Medical Bill Dispute Guide
Don't panic. Many medical bills contain errors. Follow these steps to verify and dispute your charges.
Step 1: Get an Itemized Bill
Never pay a summary bill that just says "Lab Services: $500".
Call the hospital billing department and say:
"Please send me a detailed, itemized statement with CPT codes for every charge."
This prevents them from hiding "fluff" charges.
Step 2: Check for Duplicate Charges
Look at your itemized bill. Do you see the same CPT code listed twice for the same day?
Example: Being charged for a "Tylenol" pill 5 times when you only took one.
Step 3: Ensure In-Network Status
Did your insurance pay nothing because they claim the doctor was "Out of Network"?
If you went to an In-Network Hospital, the No Surprises Act (2022) protects you from surprise bills from out-of-network doctors (like anesthesiologists or radiologists) at that facility.
Action: Call your insurance and ask: "Does the No Surprises Act apply to this claim?"
Step 4: Ask for Financial Aid
Non-profit hospitals are REQUIRED by law to have Financial Assistance Policies (Charity Care).
Even if you have a job and insurance, you might qualify if the bill is a large percentage of your income.
- Google "[Hospital Name] Financial Assistance Application".
- Call usage ask: "I would like to apply for charity care or financial assistance."
- Ask for a "Cash Pay Discount" if you can pay a lump sum immediately (often 20-30% off).
Questions to Ask the Billing Department
- 📞 "I am looking at my bill and see CPT code X. Can you explain exactly what service this charge is for?"
- 📞 "Ideally, I would like to pay this off. Do you offer a prompt-pay discount?"
- 📞 "I see a charge for 'Room and Board' but I was only in the waiting room. Can you review this?"