This article contains affiliate links. We may earn a commission when you apply through one of our links — at no extra cost to you. We are not a lender or financial advisor. See our Affiliate Disclosure for details.
Medical bills are one of the most common reasons people borrow — they arrive without warning, they are often large, and insurance rarely covers everything. With bad credit, the key is knowing which tools cost the least and, just as importantly, what to do before you borrow. This guide covers both.
Before you borrow: work the bill itself
Medical bills are unusually negotiable, and this step can save more than any financing choice. Three moves worth making first: ask for an itemized bill and check it for errors, which are common; ask the provider about financial assistance or charity care programs, which many hospitals are required to offer; and ask for an interest-free payment plan directly, which most providers will set up. Many people can shrink or restructure a medical bill substantially before financing a dime.
Your financing options at a glance
| Option | Typical APR | Best for | Watch out for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Provider payment plan | Often 0% | Almost everyone — ask first | Not always advertised |
| Personal loan (bad credit) | 18%–36% | Larger bills; fixed payments | Origination fees |
| Medical credit card | 0% promo or ~27%+ | Bills cleared inside the promo | Deferred interest |
| Hospital financial assistance | Reduced or $0 | Lower-income patients | Application required |
1. The provider payment plan
This is the first thing to ask for and often the cheapest option of all — many hospitals and clinics will split a balance into interest-free monthly payments. It does not depend on your credit, and it keeps the debt with the provider rather than a lender. Always ask before assuming you need outside financing.
2. A personal loan for bad credit
For a large bill, or several bills you want to consolidate into one payment, a fixed-rate personal loan provides predictability — one payment, one payoff date. It can also be a way to pay off a medical balance before it goes to collections. Prequalifying with a soft credit check shows your rate without a hard inquiry.
3. Medical credit cards
Cards like CareCredit are accepted at many providers and often offer a promotional 0% window. They work for a bill you can confidently clear inside that window — but the deferred-interest structure charges interest retroactively if you miss the payoff date, so use them carefully.
4. Hospital financial assistance
Many hospitals offer charity care or financial assistance programs that can reduce or even eliminate a bill for patients who qualify by income. These are not always advertised — you usually have to ask and apply. It is one of the most overlooked ways to handle a large medical bill.
A note on medical debt and your credit
Credit reporting rules around medical debt have shifted in recent years, and medical collections are treated somewhat differently than other debt. Still, an unpaid balance can end up in collections, so it is worth addressing — through a payment plan, assistance, or financing — rather than ignoring it. If medical collections are already on your report, a focused credit-repair effort can help you address them.
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I use a loan or a payment plan for medical bills?
Ask the provider for an interest-free payment plan first — it is often the cheapest option. A personal loan makes more sense for a very large bill or to consolidate multiple bills into one payment.
Can I negotiate a medical bill?
Often, yes. Request an itemized bill, check for errors, ask about financial assistance, and ask for a discount for prompt payment. Medical bills are more negotiable than most people realize.
Will medical debt hurt my credit?
It can if it goes to collections, though medical debt is treated somewhat differently than other debt under current reporting rules. Addressing it proactively is better than letting it sit.
The bottom line
For medical expenses with bad credit, work the bill first — itemize it, ask about assistance, and request an interest-free provider payment plan. For what remains, a prequalified personal loan handles large or multiple bills, and a medical card can cover a balance you will clear inside the promo. The cheapest path usually starts with a conversation, not a loan application.
