Your Health Plan Might Not Cover That: The Hidden ‘Transportation Gap’ After an Accident

After a serious accident, the last thing on anyone’s mind is how the ambulance ride is being billed. But once the dust settles and the medical bills start rolling in, many people are stunned to learn that their health plan didn’t cover everything (or anything) related to their emergency transportation.

This unexpected gap in coverage is known as the “transportation gap” and it’s more common than you think.

Ambulance and Airlift Services: Not Automatically Covered

Let’s start with a surprising fact: ground and air ambulance rides are often out-of-network, even when your destination hospital is in-network. This means your health insurance may pay only a small portion of the bill, or none at all.

According to a 2021 report from the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO), the median cost of a ground ambulance transport was $503 for those with private insurance, and $450 for those without. But that’s just the beginning. Air ambulance bills routinely exceed $40,000, especially in rural or hard-to-reach locations, and most health plans only cover a fraction of that cost, if at all.

Even with the No Surprises Act now protecting consumers from some surprise medical bills, air ambulance services are exempt, and ground ambulance billing remains largely unregulated, depending on the state.

Who Pays First: Health Plan or Auto Insurance?

In an auto accident, your automobile insurance is often the first payer, not your health plan. This is especially true if your policy includes Medical Payments Coverage (MedPay) or Personal Injury Protection (PIP).

If you don't carry MedPay or PIP, and your health insurance denies the ambulance bill due to it being out-of-network, or delays it pending accident investigation, you could be left footing the bill for thousands of dollars.

It Gets Worse: Out-of-Network ERs

After the ride, where you end up matters, too. If you're taken to a non-network ER, you may face balance billing for services your health plan only partially covers. This can include everything from physician services to imaging and trauma fees.

And remember, in an emergency, you often don’t have a choice in providers or facilities.

Coordinate Now—So You're Covered Later

A little planning goes a long way. Here’s a quick checklist to help close the coverage gap:

  • Check your health plan’s network: Know which ERs and ambulance providers are in-network.
  • Add MedPay or PIP to your auto policy: These cover medical costs regardless of fault and can pay for ambulance bills.
  • Understand your umbrella policy: It can provide extra protection for liability gaps but won’t cover your own medical bills.
  • Review out-of-network coverage: Know what you’ll owe if you can’t get to a network provider.
  • Talk to your agent: They can help align your auto and health coverages for maximum protection.

Don’t Let a Bad Day Become a Financial Crisis

No one plans for an accident. But a simple misalignment between your health insurance and auto policy can lead to thousands in unexpected bills, from the moment the sirens start.

Now is the time to coordinate your coverage, not after an accident. Let’s make sure your safety net doesn’t have holes you can’t see.

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