The Shoulder
The Shoulder
48
careful-mole-458

PT clinic randomly billing me almost a year after my settlement closed — am I on the hook??

I genuinely thought this whole nightmare was behind me. Got rear-ended pretty badly at an intersection last spring, did about four months of physical therapy at a clinic my doctor referred me to, and then got discharged when they said I'd hit my recovery plateau. Nobody from the clinic ever followed up with me after that, no bills, no calls, nothing.

Fast forward — my case settled over the summer, everything was signed, funds were distributed, my attorney closed the file. I honestly started to feel like a normal person again.

Then last week, completely out of nowhere, I get a letter from the PT clinic saying I owe them a balance. Apparently my health insurance only covered a fraction of what they billed, and they're now coming after me for the rest. We're talking a number that would genuinely hurt.

I called my old attorney and he basically said the settlement is done and he has no remaining funds to negotiate with. He mentioned that if I do decide to pay something, I should make sure to get a written agreement from them confirming they won't come back asking for more later.

But honestly I don't understand how this is even legal? I was discharged months before my case closed. They had every opportunity to submit their bills and get into the settlement. Why is that suddenly my problem now?

Has anyone dealt with something like this? Did the clinic actually have a right to do this, or are they just hoping I'll panic and write a check? Feeling really lost right now and not sure who I can even turn to for straight answers.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 20
    calm-marten-708

    Oh man, this happened to me too — different kind of provider but same situation. They sat on their billing for months and then came knocking after everything was wrapped up. What I learned is that some clinics are just terrible at submitting claims on time and then they scramble to recover whatever they can from the patient. It's infuriating. I ended up negotiating the balance way down because I pushed back hard and made it clear I wasn't just going to roll over.

  • 14
    steady-crane-004

    Don't just pay it without understanding exactly what they're claiming and why your health insurance only covered such a small portion. Sometimes these clinics bill at their full 'chargemaster' rate — which is basically an inflated number nobody actually pays — and then come after you for the difference between that and what insurance actually approved. Ask them for an itemized statement and the EOB from your insurance. Knowledge is leverage here.

    • 6
      quiet-parent808

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

    • 7
      weathered-backseat880

      Did the timeline change anything for you? Mine dragged on for weeks.

  • 12
    keen-mole-885

    A few things worth looking into: first, check whether the clinic had a lien filed on your case. If they did and it wasn't resolved at settlement, that's actually a serious issue your attorney should have caught. If they didn't file a lien, their ability to collect from you may be more limited than they're letting on. Also look at the statute of limitations for medical debt in your state — depending on the timeline, that might matter. Your attorney's advice about getting a written release before paying anything is solid, though. Whatever you do, don't pay without getting something in writing that closes this out permanently.

  • 8
    keen-seal-249

    From the inside, I can tell you that providers sometimes deliberately delay billing because they're hoping there's settlement money still on the table. Once they hear a case closed, they pivot to billing the patient directly because they know you're more likely to just pay than fight it. It's a calculated move. That doesn't mean you legally owe them what they're claiming — it just means they're being opportunistic. Don't let the scary letter pressure you into anything fast.

  • 10
    swift-wolf-825

    Not legal advice, but I'd say it's worth a quick consultation with a different attorney just to get a second set of eyes on this. If there was no medical lien properly perfected before your settlement, the clinic's options may be more limited than they're presenting. Your original attorney also may have had an obligation to address known medical providers during the settlement process — that's worth understanding. Either way, do not make any payment or written acknowledgment of the debt before you know where you actually stand legally.

    • 10
      steady-elk-480

      Here's what I'd do: write them a letter (certified mail, keep a copy) formally disputing the balance and asking for full documentation — itemized billing, their original claim submission to your insurance, and the EOB showing what was paid and what was denied. That buys you time and puts the burden back on them to prove what you actually owe. Do not call them and definitely don't agree to anything verbally.

    • 4
      level-late-shift939

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.

  • 20
    patient-fox-611

    From a medical billing standpoint, it's really common for clinics to have a huge lag between when services are provided and when they reconcile what insurance actually paid versus what's outstanding. It's sloppy and it's not fair to patients, but it happens constantly. That said, 'common' doesn't mean you automatically owe them the full amount they're asking. Medical bills are almost always negotiable, especially if you can show financial hardship or dispute the amounts.

  • 17
    keen-mole-582

    Quick question — did you sign anything at the clinic when you started treatment that mentioned a financial responsibility policy? Some PT clinics have clauses where you agree to cover any balance insurance doesn't pay, and if that's in what you signed, it complicates things. Not saying you're definitely on the hook, but it's worth digging out whatever paperwork you signed at intake before you decide how hard to push back.