Can Medical Debt Affect Your Credit Score?


For decades, medical debt has cast a long shadow over the financial lives of everyday Americans. A single unexpected health emergency—an ER visit, a surgery, or even a routine test misfiled by insurance—could quickly spiral into thousands of dollars in debt. And if that debt made its way onto your credit report, the consequences were lasting: lower credit scores, higher interest rates, denied mortgage or rental applications, and even missed job opportunities.

This long-standing burden has finally reached a turning point.

In 2025, a groundbreaking rule finalized by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) will remove all medical debt—both paid and unpaid—from consumer credit reports. This means that medical bills will no longer be used by lenders when evaluating your creditworthiness. The reform is expected to clear around $49 billion in medical debt from Americans’ credit histories, lifting a massive weight off the shoulders of millions.

This decision wasn’t made lightly. Years of research, public pressure, and advocacy from consumer protection groups pointed to one painful truth: medical debt was not a reliable indicator of someone’s financial responsibility. Unlike a shopping spree on a credit card, medical debt is rarely voluntary. It doesn’t reflect poor budgeting or reckless spending. In most cases, it’s the result of necessary care, unexpected illness, or opaque billing systems that confuse even the savviest consumer.

The good news is that these changes are already underway.

Even before the 2025 rule takes full effect, the three major credit bureaus—Experian, Equifax, and TransUnion—began phasing out medical debt reporting. As of 2023, paid medical collections have already been removed from credit reports. Additionally, unpaid medical bills with an original balance under $500 have also been eliminated. This means that if you’ve recently paid off medical debt or if your unresolved bills fall under that threshold, your credit report should already reflect those removals.

But what if you notice a medical collection that still shouldn’t be there—or worse, a charge that doesn’t even belong to you?

Medical debt is notoriously error-prone. From clerical mishandling to billing disputes between providers and insurers, it’s not uncommon for incorrect debt to be reported to credit bureaus. If you suspect something’s off, you’re not powerless. You have the legal right to dispute inaccurate credit information, and doing so can protect your credit score and financial future.

To make this easier, TomoBoost offers a dispute service that’s fast, transparent, and easy to use. With TomoBoost, you can challenge questionable items on your credit report—including medical debt—with instant results. Instead of waiting weeks for updates or navigating confusing paperwork, TomoBoost streamlines the entire process. It’s credit relief in real time.

This matters more than you might think. Your credit report isn’t just a number—it’s your financial passport. It affects everything from loan approvals and apartment leases to job applications and insurance premiums. The removal of medical debt doesn’t just lighten the load; it gives millions of Americans a chance to reclaim their financial narrative.

We’re entering a new era of credit reporting—one where medical hardship doesn’t define your future. With the CFPB’s new regulation and support tools like TomoBoost, you now have the power to clean up your credit, dispute inaccurate information, and step confidently into a healthier financial life.

Medical bills should be a healthcare issue—not a credit score issue. And starting now, they finally are.