Information for Private Pay Clients:

Per the No Surprises Act: Beginning January 1, 2022, if you’re uninsured or don’t plan to submit your claim to your health plan, health care providers and facilities must provide you with a “good faith estimate” of expected charges before you get an item or service. The good faith estimate isn’t a bill.

Providers and facilities must give you a good faith estimate if you ask for one, or when you schedule an item or service. It should include expected charges for the primary item or service you’re getting, and any other items or services provided as part of the same scheduled experience.

Note: You could be charged more than the estimate if you get additional items or services during your visit or procedure that your doctor didn’t anticipate.


What to expect from a good faith estimate

Providers and facilities must give you:

View an example of what a good faith estimate may include. (PDF)


Disputing charges higher than the estimate

Once you get your good faith estimate from your provider or facility, keep it in a safe place so you can compare it to bills you get later.

If you get the bill and the charges are at least $400 above the good faith estimate, you may be eligible to start a patient-provider dispute.

Learn more about the patient-provider dispute resolution process, including eligibility requirements.


Insurance ID cards

Starting in 2022, new pricing information will be shown on any physical or electronic insurance identification card (ID) provided to you.

This will include:

A health plan may provide additional information on their website that you can access through a Quick Response code (commonly referred to as a QR code) on a physical ID card, or through a hyperlink on a digital ID card.