Opening a massive medical bill is terrifying. What's even more terrifying? Up to 80% of all medical bills contain errors.
Whether you were charged for a service you never received, billed for "out-of-network" care when you went to an in-network hospital, or simply slapped with a massive "facility fee," you do not have to just accept the charge.
Here is exactly how you dispute a medical bill and get the charges reduced or removed completely.
Step 1: Ask for an Itemized Bill
Never pay a "summary" bill. The very first thing you should do when you receive an unexpectedly high medical bill is call the billing department and say: "I need a fully itemized bill with CPT billing codes."
An itemized bill breaks down every single charge. Hospitals hate sending these because it exposes absurd charges (like $40 for a single Tylenol or $200 for a pair of generic surgical gloves). Often, just asking for an itemized bill will cause the hospital's billing department to "review" your account and mysteriously drop the total balance.
Step 2: Check for Common Billing Errors
Once you have the itemized bill, look for these specific errors:
- Upcoding: You were billed for a more complex service than you received.
- Unbundling: You were charged separately for procedures that should have been billed together as a single package.
- Duplicate Charges: You were charged twice for the same medication or scan.
- Canceled Procedures: You were billed for a test that a doctor ordered but later canceled.
Step 3: Write a Formal Dispute Letter
If you find an error, or if you simply cannot afford the bill, you need to escalate the situation beyond a phone call. Customer service reps at hospitals do not have the power to erase thousands of dollars in debt over the phone.
You need to send a Formal Dispute Letter to the billing department or hospital administration.
This letter creates a legal paper trail. Once a debt is formally disputed in writing, it temporarily pauses the collection process. Under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA), they must investigate your dispute before they can send you to a collections agency.
What to include in your letter:
- Your account number and the date of service.
- The specific charges you are disputing (reference the CPT codes from the itemized bill).
- The reason for the dispute (e.g., "I was billed for a Level 5 Emergency Visit, but I only received stitches from a nurse.")
- A demand for an immediate review and a pause on collections.
Step 4: Mention the "No Surprises Act"
If you went to an in-network hospital but were treated by an out-of-network doctor (like an anesthesiologist or ER physician), you are protected by the federal No Surprises Act. Mention this law in your formal letter. Hospitals face massive fines for violating this act.
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Originally published at lettercraft.pro/blog/dispute-bill
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