Fighting Medical Debt in Louisiana
I got a medical bill I can't afford — here's what Louisiana law says and what to do next.
Statute: La. Rev. Stat. § 22:1880 (Louisiana Balance Billing Protections)
Deadline: 120 days
Penalty: Louisiana's balance billing protections prohibit certain surprise billing practices. Violations may result in penalties from the Louisiana Department of Insurance
What is fighting medical debt?
Medical debt is the leading cause of bankruptcy in the United States, affecting an estimated 100 million Americans. Recent federal actions have significantly strengthened your rights when dealing with medical debt — including new rules removing most medical debt from credit reports and protections against surprise billing.
The No Surprises Act (effective January 2022) protects you from unexpected bills when you receive emergency care or are treated by an out-of-network provider at an in-network facility without your consent. Additionally, the three major credit bureaus voluntarily removed medical debt under $500 from credit reports in 2023, and the CFPB finalized a rule in January 2025 to remove all medical debt from credit reports, but a federal court vacated that rule in July 2025 (Cornerstone Credit Union League v. CFPB) before it took effect.
What to Do If You Get a Medical Bill You Can't Afford
Step 1: Request an itemized bill. Medical billing errors are extremely common — studies suggest up to 80% of medical bills contain errors. Compare the itemized bill against your insurance Explanation of Benefits (EOB).
Step 2: If you received a surprise bill (out-of-network charges you didn't consent to), file a complaint under the No Surprises Act. Contact your insurer, the provider, and CMS at 1-800-985-3059. You should only owe your in-network cost-sharing amount.
Step 3: Ask the hospital about financial assistance. If the hospital is a nonprofit (most are), they must have a financial assistance policy. Request the application — you may qualify for free or reduced-cost care even with insurance.
Step 4: Negotiate the bill. Hospitals regularly accept less than the full amount. Ask for a reduction, a payment plan with no interest, or offer a lump-sum settlement for a lower amount. Get any agreement in writing.
Step 5: If the debt goes to collections, know your FDCPA rights. Request debt validation in writing within 30 days. Medical debt collectors must follow the same rules as any other debt collector. If the debt is on your credit report, check whether it qualifies for removal under the new credit reporting rules.
How Louisiana differs from federal law
Louisiana has some state-level medical debt protections, including Medicaid expansion:
- Prescriptive period: Medical debt has a 3-year prescriptive period (statute of limitations) for collection lawsuits in Louisiana (La. Civ. Code Art. 3494)
- Wage garnishment: Louisiana exempts 75% of disposable earnings from garnishment — creditors can only garnish up to 25%
- Medicaid expansion: Louisiana expanded Medicaid under the ACA in 2016, providing coverage to low-income adults up to 138% of the federal poverty level
- Hospital price transparency: Louisiana hospitals must comply with federal price transparency rules
- The federal No Surprises Act applies to protect against surprise medical bills
- Homestead protection: The constitutional homestead exemption ($35,000) protects the home from medical debt judgments
Additional steps in Louisiana
Request an itemized bill and check for errors. Ask about hospital financial assistance (charity care) programs. Check if you qualify for Louisiana Medicaid (expanded coverage available). Negotiate a payment plan before the debt goes to collections. Be aware of the 3-year prescriptive period. Southeast Louisiana Legal Services: (504) 529-1000.
What you should NOT do
Don't pay a bill you haven't verified. Always request an itemized bill and compare it to your insurance EOB before paying. Errors are extremely common.
Don't put medical debt on a credit card. Medical debt has special protections (lower interest, financial assistance eligibility, credit reporting limits) that you lose once you transfer it to a credit card.
Don't ignore the bill entirely. While medical debt protections are expanding, ignoring bills can lead to lawsuits, wage garnishment, and damage to your credit that could have been avoided through negotiation or financial assistance.
Don't assume you don't qualify for financial assistance. Income thresholds for hospital charity care programs are often surprisingly high (200-400% of the federal poverty level). Apply even if you think your income is too high.
You shouldn't have to hire a lawyer to assert your rights.
Answer a few questions. We generate a personalized medical bill dispute citing Louisiana's exact statute, deadline, and penalties — ready to print and send in minutes.
Lawyers charge $350+. Your letter: $19.
Generate your medical bill dispute →This page is general legal information for Louisiana, not legal advice for your specific situation. Laws change, and how a statute applies depends on facts we don't know. For advice on your matter, consult a licensed attorney in Louisiana.