No, it is not a crime to not pay your medical bills, as medical debt is a civil matter, not a criminal one. You cannot be sent to jail simply for owing money to a hospital or doctor. However, unpaid medical debt can result in serious consequences, including lawsuits, wage garnishment, or damaged credit.
Unpaid medical bills can lead to severe legal consequences, including actions from healthcare providers or debt collectors. Ignoring these actions may result in court orders and, in extreme cases, jail time due to contempt of court. Addressing unpaid medical bills promptly is essential to avoid such outcomes.
No, you can't go to jail for not paying a civil debt. This is more commonly known as consumer debt, and it refers to many types of debt, including credit cards, medical bills, student loans, personal loans, payday loans, auto loans, mortgages, rent payments, utility bills, overdrafts on accounts, and more.
No, a hospital cannot turn you away from the emergency room for owing money due to federal law (EMTALA), requiring stabilization for emergencies regardless of ability to pay; however, for non-emergency care, hospitals can refuse treatment, require deposits, or stop services for unpaid bills, especially for private hospitals, though nonprofit hospitals must follow specific financial assistance policies before extreme collections, notes Massachusetts Legal Help and NCLC Digital Library.
No, you generally cannot go to jail just for owing money on collections; the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA) prohibits collectors from threatening arrest for consumer debt like credit cards or medical bills, but you can be arrested for contempt of court if you ignore a judge's order to appear or pay after a lawsuit, or for specific debts like unpaid taxes or child support. Failure to comply with court-ordered payment plans or hearings, not the original debt itself, can lead to jail time, so it's crucial to respond to any lawsuits.
Even if you owe a hospital for past-due bills, that hospital cannot turn you away from its emergency room. This is your right under a federal law called the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act (EMTALA).
Financial assistance programs, sometimes called “charity care,” provide free or discounted health care to people who need help paying their medical bills. The Affordable Care Act (ACA) requires hospitals with 501(c)(3) nonprofit status to have programs to provide this care .
About the debt relief program
Public Health partnered with the non-profit organization Undue Medical Debt to implement the program. Residents started to receive letters to say their debt was canceled in May 2025 and, as of December 2025, over $363 million of medical debt has been erased for over 171,000 residents.
Bills will probably be turned over to an independent collection agency. At that point, you will no longer be able to negotiate with the person or company you owe money to. Collection agencies can be aggressive, but you do have certain rights. Collection agencies can't use abusive language or threaten you with violence.
California
California allows healthcare providers to place a lien on your property for unpaid medical bills. This means that if you sell your home, the lien must be satisfied before you receive any proceeds from the sale.
You can be sued for unpaid medical debt
Even if your credit isn't impacted by ignoring a medical debt that doesn't mean you're out of the woods. Creditors can still sue you for the money you owe.
The 11-word phrase often cited to stop debt collectors is "Please cease and desist all calls and contact with me, immediately," which leverages your rights under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA) to halt most communication, though it must be sent in writing via certified mail to be legally binding, and collectors can still notify you of lawsuits.
In a Nutshell
If you don't pay a debt, it can be sent to collections. If you continue not to pay, you'll hurt your credit score and you risk losing your property or having your wages or bank account garnished.
The 7-in-7 rule (or 7x7 rule) in debt collection, part of the CFPB's Regulation F , limits how often debt collectors can call a consumer about a specific debt: they cannot call more than seven times within seven consecutive days, nor can they call again within seven days of a conversation about that debt, preventing harassment and abusive practices, though these are rebuttable presumptions of compliance.
In short: Debt collectors typically start considering lawsuits for amounts around $1,000 to $5,000, but there's no strict rule. If your debt is within that range, or if you've ignored collection calls or letters, you could be at risk of being sued.
No, not paying a hospital bill is a civil matter, not a crime, so you won't go to jail just for owing the money; however, it can lead to serious consequences like lawsuits, damaged credit, wage garnishment, or property liens, and you can face jail time if you ignore a court order to appear, not for the debt itself. Creditors can sue you, and if they win a judgment, they can garnish wages or seize property, but you should never be threatened with jail by debt collectors, as that's illegal.
There is no single "minimum" amount that applies to all medical bills, but in many cases, the lowest you can pay is far less than the original balance.