Medical billing in America is negotiable. Most people don't know this. Here's the exact process.
Step 1: Request an itemized bill. Don't pay the summary. Request the itemized bill showing every CPT code (procedure code) and charge. Hospitals are required to provide this. Under Texas Health & Safety Code 324.101, hospitals must provide itemized statements within 10 business days of request.
Step 2: Check for errors.
- Duplicate charges
- Charges for services not received
- Upcoding (billing for a more expensive procedure than performed)
- Medical Billing Advocates of America (billadvocates.com) says 80% of hospital bills contain errors.
Step 3: Compare pricing.
- CMS Medicare lookup (cms.gov) — what Medicare pays for the same procedure. This is a benchmark.
- Healthcare Bluebook (healthcarebluebook.com) — fair market pricing by zip code.
Step 4: Call the billing department.
- Ask for the "self-pay" or "uninsured" discount. Many hospitals offer 40-60% off the chargemaster rate.
- Ask for a payment plan. Interest-free is common.
- Negotiate based on the Medicare rate or fair market rate. "Medicare pays $X for this procedure. I'm willing to pay 150% of Medicare rate."
Step 5: If they won't negotiate:
- File a complaint with the Texas Department of Insurance (TDI) if insurance was involved
- Invoke the No Surprises Act (federal) if it was emergency care or out-of-network at an in-network facility
- Under Texas SB 1264, surprise billing for emergency care is banned. You only owe in-network rates.
Step 6: Hardship programs.
- Most nonprofit hospitals (including all HCA facilities) have financial assistance programs. Under IRS 501(r)(4), they're REQUIRED to offer charity care. Ask for the application.
Sources:
- Texas Health & Safety Code 324.101 (itemized billing)
- No Surprises Act (federal, effective 2022)
- Texas SB 1264 (surprise billing protection)
- IRS 501(r)(4) (charity care requirements)
- CMS Medicare payment lookup
- Healthcare Bluebook
Never pay a medical bill without negotiating first. The first number is never the real number.
The charity care requirement for nonprofit hospitals is the most underused tool in medical billing. If your income is below 200-400% of the federal poverty level, you may qualify for a full write-off.