r/HealthInsurance Apr 28 '25

Claims/Providers Illegal to not bill through insurance?

I just got insurance for the first time in 3 years. My treatment that cost me $190 cash (self-pay) is now $520 until I meet my $3,500 deductible which would take me 11 months, soo.. pointless.

I told my Dr’s office I am no longer going to go through my insurance & the billing lady said that’s illegal… I am going to look for a new Dr now anyway but is there truth to this? Would I face repercussions as an individual patient if I simply chose not to disclose that I have insurance & pay the cash price?

FYI: the self-pay price was NOT subsidized by a grant or aid.

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u/goopstastic Apr 29 '25

hi there! i work in a pediatric office in registration & insurance verification. you are correct that for commercial insurance it is not illegal to self-pay (unless covered by medicaid), in fact it is considered a protected right you have with hipaa. consider the language you are using though:

there are several different classifications for self-pay patients. cosmetic, uninsured, total charges (for things like sports physicals), and hipaa protected.

if you request to be self-pay for a hipaa protected reason many offices will have an accompanying form (ours is called a protected health information form) that states you are waiving using your insurance and that you are self-paying for your own reasons (in training we describe this as a woman escaping abuse but is on the abuser's insurance, cobra coverage was cancelled but still running active, a teenager seeking reproductive care but doesn't want their parents to find out with an insurance charge, etc). YOU DO NOT HAVE TO DISCLOSE AS TO WHY YOU WOULD LIKE TO BE SELF-PAY. it is your right under hipaa to ask providers not to disclose your PHI (protected health information) to your insurance company and assume all personal financial liability.

my suggestion to this provider would be to request self-pay rates due to hipaa concerns and state that you have no issues signing a form to not use your insurance. do not back down. this is a right given to you under hipaa that you do not have to have your PHI disclosed to anyone without a written agreement (typically in registration forms).

feel free to ask me anything else or if you need clarification!

13

u/Weeping_Willow_Wonka Apr 29 '25

I just appreciate that you spelled HIPAA correctly 😆

9

u/goopstastic Apr 29 '25

it would definitely discredit me if i did not 🤣. it SHOCKS me how many people that work in the medical field that are not familiar with the actual acronym.

3

u/krysteline Apr 29 '25

I just went to a new dentist for the first time and the HIPAA forms were spelt HIPPA in various places and i cringed. I dont even work in healthcare haha

1

u/Superb-Grape7481 May 02 '25

They just misspelled hippo, give them a break, spelling Nazi 😃