Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You could have the debt reported to the credit bureaus, which will likely lower your score.
https://www.medicarerights.org/medicare-watch/2025/07/31/federal-court-reverses-federal-medical-debt-protections
I don't know how much it would push your score down, that information is seemingly impossible to find. It's possible they won't report it, and if it was lowered under $500, they can't report it.
A lower score possibly could affect your insurance rate, or ability to get a new car loan, for instance. But say a 20-30 point drop is unlikely to have a meaningful impact. Something over a 50 point drop could have those affects, but again not sure how much that unpaid debt would affect your score.
That’s right. Med debt under $500 or less than 1 year delinquent is not reported. So you can pay $100 if you want to avoid reporting. Or why not negotiate it down to $100?
No longer true. Thanks, Trump.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You could have the debt reported to the credit bureaus, which will likely lower your score.
https://www.medicarerights.org/medicare-watch/2025/07/31/federal-court-reverses-federal-medical-debt-protections
I don't know how much it would push your score down, that information is seemingly impossible to find. It's possible they won't report it, and if it was lowered under $500, they can't report it.
A lower score possibly could affect your insurance rate, or ability to get a new car loan, for instance. But say a 20-30 point drop is unlikely to have a meaningful impact. Something over a 50 point drop could have those affects, but again not sure how much that unpaid debt would affect your score.
That’s right. Med debt under $500 or less than 1 year delinquent is not reported. So you can pay $100 if you want to avoid reporting. Or why not negotiate it down to $100?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You could have the debt reported to the credit bureaus, which will likely lower your score.
https://www.medicarerights.org/medicare-watch/2025/07/31/federal-court-reverses-federal-medical-debt-protections
I don't know how much it would push your score down, that information is seemingly impossible to find. It's possible they won't report it, and if it was lowered under $500, they can't report it.
A lower score possibly could affect your insurance rate, or ability to get a new car loan, for instance. But say a 20-30 point drop is unlikely to have a meaningful impact. Something over a 50 point drop could have those affects, but again not sure how much that unpaid debt would affect your score.
That’s right. Med debt under $500 or less than 1 year delinquent is not reported. So you can pay $100 if you want to avoid reporting. Or why not negotiate it down to $100?
Anonymous wrote:You could have the debt reported to the credit bureaus, which will likely lower your score.
https://www.medicarerights.org/medicare-watch/2025/07/31/federal-court-reverses-federal-medical-debt-protections
I don't know how much it would push your score down, that information is seemingly impossible to find. It's possible they won't report it, and if it was lowered under $500, they can't report it.
A lower score possibly could affect your insurance rate, or ability to get a new car loan, for instance. But say a 20-30 point drop is unlikely to have a meaningful impact. Something over a 50 point drop could have those affects, but again not sure how much that unpaid debt would affect your score.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You could have the debt reported to the credit bureaus, which will likely lower your score.
https://www.medicarerights.org/medicare-watch/2025/07/31/federal-court-reverses-federal-medical-debt-protections
I don't know how much it would push your score down, that information is seemingly impossible to find. It's possible they won't report it, and if it was lowered under $500, they can't report it.
A lower score possibly could affect your insurance rate, or ability to get a new car loan, for instance. But say a 20-30 point drop is unlikely to have a meaningful impact. Something over a 50 point drop could have those affects, but again not sure how much that unpaid debt would affect your score.
+1 I get that OP doesn't want to pay the bill because the costs are excessive, but that's the unfortunate nature of American healthcare, and harming your credit rating because you feel a bill is unfair is short-sighted in my opinion.
Anonymous wrote:I believe that a medical facility is engaging in fraudulent charges but after many phone calls, I owe them $600. I can “afford” to pay them but don’t want considering they already got thousands from insurance for a service received. I already have a mortgage and excellent credit. I don’t want my credit to tank because of this but I’m 45 and have decades of great credit in my portfolio. If I let this bill linger and never pay, how much could this affect my finances?
Anonymous wrote:You could have the debt reported to the credit bureaus, which will likely lower your score.
https://www.medicarerights.org/medicare-watch/2025/07/31/federal-court-reverses-federal-medical-debt-protections
I don't know how much it would push your score down, that information is seemingly impossible to find. It's possible they won't report it, and if it was lowered under $500, they can't report it.
A lower score possibly could affect your insurance rate, or ability to get a new car loan, for instance. But say a 20-30 point drop is unlikely to have a meaningful impact. Something over a 50 point drop could have those affects, but again not sure how much that unpaid debt would affect your score.
Anonymous wrote:you're 45 and not a toddler, why risk your credit for a measley $600?