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Mike Urquidez spent six days in intensive care in September 2024 after being assaulted in a mugging. When he came out, he found himself so deep in debt that he feared ending up homeless.
“I saw the piles of bills coming up,” he says. “I couldn’t make the minimum payments on top of paying for my home.”
Urquidez, now 57, owed more than $100,000. He was uninsured at the time, having decided both his workplace plan and Affordable Care Act coverage were too expensive. “I skipped a year — took a break,” he says. “Then this happened.”
When he called the Ontario, California, hospital where he was treated to let the billing department know that he couldn’t afford to pay what he owed, they said he could apply for financial assistance. His first application was denied, but after two appeals, the hospital forgave his entire bill.
“I had no clue there could be any support,” he says. “I came out on top. It could have been much worse.”
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Many more older adults can identify. One in 10 Americans ages 50 to 64 have medical debt, according to a 2024 analysis by the health policy organization KFF. Between 2017 and 2023, adults ages 50 to 64 were more likely to have medical debt than other age groups, a January 2026 study from AARP Public Policy Institute found.
The financial impact can go well beyond short-term repayment problems. Consumers with outstanding health care bills may suffer lasting damage to their credit scores.
“The biggest word that comes to mind is ‘unsustainable,’ ” says Allison Sesso, CEO of the Undue Medical Debt, a nonprofit that raises money to buy up large portfolios of medical debt and pay off bills for people experiencing financial hardship. “It’s unsustainable because what we expect people to pay out of pocket is wholly misaligned with what their means are.”
If you have unpaid medical bills, there are ways to reduce or eliminate what you owe or create a payment plan you can manage. These steps can help.
Contact the provider immediately
Reach out to the hospital or doctor’s office that sent the bill to let them know about your financial situation. The sooner you call, the more options the provider may be able to offer, such as financial assistance or a payment plan, says Bruce McClary, a spokesperson for the National Foundation for Credit Counseling (NFCC), a network of nonprofit credit counseling agencies.
“The longer the account goes unpaid, the more likely it is to be handed over to a debt collector,” McClary says. “You don’t want it to end up in that situation.”
You may not relish the thought of sharing your financial problems with your doctor’s office, but that conversation “is more likely to be less stressful than the discussion you have with a debt collection agency,” he adds. “I’m saying that as a former debt collector.”
Find out if you’re eligible for financial assistance
Nonprofit hospitals are required by federal law to offer charity care programs that discount or forgive bills for patients with lower incomes. Many for-profit hospitals also have these programs, says Jared Walker, founder of Dollar For, a nonprofit that helps patients apply for hospital financial assistance.
However, he says, hospitals often don’t publicize financial assistance options. A 2024 Dollar For analysis found that hospitals fail to provide at least $14 billion annually in charity care to patients who would qualify if they applied.
Contact the hospital’s billing department or check its website to see whether it has a charity program and whether you qualify. “On average, if you are a family of four making less than $96,000 gross income, you would qualify for some level of assistance,” Walker says.
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