Can Medical Debt Be Removed From Your Credit Report in 2026?
Yes. Medical debt can often be removed from your credit report if it is paid, under $500, less than one year old, inaccurate, duplicate, not yours, or should have been paid by insurance. Start by pulling all three reports at AnnualCreditReport.com, then dispute the account with each bureau reporting it and attach proof such as payment records, insurance explanations of benefits, or provider letters.
Medical debt can be removed from your credit report in several common situations: the collection is already paid, the original medical collection balance was under $500, the account is less than one year old, the bill is inaccurate, insurance should have paid it, the collector cannot verify it, or the same bill appears more than once. Medical debt is not automatically erased in every situation, but it is easier to remove than many other collection accounts because medical billing errors, insurance delays, and credit bureau policy changes are common.
The key in 2026 is to separate three issues: whether the bill is valid, whether the collector has the right to collect it, and whether it is allowed to appear on your credit reports. Those are not the same thing. A bill can be valid but still not belong on your credit report yet. A bill can be in collections but still be wrong. A bill can be paid but still incorrectly appear because a collection agency or credit bureau failed to update it.
When Medical Debt Should Come Off Your Credit Report
The three nationwide credit reporting companies changed how they report medical collections. The CFPB explains that paid medical collections, medical collections under $500, and medical collections less than one year old should no longer appear on consumer credit reports. You can review the CFPB’s medical debt guidance at ConsumerFinance.gov.
| Medical Debt Situation | Should It Be Removed? | What To Do |
|---|---|---|
| Paid medical collection | Usually yes | Dispute with proof of payment or settlement confirmation |
| Original medical collection under $500 | Usually yes | Dispute and state that the original collection balance is below the reporting threshold |
| Medical collection less than one year old | Usually yes | Dispute if it appeared before the one-year waiting period |
| Unpaid medical collection over $500 and older than one year | May stay if accurate | Verify the balance, ask for itemization, review insurance, and negotiate if valid |
| Medical debt on a credit card | Usually treated as credit card debt | Medical debt policies may not protect it once you pay the provider with a card |
Step 1: Pull All Three Credit Reports
Start by checking your full credit reports, not just a credit score app summary. Use AnnualCreditReport.com, the official site for free credit reports from Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion. Download or save each report because the same medical collection may appear on one bureau but not another.
Write down the collection agency name, original creditor or provider, account number, date opened, balance, and which bureaus are reporting it. If the debt is marked as paid, under $500, or recently placed, highlight that immediately because those facts may support a faster dispute.
Step 2: Confirm Whether the Bill Is Real
Medical bills are often complicated because the provider, hospital, lab, ambulance company, insurance company, and collection agency may all be involved. Before paying or disputing, ask for documentation.
- An itemized bill from the medical provider
- An explanation of benefits from your insurer
- The collection agency’s validation information
- Proof of payment if you already paid
- Any financial assistance or charity care approval
- Any insurance appeal decision
Do not assume the collection balance is correct just because it appears on a credit report. Balance errors, duplicate bills, out-of-network mistakes, and insurance delays are common. If the debt is not yours, was paid by insurance, or was billed incorrectly, dispute it with the credit bureaus and the collector.
Step 3: Dispute the Medical Collection the Right Way
You can dispute directly with Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion. You can also dispute with the debt collector or medical provider if they are furnishing inaccurate information. The most effective dispute is specific. Do not write only, “This is not mine,” unless that is truly the issue.
- Identify the account. Include the bureau name, collection agency, partial account number, and balance.
- State the exact problem. Examples: paid medical collection, under $500, less than one year old, duplicate account, wrong balance, insurance paid, or wrong patient.
- Attach proof. Use receipts, insurance EOBs, provider letters, settlement confirmations, or screenshots.
- Ask for deletion or correction. Be direct: “Please delete this medical collection from my credit report” or “Please correct the balance to zero.”
- Save the confirmation. Keep the dispute number and a copy of everything you submit.
If the credit bureau does not fix the problem, you can submit a complaint to the CFPB complaint portal. You can also report billing or collection problems to your state attorney general.
What If the Medical Debt Is Accurate?
If the debt is accurate, unpaid, over $500, and older than one year, it may be harder to remove. Still, you have options. Start by calling the medical provider, not just the collector. Hospitals and providers may have financial assistance programs, charity care policies, payment plans, or insurance review departments.
| Option | Best When | Credit Report Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Financial assistance or charity care | Your income qualifies under the provider’s policy | Can reduce or eliminate the bill, then support deletion if collection is no longer valid |
| Insurance appeal | The claim was denied or processed incorrectly | Can reduce the balance and fix reporting if insurance pays |
| Payment plan with provider | The account has not gone to collections yet | May prevent reporting if set up early |
| Settlement with collector | The debt is valid but unaffordable | Get written terms and ask whether deletion or update will occur |
How Medical Debt Affects Your Score in 2026
Medical debt generally hurts only if it becomes a collection account that is allowed to report. The impact depends on the scoring model, account age, balance, and the rest of your credit file. Some newer scoring models treat medical collections differently from other collections, but lenders do not all use the same score version.
That is why removal is better than simply hoping a score app ignores the account. Mortgage lenders, auto lenders, landlords, and insurers may review different reports or scoring models. If a medical collection should not be there, dispute it instead of assuming it will not matter.
FAQ: Removing Medical Debt From Credit Reports
The Bottom Line
Medical debt can often be removed from your credit report in 2026, especially when it is paid, under $500, less than one year old, inaccurate, duplicate, or tied to an insurance mistake. The fastest path is to pull all three credit reports, gather proof, dispute with each bureau reporting the account, and escalate to the CFPB if the investigation does not fix a valid issue.
Start with your reports today, then organize the bill, insurance paperwork, and payment records before sending disputes.
