About CharityCareCheck
We built CharityCareCheck because a federally required patient right — hospital financial assistance — stays invisible to most people who'd qualify for it. This page explains who we are, how we research what's on this site, and how it's funded.
Make a required right easier to find
Hospital charity care isn't charity in the everyday sense — for nonprofit hospitals, it's a legal requirement tied to their tax-exempt status. But the policies are scattered across thousands of individual hospital websites, written in regulatory language, and rarely surfaced at the moment a patient is staring at a bill. CharityCareCheck exists to close that gap: a plain-language explanation of how the system works, state-by-state context, and a free calculator to help you get an early estimate before you contact a hospital directly.
An independent guide
A free, advertising-supported educational resource and self-service estimator, built and maintained by our small editorial team.
A hospital or agency
We're not a hospital, insurer, debt collector, law firm, or government agency, and we're not affiliated with any specific hospital system.
Guarantee outcomes
We don't charge for estimates, sell leads to hospitals, or promise approval — only the hospital you apply to can determine your actual eligibility.
How we research and fact-check this site
Start from primary sources
We base every claim on the underlying law or regulation itself — IRS Section 501(r) guidance, HHS poverty guidelines, and individual state statutes — rather than secondhand summaries.
Cross-check against real hospital policies
Where it helps illustrate a typical range, we reference published, publicly posted hospital Financial Assistance Policies, always labeled as examples rather than universal rules.
Rewrite in plain language
We translate regulatory text into language a patient under financial stress can actually use, without losing the legal substance.
Review before publishing
Pages are checked against the cited sources before they go live, with links to those sources included on the page itself so you can verify anything yourself.
Re-review on a schedule
Income thresholds, state laws, and federal guidance change — most recently the 2025 update to California's threshold and the 2026 federal poverty guidelines. Every page shows a "last reviewed" date in its footer.
Correct mistakes quickly
If you spot something inaccurate or out of date, tell us — see the contact section below. We review and correct genuine errors promptly.
Advertising, not hospitals or law firms
CharityCareCheck is supported by display advertising, including ads served through programs like Google AdSense. A few things we want to be upfront about:
- Ad placements are clearly marked and never disguised as editorial content.
- We don't accept payment from hospitals, law firms, or debt-relief companies in exchange for favorable coverage or placement in our guides.
- Our calculator doesn't sell your responses as sales leads to hospitals or financial-assistance vendors.
- Advertising vendors may use cookies to personalize the ads you see — details are in our Privacy Policy.
This site offers general information, not advice
Nothing on CharityCareCheck is legal, medical, or financial advice, and no part of this site creates an attorney-client, provider-patient, or advisory relationship. Always confirm your specific situation with the hospital's financial assistance office or a qualified professional.
Questions, corrections, or feedback
Spotted an outdated figure, a broken source link, or something that doesn't match your hospital's actual policy? We'd genuinely like to know. Reach us at hello@charitycarecheck.com.