Hospital charity care in California
California layers some of the strongest charity-care protections in the country on top of the federal floor, through the Hospital Fair Pricing Act. Here's what's different if you were treated at a hospital in California.
Hospital Fair Pricing Act
Cal. Health & Safety Code §127400 et seq., established by AB 774 (2006), strengthened by SB 1276 (2014) and AB 1020 / AB 2297 / SB 1061 (2025).
400% of FPL
Raised from 350% effective January 1, 2025. Uninsured patients and patients with "high medical costs" at or below this line must be allowed to apply.
HCAI
The Department of Health Care Access and Information collects and publishes every licensed hospital's charity care and discount policies.
Nearly all licensed hospitals
General acute care, psychiatric acute, and special hospitals — plus a parallel discount duty for emergency room physicians.
California's 400% FPL line
Since January 1, 2025, California law requires that any uninsured patient — or any patient with "high medical costs," meaning their bill exceeds what they'd otherwise pay with third-party coverage — be eligible to apply for charity care or a discount payment policy if their family income is at or below 400% of the federal poverty level. Before 2025, the line was 350%. Hospitals remain free to set a more generous cutoff for higher incomes, and rural hospitals are allowed to set a lower threshold than 400% if needed to protect their financial and operational integrity.
| Household size | 100% FPL (2026) | 400% FPL (2026) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 person | $15,960 | $63,840 |
| 4 people | $33,000 | $132,000 |
That 400% line is the ceiling for who must be allowed to apply — it isn't automatically a promise of 100% free care. Individual hospitals still set their own tiers below that line; for example, some hospitals offer full free care up to roughly 200–300% of FPL and a sliding-scale discount from there up to 400%. Always check the specific hospital's published policy for its tiers.
Extra protections added by AB 2297 & SB 1061
A package of 2025 amendments added patient protections that go well beyond the federal 501(r) floor. As of January 1, 2025, California hospitals and emergency physicians are prohibited from:
- Banned
Considering monetary assets
Eligibility must be based on income — though a hospital may still consider whether you have funds available in a Health Savings Account.
- Banned
Imposing application deadlines
Hospitals can't set a cutoff date by which you must apply for charity care or a discount.
- Banned
Denying based on application timing
You can't be turned down solely because of when you submitted your application.
- Banned
Reporting you to credit bureaus
Hospitals and emergency physicians can't report adverse information about your hospital debt to a consumer credit reporting agency.
- Banned
Placing liens on your home
Real-property liens can no longer be used as a method of collecting unpaid hospital or ER physician bills.
Debt sales are also restricted: a hospital generally can't sell your unpaid bill to a debt buyer unless it has already determined you're ineligible for financial assistance, or you haven't responded to billing and assistance outreach for at least 180 days. That same 180-day mark — up from 150 days under the prior law — is now the earliest point a hospital can report adverse information or begin a civil action over an unpaid bill. Debt collectors must also certify that you were screened for public coverage programs and financial assistance before they can file a lawsuit against you.
Rural hospital exception
Rural hospitals (as defined under Cal. Health & Safety Code §124840) may set eligibility levels below 400% of FPL where necessary to maintain financial and operational integrity — so the threshold can vary at smaller, remote facilities.
Where to look up a specific hospital's rules
HCAI (formerly OSHPD) collects a copy of every licensed hospital's charity care policy, discount payment policy, eligibility procedures, review process, and application form, and makes them publicly available through its Hospital Fair Billing Program. That's the most reliable way to confirm a specific hospital's actual income tiers rather than relying on general statewide ranges.
Where this page's claims come from
- 1.California HCAI, Hospital Fair Billing Program — Laws & Regulations — hcai.ca.gov
- 2.California Senate Bill 1276 (2014), bill text — leginfo.legislature.ca.gov
- 3.California Assembly Bill 774 (2006), bill text — leginfo.legislature.ca.gov
- 4.California Hospital Association, AB 1020 compliance summary — calhospital.org
- 5.Moss Adams, "2025 Changes in California Hospitals Fair Pricing Act" — mossadams.com
General information, not legal advice
State law changes regularly. Confirm current details with HCAI or the specific hospital's financial assistance office before relying on this page for a decision.