Utah Medical Billing Rights
Your rights when dealing with medical bills in Utah. These state laws work alongside the federal No Surprises Act to protect you from unfair billing.
Prompt Pay: 30 Days
In Utah, insurance companies must process clean claims within 30 days. If your insurer takes longer, you may be entitled to interest or penalties. If your bill shows a payment date far beyond this window, it could indicate a prompt-pay violation.
UT Code 31A-26-301.5 (clean claims: 30 days electronic, 45 paper)No State Balance Billing Law
Utah does not currently have a state-specific balance billing law. However, the federal No Surprises Act (effective Jan 1, 2022) protects you from surprise balance bills for emergency services and out-of-network providers at in-network facilities. Your federal protections still apply.
Federal-Only Surprise Billing Coverage
Utah does not have a separate state-level surprise billing law. Residents are protected by the federal No Surprises Act (effective Jan 1, 2022), which prohibits surprise billing for emergency services, air ambulance services from out-of-network providers, and certain non-emergency services at in-network facilities.
Right to an Itemized Bill
Under Utah law, you have the right to request a detailed, itemized bill from your healthcare provider. This bill must list each service, procedure code (CPT/HCPCS), and individual charge. An itemized bill is essential for spotting errors — it's the first thing you should request.
UT Code 26-21-26No State Medical Debt Protection
Utah does not currently have specific medical debt protection laws beyond federal requirements. Federal protections include: the three major credit bureaus no longer report paid medical debt, and unpaid medical debt under $500 is excluded from credit reports (effective 2023).
Statute of limitations on medical debt in Utah: approximately 6 years. After this period, creditors generally cannot sue to collect the debt. Making a payment or acknowledging the debt may restart this clock.
File a Complaint in Utah
If you believe a provider or insurer has violated your billing rights, you can file a complaint with these Utah agencies:
Think your Utah medical bill has errors?
Use our free tools to check codes against NCCI bundling rules, look up Medicare rates, and generate a dispute letter citing Utah-specific protections. Start with our 5-step bill checking guide, or jump to a specific bill type: ER bills, ambulance bills, insurance claims, or any bill type.
This page is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. State laws change frequently. Statute citations were last verified for the 2023 legislative session. For current law, consult Utah's official state legislature website or a qualified attorney. Generated using artificial intelligence by BillError.com (Amburd LLC).