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He Got an Ambulance Bill, Threatened to Use a Helicopter, and the Insurer Paid Up

by Sunny Nguyen
November 11, 2025
in Social Issues

When he opened a bill for his ambulance ride after an anaphylactic reaction, he felt like he had been smacked twice. First the shock of nearly dying.

Then the shock of a large invoice because the hospital-owned ground ambulance that took him in turned out to be out of his insurer’s network. What happened next was equal parts blunt logic and cheeky leverage, and it worked.

He Got an Ambulance Bill, Threatened to Use a Helicopter, and the Insurer Paid Up
Not the actual photo

Here’s the original post:

Don't want to pay for my ambulance? How about a helicopter instead?

EDIT: I do NOT consent for this post to be shared, re-posted, uploaded, or used on ANY social media or news platform.

I had an anaphylactic reaction a few months ago and recently received a large bill for being taken to the hospital in an ambulance.

Apparently, the ambulance company (while owned by the in-network hospital) was out of network, so the bill was on me.

Wanting to avoid this situation in the future, I called my health insurance company to ask what ambulance companies WERE in network.

That's when I learned that absolutely no ambulances for a 150-mile radius are in network, except for three helicopter ambulance companies.

So I live in a fairly rural area, where many folks are hours away from the nearest hospital, and farm accidents are common, so it makes sense that we have...

But I live in town, and a ground ambulance is by far the cheapest and easiest thing for everyone. But it's not in network.

The insurance representative said that the reason the ambulance wasn't covered was to encourage members to use in-network services.

So I said, "The in-network option is a helicopter, and I live 3 miles by road from the hospital. Are you sure you want me to use the in-network option?"

There was a long pause, and she said she had to check with her supervisor.

A week later, I got letter from my insurance company saying that my bill was paid in full. Looks like they did not want that in-network option after all.

The problem with “in-network” ambulances

After the scare, he called his insurer to ask which ambulance companies were in network within about 150 miles of his rural town. The answer surprised him: almost none.

Ground ambulances in his area were out of network, except for three air ambulance companies. In short, getting to the nearest hospital by driving ambulance could leave you holding a hefty balance, while the only “in-network” option was a helicopter.

That was not a practical or safe expectation for someone who lived three miles from the hospital.

This mismatch is not an isolated quirk. Recent analyses show that out-of-network billing for ambulance rides is common, and the patient financial burden can be significant.

One cross-sectional study found over half of ground ambulance services billed out of network, with average patient financial burdens of several hundred dollars per trip.

Another report noted that nearly 60 percent of ground ambulance rides were out of network in recent years, leaving patients exposed to surprise bills.

Federal protections and their limits

Since 2022, the No Surprises Act has shielded many patients from balance bills for emergency care and for air ambulance services. The law prohibits balance billing in many emergency situations and specifically covers air ambulances from surprise billing.

But ground ambulances are a gray area. While the act tightened protections and created dispute-resolution mechanisms, ground ambulance billing remains a major source of surprise charges for patients in many regions.

In practice, that has left people vulnerable when the nearest or most practical ground ambulance happens to be out of network.

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

His tactic: point out the absurd “in-network” option

When an insurer representative told him the out-of-network bill was by design, to incentivize use of in-network providers, he posed a simple question:

“So your only in-network ambulance is a helicopter, and I live three miles from the hospital. Do you really want me to use that option?”

The rep went quiet, consulted a supervisor, and a week later he received a letter saying his bill was paid in full. It seems the insurer did not relish the optics or logistics of promoting helicopter transport for short, local trips. The nudge worked.
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

Why this matters – practical and ethical angles

From a patient perspective, this is about fairness and safety. People call ambulances in emergencies; they should not have to calculate networks while in distress.

Consumer advocates urge patients to appeal surprise bills and cite federal protections when relevant.  In many cases appealing or quoting a plan’s own policy can prompt insurers to cover charges or use the federal dispute process.

One former claims worker advised that emergencies billed out of network should be appealed because many will be reclassified as in-network under the law or plan rules.

Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

Insurers and some policy analysts counter that networks exist to control costs and that having no in-network ground ambulances in a region can reflect market realities, especially in rural areas where ambulance services are municipally run or run by small providers who cannot secure network contracts on insurer terms.

They point out that mandating all ambulances be in network could raise premiums or contract complexity. Yet critics argue market realities cannot justify leaving patients exposed during emergencies, and that federal and state fixes are needed.

What experts suggest

Health policy experts recommend several steps for patients: ask the insurer to explain coverage and in writing; file an appeal citing emergency care protections; request the insurer apply federal No Surprises Act protections if applicable; and if needed, escalate to state insurance regulators or use the federal independent dispute resolution process for unresolved balance bills.

A proactive read of plan documents and quick appeals after a surprising bill often changes outcomes.

Here’s what the community had to contribute:

Redditors were predictably angry and not surprised.

TodayThrowaway1979 − I used to work for Cigna Health Insurance in claims. If you ever have an emergency service denied for out of network, appeal.

Any service rendered in accordance to what any layperson would constitute as an emergency should have this service upgraded to be in network coverage even if the provider is out...

Sofa-King-Done − America, I'm assuming, needs to do better with this kind of crap. An ambulance should be in-network no matter what. It's needed for the emergency.

Kamikaze_Cloud − I went to an in network doctor at an in network hospital who sent my blood work to an out of network lab so guess who got a...

Many shared horror stories of out-of-network labs or anesthesiologists.

dominiqlane − Had a similar issue when I went to the ER and got admitted for emergency surgery. Apparently, the anesthesiologist was out of network, so they weren’t covered.

Checked to see which one was covered and there are zero in network. I guess you just have to bring and administer your own pain meds for surgery.

MrOngor − Whenever I read about the US Healthcare System, it blows my mind.

Schly − Here’s a little secret I learned by actually reading my policy. There was no in network ambulance service,

so when we had a 24 thousand dollar invoice for an emergency medical transport between hospitals an hour away, the insurance refused to pay it.

So I dug into the policy and discovered a little tidbit that they didn’t want to tell me;

“If there is no ‘in network’ ambulance service in my area, they are obligated to pay for any out of network ambulance service”.

Quoted their own policy to them and they finally wiped the invoice from my account by paying it at their discounted rate.

NEVER trust your health insurance to be honest with you, EVER!

Several urged appeals and pointed to the No Surprises Act. 

343WaysToDie − Health insurance companies are for-profit and don’t actually provide any service that improves health. They are leeches that have convinced us that we need their “services”

StrixCZ − Living in Czech Republic, sometimes I need a reminder that free\* healthcare isn't a thing everywhere.

I mean our country has its share of problems, regarding bad decisions at the government level but I'm grateful at least we don't have to deal with this kind of...

It's not actually free as we have to pay mandatory health insurrance monthly fee which is either deducted from our wage or you have to pay it yourself if you're...

But the fee is reasonably low (less than 14 % of a minimum wage) and it gives you a peace of mind, knowing that if something happens you'll be taken...

Others expressed broader frustration, calling for fundamental reform to stop profit incentives from jeopardizing emergency care.

raylverine − Helicopter to travel 3 miles, hahahaha.

firestorm_v1 − Ahh, America. Where you can pay a grand for an in network ER hospital that assigns you an out of network doctor to tell you that

"We can't do anything about your arm pain". Profit should never be involved with healthcare. Burn the system to the ground.

His blunt hypothetical – “want me to take a helicopter instead?” – exposed an ugly truth: network rules can produce bizarre, unsafe incentives in emergencies.

He did not invent a legal argument. He simply highlighted a real-world absurdity, and it got his bill wiped.

The fix should not rely on rhetorical helicopters. It should be systemic: clearer rules, better network design in rural areas, and enforcement that emergency care never becomes a surprise financial risk.

Would you have pushed back the same way, or let a scary bill slide?

Sunny Nguyen

Sunny Nguyen

Sunny Nguyen writes for DailyHighlight.com, focusing on social issues and the stories that matter most to everyday people. She’s passionate about uncovering voices and experiences that often go unheard, blending empathy with insight in every article. Outside of work, Sunny can be found wandering galleries, sipping coffee while people-watching, or snapping photos of everyday life - always chasing moments that reveal the world in a new light.

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