Medical billing errors are not rare — studies estimate that 80% of medical bills contain at least one error. Duplicate charges, upcoded procedures, unbundled services, and coding mistakes cost patients thousands of dollars every year. The good news: you have the legal right to dispute any bill you believe is incorrect, and the process is more straightforward than most people realize.
Step 1: Request a Full Itemized Bill
Most hospitals send you a summary bill — a single total that tells you almost nothing. You have the legal right under the No Surprises Act (effective 2022) and HIPAA to request a complete, line-by-line itemized bill. If you're uninsured, hospitals must provide this upon request. If you have insurance, you can request one from the provider.
How to request it: Call the billing department and say: I'd like to request a complete itemized statement for the services rendered on [date]. I'm requesting this under my right to an itemized bill.
They must provide this within 30 days. Once you have it, you're ready to look for errors.
Step 2: Look for Common Billing Errors
Review your itemized bill against your own records (appointment confirmation, doctor's notes, insurance information). Look for these common errors:
The same line item appearing twice — same code, same amount, same date.
A procedure that should be billed as one code is split into multiple codes to increase total charges.
The procedure code billed is for a more complex or expensive service than what you actually received.
Services that were never rendered, or dates that don't match your visit. Easier to catch if you kept your own records.
You were treated at an in-network facility by an out-of-network provider you didn't choose. Prohibited under the No Surprises Act for emergency and certain non-emergency services.
See the full list of 10 most common medical billing errors →
Step 3: Compare Your Bill to Your Insurance EOB
Your Explanation of Benefits (EOB) from your insurance company shows what was billed, what the contracted rate is, what your plan covered, and what you owe. If the hospital bill doesn't match the EOB, that's a problem.
Look for discrepancies in the billed amount vs. the EOB's allowed amount. The hospital may be billing you for the full, undiscounted rate when your insurance has already negotiated a lower rate. You should only owe the amount listed on the EOB as your responsibility.
What to check: Was the claim processed as in-network or out-of-network? Did the insurer apply the right diagnosis code? Was the procedure coded correctly? If any of these are wrong, call your insurer to ask for a review.
Step 4: Call the Billing Department
Before writing anything, call the provider's billing department. Many errors are resolved over the phone with a five-minute conversation. Be calm, specific, and have your itemized bill in front of you.
What to say: I've reviewed my itemized statement and I believe there is an error. [Describe the specific error: duplicate charge, wrong code, etc.] I would like this corrected and the bill adjusted accordingly. Can you confirm this will be updated?
Get the name and reference number of every person you speak with. Document the date, time, and what was discussed. If they tell you they'll correct it, follow up in writing.
Step 5: Write a Formal Dispute Letter
If a phone call doesn't resolve it, or if you're disputing a significant amount, a written dispute is essential. Verbal complaints don't create a paper trail. Providers are legally required to respond to written disputes, and a formal letter often triggers a different — more cooperative — response.
Your letter should include: your specific facts, the exact error or dispute, the exact dollar amount in question, a request for a written response within 30 days, and a note that you'll escalate to regulatory agencies if unresolved.
I am formally disputing the charge of $[amount] for [procedure/service] appearing on my account [account number]. Upon reviewing the itemized billing statement, I identified [describe error: duplicate charge / unbundled codes / incorrect procedure]. The correct amount for this service should be $[corrected amount], based on [CMS fee schedule / contracted rate / standard billing practice].
I request a complete review of this billing, correction of any errors, and written confirmation of the updated bill within 30 days. If this matter is not resolved, I will file complaints with the [state] Insurance Commissioner, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), and the [State] Attorney General's office.
Sign and date the letter, attach copies of your itemized bill and EOB, and send by certified mail.
Step 6: Escalate to Regulatory Agencies
If the provider doesn't resolve your dispute within 30 days, escalate to the agencies that have authority over medical billing practices:
Handles insurance billing disputes and balance billing. File a complaint online — most states have an online portal.
Enforces the No Surprises Act and hospital price transparency rules. File a complaint at cms.gov/nosurprises.
Takes complaints about medical billing errors and debt collection practices. Submit at consumerfinance.gov.
Investigates healthcare billing fraud and unfair practices. File a complaint through your state AG's website.
Under the ACA, you have the right to an independent external review of insurance claim denials. File within 60 days of the denial.
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