Medical Bills and Credit
How not paying for medical bills can affect your credit
Unpaid medical bills can cause surprising and serious damage to
your credit report.
It’s often a plain and simple case of miscommunication. Your insurance
company and your medical provider are in negotiations over paying
a recent hospital bill. You think it has been paid, or at least
should have been, because you have insurance. The bill is delinquent
and then overdue and then sent to collections. All of the sudden
you are stuck with a collections record on your credit report for
7+ years. Not your fault?…Think again.
Medical collections are becoming increasingly common in this era
of red-tape insurance companies and giant health care corporations.
If you are injured and your insurance company doesn’t pay, you can
often be legally stuck with responsibility for the bill. That collections
account can stay on your credit report for up to seven years if
you don’t prove that it was a factual error. How can you be sure
your credit doesn’t end up with a scar? Follow these tips for keeping
your credit out of harm’s way:
Prevention
• Emergency Reserve – It’s important to have enough money saved
to cover your living expenses for a few months in case you lose
your job or unexpectedly land in the hospital. Medical bills can
sometimes add up to unbelievable amounts, so you may want to also
keep a credit card with a high limit reserved for emergency use.
• Be Flexible – Flexible Spending Accounts or “Cafeteria Plans”
offered through your employer provide an easy pre-tax way to pay
for medical expenses. Ask your employer about what plan may be included
in your benefits. With this system, you decide how much of your
salary to set aside when you sign up for the year. For example,
if you choose to pull out $100 a month for the plan, you have $1,200
you can use for medical bill reimbursements that year. The catch
is, whatever is left in the account at the end of the year is lost.
• Power of Attorney – If things get really sticky, having a trusted
spouse or family member with legal power of attorney can help. When
you are sick in the hospital, you may not be able to wrestle with
the insurance companies and billing offices on your own. Talk to
a financial planner or lawyer to have these papers drawn up. Be
sure that this person understands the responsibilities and has a
copy of your medical insurance policy.
Prescription
• Get the Facts – If you receive a bill you thought was covered,
go through your insurance policy with a fine tooth comb to see what
you are really responsible for paying. These documents can also
outline the best procedures for cutting through the red tape in
the billing office. You’ll also want to contact the insurance company
and the medical office for more information as soon as you suspect
something is wrong with your bill.
• Settle your Bills – Even if your insurance company is at fault,
you will probably be better off paying the medical bill yourself
before it’s sent to collections rather than continuing to deny the
charge. Paying the bill doesn’t mean you have to stop negotiating
with your insurance company over the amount, it just means that
you won’t also have to negotiate over a collection account on your
credit report.
• Righting the Wrongs – If the account was sent to collections,
avoid “settling” the bill and try to pay off the amount in full.
A fully paid collections account is slightly better for your credit
than an unpaid or settled account. If your medical bill was sent
to collections in error, you still have options. You can dispute
the record on your credit report if you can prove that the bill
was sent to collections unlawfully (for example – if you were never
billed directly for the amount before it was sent to collections).




