Fact Sheet: Hospital Costs Explained

The mission of each and every hospital in America is to serve the health care needs of the people in its community 24 hours a day, seven days a week. But, hospitals’ work is made more difficult by our fragmented health care system — a system that leaves millions of people unable to afford the health care services they need.

Hospitals deal with over 1,000 insurers, 1 which typically have several different plan options. For instance, in the Federally-Facilitated Exchange (FFE) program specifically, there are approximately 120 unique insurers offering over 75,000 discrete health plan options 2 leading to multiple and often unique requirements for hospital bills. Add to that decades of government regulations, which have made a complex billing system even more complex and frustrating for everyone involved.

Over the past year, the COVID-19 pandemic has placed a tremendous strain on hospitals and health systems across the country. In 2020 alone, the AHA estimated that hospital financial losses were at least $323.1 billion. 3 As the pandemic has continued to persist well into 2021, a recent report by Kaufman Hall forecasts that hospitals and health systems could face an additional $53 billion to $122 billion in losses in 2021. 4 Today’s fragmented health care system, exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic, leaves hospitals with a daily balancing act to maintain their mission to the communities they serve while making ends meet. The following is an explanation of key components of hospital billing, including hospital charges, payment and costs.

Charges vs. Payments

Payments Received by Typical Hospitals

Federal laws and regulations require hospitals to maintain uniform charge structures. Payments, however, do not correspond to those charges. What a hospital actually receives in payment for care is very different. That is because: