Medical Debt Is Treated as General Unsecured Debt
Under federal bankruptcy law, debts fall into different categories that determine how they are handled. Medical bills — hospital charges, physician fees, emergency room visits, surgical costs, ambulance fees, lab work, and similar expenses — are classified as general unsecured debt.
This is an important distinction. Secured debts, like a mortgage or car loan, are tied to property a creditor can repossess or foreclose on. Unsecured debts have no such collateral. Medical creditors have no claim on your home, your car, or your belongings simply because you owe them money.
More importantly, 11 U.S.C. § 523 — the section of the federal Bankruptcy Code that lists debts that cannot be discharged — does not include medical debt. Congress has specifically excepted student loans, child support, alimony, recent taxes, and certain other obligations from bankruptcy discharge. Medical bills are not on that list. That means, in most cases, they can be wiped out entirely.
To understand the difference between secured and unsecured debt in more detail, see Duncan Law’s overview of secured versus unsecured debt.
How Chapter 7 Bankruptcy May Eliminate Medical Bills
Chapter 7 bankruptcy is often called liquidation bankruptcy, though for most consumers in North Carolina very little — if anything — is actually liquidated. A typical Chapter 7 case takes roughly four to six months from filing to discharge. When the court enters a discharge order under 11 U.S.C. § 727, your personal liability for all listed unsecured debts, including medical bills, is eliminated. Creditors cannot legally attempt to collect those debts from you again.
What Happens to Medical Creditors in Chapter 7
When you file Chapter 7, you list your medical creditors on Schedule E/F of your bankruptcy petition. Those creditors receive official notice of your filing and are subject to the automatic stay — a court-ordered pause on virtually all collection activity that takes effect the moment your case is filed. Collection calls must stop. Lawsuits must pause. Wage garnishments on medical judgments must halt.
At the end of the case, your medical debts are discharged. Unless the bankruptcy trustee finds and liquidates non-exempt assets — which rarely happens in a well-prepared consumer case — medical creditors typically receive nothing. The debt is simply gone.
Qualifying for Chapter 7: The Means Test
Not everyone qualifies for Chapter 7. To file, you must pass the means test, which compares your average monthly income over the six months before filing to the median income for a household of your size in North Carolina. If your income falls below the state median, you generally qualify automatically. If it is above the median, additional expense deductions are applied to determine eligibility.
The U.S. Trustee Program updates North Carolina median income figures periodically. Current figures are available at justice.gov. Because these numbers change, this article does not state specific thresholds — speak with an attorney to get the current figures for your household size.
How Chapter 13 Bankruptcy May Reduce What You Pay
If your income is too high for Chapter 7, or if you have assets you want to protect, Chapter 13 bankruptcy offers a different approach. Instead of a quick discharge, Chapter 13 involves a structured repayment plan lasting three to five years. The plan is confirmed by the bankruptcy court and governs how your debts are paid during that period.
How Medical Debt Is Treated in a Chapter 13 Plan
Under 11 U.S.C. § 1322, medical creditors are classified as general unsecured creditors in a Chapter 13 plan. They sit at the bottom of the payment priority. Secured creditors (like your mortgage lender or car loan servicer) and priority creditors (like the IRS for recent tax debt) are paid first. Whatever money remains after those obligations is distributed to general unsecured creditors — often only a small fraction of what was owed.
In practice, many Chapter 13 filers pay very little — sometimes pennies on the dollar — toward medical bills. When the plan is completed, any remaining unpaid balance on those debts is discharged under 11 U.S.C. § 1328. For someone with $60,000 in medical debt and a plan that pays unsecured creditors 15 cents on the dollar, that means paying roughly $9,000 over five years and having $51,000 discharged at the end.
How the Automatic Stay Can Stop Medical Debt Collection
One of the most immediate benefits of filing bankruptcy — whether Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 — is the automatic stay under 11 U.S.C. § 362. The moment your case is filed, the automatic stay goes into effect and requires creditors to stop:
- calling you or contacting you about the debt,
- sending collection letters,
- filing or continuing lawsuits,
- garnishing wages under an existing medical judgment,
- attempting to levy bank accounts.
If a hospital or collection agency continues to contact you after your bankruptcy filing, they may be violating the automatic stay and could face sanctions from the bankruptcy court. Your attorney can address this directly if it happens.
North Carolina Property Exemptions and Medical Debt
One of the most common fears people have is that filing bankruptcy means losing their home, car, or savings to pay creditors. In North Carolina, state law provides a set of exemptions that protect significant assets from creditors — including medical collectors and collection agencies that have obtained judgments. North Carolina is an “opt-out” state, meaning filers must use state exemptions rather than the federal alternatives.
Key North Carolina exemptions under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1C-1601 include:
- Homestead exemption: Up to $35,000 in home equity ($70,000 for married couples filing jointly) — N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1C-1601(a)(1)
- Wild card exemption: Up to $5,000 in any personal property — N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1C-1601(a)(2)
- Motor vehicle exemption: Up to $3,500 in vehicle equity — N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1C-1601(a)(3)
- Retirement accounts: ERISA-qualified 401(k) plans, IRAs, and pensions are generally fully protected — 11 U.S.C. § 522(b)(3)(C)
- Social Security income: Exempt from creditor claims under federal law
If your equity in these assets falls within the applicable limits, those assets are protected in bankruptcy — regardless of how much you owe to medical creditors.
What About Medical Debt Judgment Liens?
If a hospital or collection agency has already filed a lawsuit, obtained a court judgment, and recorded that judgment as a lien against your real property in North Carolina, the situation requires closer attention. Discharging the underlying medical debt eliminates your personal obligation to pay it — but a recorded judgment lien may survive the discharge and remain attached to your property.
In many cases, however, a motion to avoid the lien can be filed under 11 U.S.C. § 522(f) if the lien impairs your homestead or other exemptions. This is a fact-specific analysis that depends on the amount of the lien, your equity, and the applicable exemption. If you have a judgment against you from a medical creditor, this is something to discuss directly with a bankruptcy attorney before and during your case.
Medical Debt and Your Credit Report in 2026
Federal regulators have taken significant steps in recent years to reduce the impact of medical debt on consumer credit scores. The three major credit bureaus — Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion — announced changes in 2023 and 2024 that removed many paid medical collections from credit reports and raised thresholds for reporting unpaid medical balances. In 2025, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau finalized a rule that would further limit medical debt reporting, though that rule has faced legal and regulatory challenges and its current status may be subject to change.
What this means practically: the weight of medical debt on your credit report has generally been declining, but large unpaid medical balances may still affect your score. Filing bankruptcy adds a notation to your credit report — Chapter 7 remains for ten years from the filing date, and Chapter 13 for seven. Many people, however, find that their credit begins to recover meaningfully within one to two years of receiving a discharge, because the eliminated debts no longer appear as active delinquencies dragging down the score. The path forward depends on your specific situation.
When Bankruptcy May Not Be the Right Fit
Bankruptcy is a powerful tool, but it is not the right solution for everyone. It may be worth exploring other options first, or alongside bankruptcy, if:
- your medical debt is the only significant debt you have and your overall financial situation is otherwise stable,
- the hospital or provider has a financial hardship or charity care program that could reduce or eliminate the bill,
- your income is irregular and you are unsure whether you can sustain a Chapter 13 plan,
- you recently filed bankruptcy and may not be eligible to file again yet.
It is also worth noting that not every debt can be discharged in bankruptcy. If medical debt is mixed with significant non-dischargeable debt — like recent income taxes or domestic support obligations — bankruptcy may address some of your burden but not all of it. A full picture of your debt situation is important before deciding.
When to Talk to a Bankruptcy Attorney
Consider speaking with a bankruptcy attorney if any of the following apply to your situation:
- Your medical bills are more than you could realistically pay off within two to three years.
- A hospital billing department or collection agency is calling regularly or threatening to sue.
- You have already been served with a lawsuit or a judgment has been entered against you.
- Your wages are being garnished because of a medical judgment.
- You are considering raiding your retirement accounts or home equity to pay medical bills — both of which may be protected in bankruptcy.
- You are stressed and losing sleep over bills you see no path out of.
At Duncan Law, we offer free consultations to discuss your situation honestly. We serve clients throughout Greensboro, Winston-Salem, High Point, Charlotte, and the surrounding areas of North Carolina. Contact us to schedule a time to talk.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I file bankruptcy just because of medical bills?
Yes. There is no rule requiring you to have a minimum number of creditors or a specific mix of debt types. A bankruptcy case filed primarily or entirely because of medical bills is entirely valid under federal law. Many people file for exactly this reason.
Are all medical debts dischargeable, or are some exceptions?
Most medical debts — hospital bills, physician fees, surgical costs, emergency room charges, ambulance fees — are dischargeable in bankruptcy. Medical debt is not listed among the exceptions to discharge in 11 U.S.C. § 523. However, the specifics of your case matter, and an attorney can review your full debt picture to confirm.
What if my medical bill has already been sent to a collection agency?
A medical debt sold to a third-party collection agency remains dischargeable. You list the collection account on your bankruptcy schedules, the collection agency receives notice of your filing, and the debt is eliminated through the bankruptcy process just like the original bill would be.
What if a collection agency has already sued me over a medical bill?
Filing bankruptcy triggers the automatic stay, which requires the collection agency to stop the lawsuit immediately. Even if a judgment has already been entered, the underlying debt can typically still be discharged. If a judgment lien was recorded against your property, a separate motion may be needed — speak with your attorney about this specifically.
Will I lose my house or car if I file bankruptcy over medical debt?
Not necessarily. North Carolina’s exemption laws protect significant equity in your home and vehicle. If your equity falls within the applicable limits — $35,000 in home equity for an individual, $3,500 in vehicle equity — those assets are generally protected. Your attorney will review your specific assets and exemptions as part of case preparation.
Can bankruptcy stop a wage garnishment from a medical creditor?
Yes. The automatic stay stops most wage garnishments the moment your bankruptcy case is filed. If your wages are currently being garnished because of a medical judgment, filing bankruptcy may stop that garnishment quickly. Speak with an attorney promptly if this is happening.
How does Chapter 13 treat medical bills differently from Chapter 7?
In Chapter 7, medical bills are typically eliminated entirely with no payment to those creditors. In Chapter 13, medical creditors are treated as general unsecured creditors in your repayment plan and receive only what the plan provides — often a fraction of the total owed — with the remainder discharged at the end of the plan. Chapter 13 may be the better fit if your income is too high for Chapter 7 or if you have assets you want to protect.
Will I have to go to court?
Most bankruptcy filers attend one hearing called the Meeting of Creditors (also called the 341 meeting), which is typically informal and relatively brief. It is not held in a courtroom before a judge. Medical creditors rarely appear at these meetings. In most straightforward cases, that is the only proceeding you attend.
What happens to my credit after filing bankruptcy for medical debt?
A Chapter 7 bankruptcy stays on your credit report for ten years from the filing date; Chapter 13 stays for seven. However, eliminating large unpaid debts often allows credit scores to begin recovering within one to two years. Many people who file bankruptcy find themselves in a better credit position after two to three years than they would have been continuing to carry unmanageable debt.
Can a doctor or hospital refuse to treat me after I file bankruptcy?
Discharging a medical debt in bankruptcy eliminates your legal obligation to pay it, but it does not require a provider to continue treating you. Some providers may decline future non-emergency services after a bankruptcy discharge. Emergency care cannot be denied. This is a provider policy issue, not a legal requirement. Duncan Law has more detail on this question at Can a Doctor Refuse to See Me After Bankruptcy?
Legal Disclaimer
This article is for general informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Reading this article does not create an attorney-client relationship with Duncan Law. Bankruptcy laws can be complicated, and how the law applies depends on the facts of your situation. If you have questions about your specific circumstances, you should speak with a qualified bankruptcy attorney.