% write-off
100-200% FPL80-100% write-off
200-300% FPL50-80% write-off
300-400% FPL20-50% write-off
> 400% FPLNo FAP, but negotiate

Step 4: Negotiation

Self-pay (cash) discount

Call the billing department:

"I'm self-pay. Can you offer a discount if I pay immediately?"

  • Often 30-60% off chargemaster
  • Greater chances in nonprofit hospitals
  • Faster payment = larger discount

Insurance Negotiation Rate

Argument: "Medicare pays $X for this CPT code. I'll match that rate."

  • Lookup Medicare reimbursement rate (medicare.gov/physician-fee-schedule)
  • Typically 30-40% chargemaster
  • Powerful negotiation anchor

Zero-interest Payment Plan

Most hospitals agree to:

  • 12-36 month plan
  • Zero interest
  • $50-500/month payments
  • Better than collection

Hardship Reduction

Language: "I'm experiencing financial hardship. Can you reduce this bill?"

  • You will show hardship documents (unemployment, layoff, medical condition)
  • Often reduction 40-70%
  • Some hospitals have hardship discount policy separate from FAP

Settlement Lump Sum

"I can pay $X as settlement in full now."

  • Often successful at 30-50% of the original bill
  • Confirm settlement in writing
  • Watch for 1099-C if > $600 forgiven

Specific Tactics by Department

Hospital Itself

  • Billing department
  • Patient Financial Services
  • Financial Counselor
  • Patient Advocate

Physician Separately

Hospital + doctor are often billed separately. An ER visit may have:

  • Hospital facility charge
  • Emergency physician charge
  • Radiologist (if X-ray)
  • Pathologist (if labs)
  • Anesthesiologist (if surgery)

Negotiate with each separately.

Specialty

  • Radiology — often accepts Medicare rate
  • Anesthesia — may be more negotiable
  • Surgeon — usually tougher
  • Lab — usually accepts smaller reduction

No Surprises Act (2022)

Federal law since 2022 protects against surprise medical bills:

What It Protects

  • Emergency services — in-network rates apply even with out-of-network ER
  • Out-of-network providers in in-network hospital — non-elective
  • Air ambulance — in-network rates

What It Does NOT Protect

  • Ground ambulance (NOT protected — biggest gap)
  • Out-of-network providers when patient consent (special form)
  • Out-of-network hospital, planned services

What to Do If You Get a Surprise Bill

  1. Check if you fall under NSA
  2. Contact insurance company — NSA applies
  3. Submit Independent Dispute Resolution (IDR) if insurance and provider can't agree
  4. NSA helpline: 1-800-985-3059

Step 5: What If Sent to Collections

Medical Debt Protections (since 2022-23)

  • Medical debt below $500 does NOT appear on credit reports
  • Medical collections wait 1 year before reporting
  • Paid medical debt removed from credit reports

Strategies After Collections

  1. Validation letter (like other debts)
  2. Apply for FAP retroactively — some hospitals recall debt from collections
  3. Negotiate with collection agency — typically 30-50% within
  4. Pay-for-delete arrangement
  5. Statute of limitations check

Special Situations

Uninsured

  • EMTALA guarantees ER care — hospital cannot refuse
  • Apply for Emergency Medicaid (retroactively up to 3 months)
  • FAP — full write-off often possible
  • Negotiate self-pay discount 30-60%

With Insurance but High Deductible

  • Insurance covers 0% before deductible
  • Hospital uses contracted rate (negotiated), not chargemaster — automatic reduction
  • Can apply for FAP even with insurance (some hospitals)

With Insurance After Deductible

  • Insurance covers 70-90% post-deductible
  • You pay co-insurance + co-pay
  • Check EOB (Explanation of Benefits) — whether insurance correctly applied
  • From hospital bill, your "patient responsibility" amount

Out-of-Network Hospital

  • Insurance covers less (50-70% typically)
  • May balance bill the rest
  • NSA protects for emergencies
  • Negotiate aggressively

Polish Travel Insurance in the USA

  • NFZ does NOT cover the USA
  • Polish travel insurance — typically $30k-$100k cap, excludes pre-existing
  • Often reimbursement rate is poor — pay upfront, claim later
  • Document everything — itemized bill, payment receipts

Polish Specific Scenarios

Polish Newcomer Without Insurance

$25k ER bill after the first week in the USA without insurance:

  1. Apply for Emergency Medicaid (retroactively)
  2. Apply for FAP — often 100% write-off for $0 income
  3. Hospital may settle for $500-2,000
  4. Final bill likely $0 to $2,000

Polish Senior Without Medicare

$50k surgery bill, has a Polish pension, $0 US income:

  1. FAP — likely 100% write-off
  2. Can still apply for Medicare if LPR 5+ years (paid)
  3. Medicaid pregnancy/emergency for special cases

Polish Woman Pregnant Without Insurance

  1. Medicaid Pregnancy — covers in all states regardless of immigration status
  2. Apply IMMEDIATELY at the first prenatal visit
  3. Covers everything: prenatal, delivery, postnatal 60 days-12 months
  4. Child US citizen → automatic Medicaid newborn

Practical Tips

  • DO NOT pay immediately — the first bill is often negotiable
  • Itemized bill ALWAYS first step
  • FAP application for every nonprofit hospital
  • 30-60% self-pay discount standard
  • Zero-interest payment plan realistic ask
  • Keep all EOBs from insurance — verify what was paid
  • Notes from every conversation — date, time, whom, what was agreed
  • Written confirmation of all agreements
  • Dollar For organization — helps with hospital financial assistance applications, free
  • Patient Advocate Foundation — case management for complex bills
  • DO NOT use credit card for medical bills — some hospitals may offer better terms than credit card interest
  • Medical debt < $500 — not on credit report since 2023
  • NSA for surprise bills — use helpline

Official sources

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