Guides

How to Get Hospital Financial Assistance (Charity Care)

Published July 10, 2026 · 7 min read

There is a program that can shrink or erase a hospital bill, and most people who qualify for it never ask. Nonprofit hospitals are required to offer financial assistance, sometimes called charity care, but they rarely advertise it, and the bill that lands in your mailbox almost never mentions it. If a hospital bill is more than you can handle, this is the first door to knock on. Here is how your money's advocate would approach it.

What financial assistance actually is

Financial assistance is a hospital's own program for reducing or canceling bills for patients who cannot pay. Nonprofit hospitals, which is most large hospitals, are required to have a written policy for it. Depending on your income and the hospital's rules, the outcome can range from a meaningful discount to the entire bill being forgiven. It is not a loan and not a payment plan. It reduces what you owe.

Who qualifies

Eligibility is usually tied to your household income measured against the federal poverty level. The exact thresholds vary from one hospital to the next, and this is where people talk themselves out of applying. The cutoffs are often higher than expected, and many hospitals offer at least a partial discount well into middle-income ranges. Some also grant presumptive eligibility, meaning they can approve you based on other signals without a long application. The only way to know is to ask for the numbers.

How to apply

  1. Call the billing office and ask for the hospital's financial assistance policy and application. Use those words. Every nonprofit hospital has them.
  2. Ask them to pause the account, including any collections activity, while your application is pending.
  3. Gather what they ask for, usually proof of income such as recent pay stubs or a tax return, and household size.
  4. Submit it and keep a dated copy of everything, along with the name of who you spoke to.
  5. Follow up in writing if you do not hear back within a couple of weeks.

Timing: it is often not too late

A common myth is that you can only apply before or right after treatment. In practice, many hospitals accept applications months later, and some will retrieve an account from collections if you qualify. If a bill already feels overdue, that is a reason to apply now, not a reason to give up.

Assistance first, payment plan second

Keep the order right. Apply for financial assistance before you agree to a payment plan or reach for a credit card. A payment plan just splits the same total into installments, and a credit card can turn a medical bill into high-interest debt with none of the protections medical debt carries. Financial assistance shrinks the total itself. Only set up a plan for whatever is left after assistance is applied.

The takeaway

The bill you received is often not the final word. Between checking it for errors and applying for the assistance you may be owed, the amount you actually pay can drop a great deal. Ask for the policy, apply, and keep records. It is one more way to make a bill right before you pay it.

Frequently asked questions

What is hospital financial assistance or charity care?

Financial assistance, often called charity care, is a program that reduces or fully cancels a hospital bill for patients who cannot afford it. Nonprofit hospitals are required to have a written financial assistance policy. Depending on your income, it can mean a partial discount or having the bill wiped out entirely.

Do I qualify?

Eligibility is usually based on your household income relative to the federal poverty level, and the exact thresholds vary by hospital. Many people who would qualify never apply because they assume they earn too much. It is worth requesting the policy and checking the numbers rather than guessing, since the cutoffs are often higher than people expect.

Can I apply after the bill is already overdue or in collections?

Usually yes. Many hospitals accept financial assistance applications well after the bill was issued, and some will pull an account back from collections if you qualify. Do not assume it is too late. Ask for the application and the deadline in writing.

Is financial assistance the same as a payment plan?

No. A payment plan spreads the same total over time. Financial assistance reduces or cancels the total itself. If you qualify for assistance, use it first, then set up a payment plan only for whatever is left. Do not put a large medical bill on a credit card before checking whether assistance could shrink it.

Does every hospital offer it?

Every nonprofit hospital is required to have a financial assistance policy, and most large hospital systems are nonprofits. For-profit hospitals are not federally required to, but many still have programs. If you are unsure, ask the billing office directly for their financial assistance policy.

Steward is software acting on your instruction, not a lawyer, accountant, or licensed advisor.