AI Dispute Engine

Illegal Medical Billing · Georgia

Is a hospital billing more than $400 above your written Good Faith Estimate in Georgia?

Freeze the bill, halt collections, and force the charges off your account.

Under federal law, this exact tactic violates Federal No Surprises Act, 45 C.F.R. § 149.610. Providers cannot legally collect amounts more than $400 over a GFE without first going through the federal PPDR process administered by HHS. Use our engine to generate a professional Medical Bill Appeal in under 60 seconds.

Your rights in Georgia

Hospital billing departments rely on your confusion to collect illegal charges. Here is the exact consumer rights you hold over them right now.

Federal protection — Federal No Surprises Act, 45 C.F.R. § 149.610

Self-pay and uninsured patients are entitled to a written Good Faith Estimate; if the final bill exceeds the estimate by $400 or more per provider, the patient can invoke the Patient-Provider Dispute Resolution process.

Georgia adds: Georgia Surprise Billing Consumer Protection Act, O.C.G.A. § 33-20E-1

Patient held harmless for surprise bills + insurer-provider arbitration. State remedies stack on top of federal No Surprises Act protections.

Remedy

Bill capped at the GFE amount plus $400 unless the provider successfully proves the excess in PPDR; collections must be paused during dispute.

Evidence to lock in your appeal

Save the original Good Faith Estimate, the final itemized bill, and the dates of service. The $400 threshold applies per provider, not in aggregate.

Crucial tactic: If the hospital sends an illegal balance bill to a collector, sending a formal written dispute immediately flags the account as "contested" — halting credit reporting and pausing collection activity while their legal team reviews the statutory violations.

How to freeze your medical bill today

STEP 1
Input the bill details
Tell our engine the hospital, the date of service, and exactly what the billing tactic was. We map it to Federal No Surprises Act, 45 C.F.R. § 149.610 and the Georgia Surprise Billing Consumer Protection Act, O.C.G.A. § 33-20E-1.
STEP 2
Instant statute mapping
The engine drafts a formal Medical Bill Appeal citing federal protections and Georgia law, demanding an immediate audit and freeze.
STEP 3
Deploy the appeal
Download the professional PDF. Send it to the hospital's billing compliance officer and your insurance plan to trigger the mandatory dispute resolution process.
Choose a different dispute

Health

Medical Bill Appeal

Question 1 of 911%

The person, company, or agency this letter is addressed to.

Triggers ERISA / state appeal deadlines

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June 1, 2026

[recipient name]
[recipient address]

Re: Formal Appeal of Claim #[claim number] — Amount in Dispute: $[amount disputed]

Dear Appeals Department:

I am writing to formally appeal your denial of the above-referenced claim. The stated reason for denial — "[denial reason]" — is inconsistent with my policy and the medical record.

Facts:
[facts]

Requested resolution:
[desired outcome]

Please treat this letter as a formal first-level appeal under my plan's appeal procedures and applicable state and federal law (including ERISA where applicable). I request a written determination within the statutory timeframe.

Sincerely,

[user full name]
[user address]
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