Medical Debt and Credit Reporting: What Healthcare Providers and EMS/Ambulance Leaders Need to Know in 2025

Numerous changes and proposed rules regarding medical debt and credit reporting have been created, codified, or blocked over the past few years. You may have heard that medical debts in small amounts are no longer reported on credit reports, or that all medical debt has been wiped from reports. It can be difficult to figure out what the rules really are, and those in healthcare and medicine have been asking us: What actually changed? How does this work going forward?
The short answer: it depends. Rules differ across state lines, and federal regulations have been in flux this year. It’s vital for healthcare providers, ambulance services, EMS providers, and their billing partners to understand this ever-changing landscape.
Timeline of changes:
- In January 2022, the No Surprises Act was enacted to address unexpected medical bills that occur from emergencies. The goal of this law is to protect patients by making costs clearer, prohibiting balance billing, and other changes.
- In March 2022, the three major credit bureaus—Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion —announced that they would no longer be including paid medical debts, medical debts less than a year old, and medical debt under $500 on consumer credit reports. It’s estimated that this affected roughly half of consumers with medical debt on their credit reports.
- In January of this year, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) finalized a rule that would have removed most medical debt from credit reports and prohibited lenders from making credit decisions based on medical debt. This rule was expected to go into effect in March, however, this was prevented by a lawsuit challenging it.
- In July, the rule was blocked by a federal judge in Texas, and the CFPB agreed to vacate the rule. This means that the rule will no longer go into effect.
Although medical debt as a whole has not been removed from credit reports, some states have more restrictions than others when it comes to consumer protections. As of June 2025, 11 states have enacted laws restricting, or even banning, the reporting of medical debt to consumer reporting agencies.
What does this mean for patients?
As stated, it’s complicated. Any ambulance or other unpaid medical bills may show up on their credit report, but they may not. Patients are less likely to see these bills on their credit report if their bills are small, if they are paid off quickly, or if the patient received care in a state with stricter consumer protections. Larger medical debts in collections that go unpaid for more than a year can still affect a patient’s credit score, but credit scoring models like FICO 9, FICO 10, and VantageScore 4.0 weigh them less heavily than other types of debt.
What does this mean for healthcare institutions and medical companies?
Companies that rely on debt collection agencies need to be aware of how the agency they work with operates, and what they can do as a company to help the collections process go smoothly. Here some things to keep in mind:
- Accuracy is key. The record of the bill itself is important, but so are patient identifiers like date of birth and insurance history. Missing information can result in errors, compliance issues, and potentially cause the debt to be unreportable.
- Know your collector’s policies. Some agencies continue reporting debts above $500, while others no longer report medical collections at all. Ask direct questions about thresholds, timing, and dispute procedures.
- Stay informed of your state’s policies. Given the difference in consumer protections across different states, it’s important to stay abreast of your state’s rules and regulations. If you operate in multiple states, don’t assume that they have the same standards.
- Communicate well with patients. The easiest way to get payment on a balance is to do it before it reaches collections in the first place. To do this, give your patients transparency on their billing statements, multiple payment plan options to choose from, and access to financial assistance programs to help them settle their balance quickly and easily.
The bottom line
Medical debt reporting has gone through some drastic changes over the past few years, but it hasn’t gone away completely. Though many debts were removed in 2022-2023, the rule that would’ve eliminated them all has been blocked for the time being. Whether or not a bill affects a patient’s credit report depends on how large the debt is, what the collector’s policies are, and where the patient lives.
The best way to ensure that your company is settling patient balances within regulations is to work with a collection agency that is compassionate with patients and compliant with state laws. Protect your company and community and set both up for success by prioritizing clear communication, compliance, and accuracy in collections.












