Challenge incorrect, inflated, or surprise medical bills using the No Surprises Act and state balance billing protections. This guide is customized for Raleigh residents with North Carolina-specific consumer protection information.
Raleigh Local Tip: Raleigh's tech economy generates SaaS billing disputes — file with NC AG's Consumer Protection Division.
North Carolina law: Unfair and Deceptive Trade Practices Act (N.C. Gen. Stat. § 75-1.1) — treble damages available — private right of action
Call the billing department and request a detailed itemized bill with CPT codes. 80% of medical bills contain errors — you need the detail to find them.
Check your insurance company's Explanation of Benefits. Compare what was billed vs what insurance approved. Look for charges insurance already covered.
Look for: duplicate charges, unbundling (charging separately for items usually billed together), upcoding (billing a more expensive procedure than performed), charges for services not received.
If you received an out-of-network bill at an in-network facility, or a surprise emergency room bill, the No Surprises Act protects you. You can only be charged in-network rates.
Write to the billing department citing specific errors and the relevant law (No Surprises Act, state balance billing law). Include your itemized bill markup showing the errors.
Even if the bill is technically correct, hospitals routinely accept 40-60% of the billed amount. Ask for a hardship discount or payment plan. Request their financial assistance policy.