Your Medical Debt Rights in Texas
This page covers pre-bankruptcy medical-debt protections in Texas -- the tools that keep medical debt off your credit report, reduce or eliminate your bill at the hospital, and stop aggressive collection before you reach the bankruptcy courthouse.
If you are already being sued or garnished, these protections still apply, but you may need to combine them with FDCPA defenses or bankruptcy filing. See collection limits.
Texas Medical Debt Credit Reporting
No state-level CR ban as of 2026.
Regardless of state law, the CFPB 2025 Medical Debt Rule (12 CFR Part 1022) bars consumer reporting agencies from including medical debt information on consumer reports used for credit eligibility determinations. This rule applies nationally -- including in Texas -- and significantly reduces medical debt's effect on credit scores.
The three nationwide CRAs (Equifax, Experian, TransUnion) also voluntarily stopped reporting unpaid medical collections under $500 as of 2023, and removed paid medical collections from credit reports starting 2022.
Texas Hospital Financial Assistance Policies
Texas Health & Safety Code Sections 311.031-.0325 mandate charity-care for Texas nonprofit hospitals.
Every 501(c)(3) nonprofit hospital nationwide must maintain a Financial Assistance Policy (FAP) under 26 U.S.C. Section 501(r). A Texas FAP must:
- Establish eligibility criteria based on income, typically tied to federal poverty level (FPL).
- Describe the basis for calculating amounts charged to FAP-eligible individuals (cannot exceed "Amounts Generally Billed" to insured patients -- AGB).
- Describe the FAP application method.
- Include a widely publicized plain-language summary.
- Be made available free of charge in English and any primary language spoken by 5% of the hospital's service area.
Check the Texas hospital's website, ask at billing, or request a paper FAP -- it must be provided. Many Texas patients qualify for substantial or total bill forgiveness under these policies without ever filing for bankruptcy.
See financial assistance applications and charity-care requirements.
501(r) Extraordinary Collection Actions (ECA)
501(r)(6) and Texas-specific ECA rules apply.
Under 26 CFR Section 1.501(r)-6, a nonprofit hospital cannot engage in "extraordinary collection actions" (ECAs) against a patient until it has made reasonable efforts to determine whether the patient is FAP-eligible. ECAs include:
- Reporting adverse information to credit reporting agencies.
- Selling the debt to a collection agency (with limited exceptions).
- Deferring or denying medically necessary care because of unpaid bills.
- Requiring payment before providing medically necessary care because of prior non-payment.
- Filing a civil action.
- Placing a lien on property.
- Foreclosing on real property.
- Attaching or seizing a bank account.
- Causing an arrest or body attachment writ.
- Garnishing wages.
The "reasonable efforts" window is typically 120 days from the first post-discharge billing statement, with a 240-day application window for the FAP. If an Texas hospital starts ECAs before that window and without proper notification, federal law may require remediation and reporting.
Surprise Billing and the No Surprises Act
The federal No Surprises Act (effective January 1, 2022) bars balance billing for:
- Out-of-network emergency services at in-network or out-of-network facilities.
- Out-of-network services at in-network facilities (e.g., the anesthesiologist at your in-network hospital).
- Out-of-network air ambulance services.
Patients in Texas who receive a balance bill for any of these situations can dispute the bill through federal Independent Dispute Resolution (IDR). See surprise billing rules.
Texas Medical Debt Collection Limits
TX has strong homestead protection; medical debt rarely threatens home, but wage garnishment concerns are largely preempted by Texas law.
Federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA) rules apply to Texas third-party collectors; many Texas residents also have state-level analogs. If collection conduct includes:
- Calls before 8 a.m. or after 9 p.m.,
- Third-party disclosure of the debt,
- Misrepresentation of the amount owed,
- Threats of wage garnishment absent a judgment,
...you may have FDCPA claims, which can offset the underlying debt or produce statutory damages up to $1,000 plus attorney fees.
Insurance Appeals Before Collection
Many Texas medical bills that end up in collections were wrongly denied by insurance. Before accepting a bill as "owed," run the appeal process:
- Internal insurance appeal -- usually two levels, typically 30-180 days.
- External independent review -- in Texas, state law plus ERISA or ACA-based external review.
- State insurance department complaint.
- CMS No Surprises Act complaint for surprise-bill situations.
Fair Billing Standards for Texas Patients
Under 501(r)(5), nonprofit hospitals cannot charge FAP-eligible patients more than AGB -- Amounts Generally Billed, which is calculated as either a look-back method based on commercial insurance and Medicare, or a prospective Medicare-based method. For a Texas FAP-eligible patient, this usually means a 60-80% discount off "chargemaster" rack rates.
Itemized-bill review typically uncovers duplicate charges, incorrect CPT codes, and billed-but-never-performed services. Request the itemized bill in writing; Texas hospitals must provide it.
Texas Federal Bankruptcy Data
Medical debt is a leading cause of consumer bankruptcy. The Texas consumer bankruptcy volume below shows the downstream scale when pre-bankruptcy protections fail.
Numbers below come from the Federal Judicial Center Integrated Database covering 30,781 consumer bankruptcy cases from Texas's federal bankruptcy courts.
| Chapter | Cases Filed | Discharge Rate | Dismissal Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chapter 7 | 11,844 | 97.8% | 2.0% |
| Chapter 13 | 18,937 | 36.8% | 63.2% |
Rates computed on resolved cases only. Source: FJC Integrated Database.
When Bankruptcy Becomes the Right Tool
After running every pre-bankruptcy lever -- FAP application, insurance appeal, itemized-bill review, surprise-billing dispute, CFPB credit-reporting compliance -- medical debt that survives is typically unsecured and dischargeable in Chapter 7, or payable at cents-on-the-dollar in Chapter 13.
For Texas debtors who have exhausted pre-bankruptcy tools, see Texas refile timing rules and the 1328(f) discharge screener.