Fact-checked by the Smart Insurance 101 editorial team
Quick Answer
Understanding in-network vs out-of-network costs means knowing that out-of-network care can cost you 2 to 3 times more than in-network care for the same procedure. As of July 2025, the key steps are: verify your provider’s network status, understand your plan’s cost-sharing tiers, and always request a cost estimate before receiving non-emergency care.
When comparing in-network vs out-of-network providers, the cost difference is rarely subtle — it can be the difference between a $200 bill and a $2,000 one. According to KFF’s analysis of surprise medical billing, patients who unknowingly receive out-of-network care face average out-of-pocket costs that are dramatically higher than their in-network equivalent, even for routine services. As of July 2025, millions of Americans continue to be caught off guard by these disparities.
The stakes have grown even higher in recent years. The rise of high-deductible health plans, narrowing provider networks, and increased consolidation among hospital systems means that more patients are accidentally stepping outside their network than ever before. If you’ve been reading about how medical coverage is shrinking as costs explode, this guide is the practical companion that explains exactly where those costs hit hardest.
This guide is for anyone enrolled in a private health insurance plan — whether through an employer, the ACA marketplace, or a self-employed arrangement — who wants to understand exactly how much more out-of-network care costs, when it might be worth it, and how to protect yourself before your next medical bill arrives.
Key Takeaways
- Out-of-network care typically costs 2 to 3 times more out-of-pocket than in-network care for the same service, according to KFF research on balance billing.
- The No Surprises Act, effective since January 2022, protects patients from unexpected out-of-network bills in emergency situations, according to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
- Out-of-network deductibles are often separate and higher than in-network deductibles — sometimes double — meaning you pay more before insurance kicks in at all.
- Approximately 1 in 5 emergency room visits involves at least one out-of-network provider, even when the hospital itself is in-network, per KFF data.
- HMO plans offer zero out-of-network coverage in most non-emergency situations, while PPO plans typically cover out-of-network care at 50–70% of the “allowed amount” after a higher deductible is met.
- Balance billing — where a provider bills you for the difference between their charge and what your insurer pays — was reported in cases averaging $622 per incident, according to a Health Affairs study.
In This Guide
- What exactly is the difference between in-network and out-of-network providers?
- How much more does out-of-network care actually cost compared to in-network?
- How do I check if a doctor or hospital is in my insurance network?
- When is it worth paying more to see an out-of-network provider?
- How does the No Surprises Act protect me from unexpected out-of-network bills?
- How can I negotiate or reduce an out-of-network medical bill I’ve already received?
- Frequently Asked Questions
Step 1: What Exactly Is the Difference Between In-Network and Out-of-Network Providers?
An in-network provider is a doctor, hospital, lab, or specialist that has signed a contract with your insurance company agreeing to accept a set, pre-negotiated rate for services. An out-of-network provider has no such agreement and can charge whatever they choose — leaving your insurer to pay less (or nothing) and you to cover the rest.
How the Contracting System Works
Insurance companies build their networks by negotiating rates with providers. These discounted rates — called allowed amounts or contracted rates — are often 30–60% lower than what a provider would charge an uninsured patient. When you see an in-network provider, your insurer pays their negotiated share and you pay your cost-sharing portion (deductible, copay, or coinsurance) based on that lower rate.
When you go out-of-network, your insurer may still pay a portion — but it is typically calculated on a much lower “reasonable and customary” rate, not the provider’s actual charge. The gap between what the provider bills and what your insurer pays is called the balance, and in many states (and for many plan types), you can be billed for that entire difference. This is known as balance billing.
What to Watch Out For
Many patients assume that if a hospital is in-network, all providers inside it are too. This is false. Anesthesiologists, radiologists, emergency room physicians, and surgical assistants are frequently employed by separate staffing groups that operate outside your network — even within an in-network facility. Always ask which specific providers will be involved in your care.
Your plan type determines how much network restrictions apply. HMO plans generally offer no out-of-network coverage except in emergencies, while PPO plans give you more flexibility — but always at a higher cost. EPO and POS plans fall somewhere in between.
Step 2: How Much More Does Out-of-Network Care Actually Cost Compared to In-Network?
Out-of-network care costs significantly more because patients face higher deductibles, higher coinsurance rates, and potential balance billing — all layered on top of each other. For the same procedure, an out-of-network patient can easily pay 3 to 10 times what an in-network patient pays.
Breaking Down the Cost Layers
The cost difference operates on multiple levels simultaneously. Each layer adds up independently, which is why the final bill can be so shocking.
- Separate deductible: Most plans have a higher, separate deductible for out-of-network care. A plan with a $1,500 in-network deductible might have a $3,000 out-of-network deductible.
- Higher coinsurance: After meeting your deductible, in-network coinsurance is typically 20–30%. Out-of-network coinsurance commonly runs 40–50% — and that percentage is applied to the insurer’s “allowed amount,” not the provider’s actual bill.
- Balance billing: If your insurer’s allowed amount is $800 but the provider charges $2,000, the remaining $1,200 can be billed directly to you in states without balance billing protections.
- Out-of-pocket maximum may not apply: In many plans, out-of-network costs do not count toward your in-network out-of-pocket maximum, meaning you have no cap on how much you can owe.
To understand how your deductible and out-of-pocket maximum interact with these costs, the guide on health insurance deductibles vs out-of-pocket maximums explains those mechanics in depth.

Real-World Cost Examples
These examples illustrate the cost gap using typical plan structures:
- Primary care visit: In-network copay of $30 vs. out-of-network cost of $150–$300 after applying coinsurance to the allowed amount — before any potential balance bill.
- MRI scan: In-network cost of $200–$500 vs. out-of-network cost of $1,000–$4,000 depending on balance billing and your deductible status.
- Knee surgery: In-network patient cost of $2,000–$5,000 (after deductible and coinsurance) vs. out-of-network patient cost of $10,000–$30,000+ when balance billing is added.
| Cost Factor | In-Network | Out-of-Network |
|---|---|---|
| Deductible (typical PPO) | $1,500 | $3,000 |
| Coinsurance rate | 20% | 40–50% |
| Coinsurance applied to | Contracted (discounted) rate | Insurer’s “allowed amount” only |
| Balance billing risk | None | Full difference between billed and allowed |
| Out-of-pocket maximum | $7,000 (ACA cap) | May be separate or unlimited |
| Primary care visit cost | $30 copay | $150–$300 |
| MRI scan cost | $200–$500 | $1,000–$4,000+ |
| Emergency room visit cost | $150–$350 copay | $500–$3,000+ (No Surprises Act may apply) |
According to a Health Affairs study on surprise medical billing, the average surprise out-of-network bill sent to patients was $622 per incident — but bills in surgical and emergency contexts frequently reached tens of thousands of dollars.
Step 3: How Do I Check If a Doctor or Hospital Is in My Insurance Network?
The most reliable way to verify network status is to use your insurer’s online provider directory, then call both your insurer and the provider’s office directly to confirm — because directories are frequently out of date. A 2023 audit by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services found that a significant percentage of provider directory listings contained inaccurate or outdated information.
How to Do This
Follow these steps every time you schedule care with a new provider:
- Log into your insurer’s member portal. All major insurers — including Aetna, BlueCross BlueShield, UnitedHealthcare, and Cigna — have searchable online directories. Search by specialty, location, and your specific plan name (not just the insurer’s name, since one insurer may run multiple networks).
- Call your insurer directly. Use the member services number on the back of your insurance card. Ask specifically: “Is [provider name] in-network for my plan: [exact plan name]?”
- Call the provider’s billing office. Ask them to confirm they are in-network with your specific plan — not just your insurer generally. A provider may be in-network for a BlueCross PPO but out-of-network for a BlueCross HMO.
- Get written confirmation. Request an email or ask your insurer to note the confirmation in your account. If a billing dispute arises, this documentation protects you.
What to Watch Out For
Provider directories can lag by months when doctors change affiliations or leave a network. Even if a directory says “in-network,” always call to confirm. If you receive care based on an inaccurate directory listing, many states require your insurer to hold you harmless — but you must document that you relied on the directory in good faith.
When scheduling a procedure at an in-network hospital, specifically ask your surgeon: “Will everyone involved in my procedure — including the anesthesiologist and any assistants — be in-network for my plan?” Request their names and verify each one separately before your procedure date.
Step 4: When Is It Worth Paying More to See an Out-of-Network Provider?
Seeing an out-of-network provider is occasionally worth the added cost — specifically when you have a rare or complex condition, when no qualified in-network specialist exists within a reasonable distance, or when continuity of care with a long-standing physician is medically critical. Outside these circumstances, the financial risk generally outweighs the benefit.
Situations Where Out-of-Network May Be Justified
- Rare or complex diagnoses: If you have a condition like a rare cancer or a complex neurological disorder, the best specialist in your region may not be in your network. The clinical outcome difference can justify the added cost.
- Mental health continuity: Switching therapists or psychiatrists mid-treatment can disrupt care significantly. If your current mental health provider leaves your network, continuing with them temporarily may be medically appropriate.
- Geographic gaps: In rural areas, the nearest in-network specialist may be 100+ miles away. Some plans have network adequacy rules that require them to cover out-of-network care when no reasonable in-network alternative exists.
- Ongoing treatment relationships: If you are mid-treatment (chemotherapy, pregnancy, post-surgical recovery) when your provider leaves your network, most ACA-compliant plans must allow a transition of care period at in-network rates.
“Patients should think of network verification as a pre-authorization process they do for themselves. The time to discover your provider is out-of-network is before the appointment — not when the bill arrives six weeks later.”
What to Watch Out For
If you decide to proceed with out-of-network care, request a Good Faith Estimate in advance. Under the No Surprises Act, providers must give uninsured patients — and, in many cases, insured patients — a written cost estimate before scheduled services. This does not cap your bill but gives you a baseline to negotiate from.
If you are self-employed and selecting a plan, understanding your network options before enrollment is critical. The guide to health insurance for self-employed workers in 2026 covers how to evaluate network breadth when choosing a plan.

If your plan is an HMO or EPO, going out-of-network for non-emergency care typically means your insurer pays nothing. You are responsible for the entire bill. Always confirm your plan type before scheduling care outside the network.
Step 5: How Does the No Surprises Act Protect Me From Unexpected Out-of-Network Bills?
The No Surprises Act (effective January 1, 2022) limits your exposure to unexpected out-of-network costs in emergency situations and for certain scheduled services at in-network facilities. Under this law, your cost-sharing for protected services is calculated as if the care were in-network, regardless of who actually provided it.
What the No Surprises Act Covers
The law provides three core protections, administered by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services:
- Emergency services: You cannot be billed more than your in-network cost-sharing for emergency care at any facility — even if the hospital or providers are out-of-network. This applies to both emergency room visits and post-stabilization care.
- Non-emergency services at in-network facilities: If you receive care from an out-of-network provider at an in-network hospital or ambulatory surgical center, your cost-sharing is capped at the in-network rate — unless you give written consent to waive this protection at least 72 hours in advance.
- Air ambulance services: Out-of-network air ambulance providers from licensed carriers cannot balance bill you beyond your in-network cost-sharing.
What the No Surprises Act Does NOT Cover
The law has important gaps. It does not apply to ground ambulance services, meaning out-of-network ground ambulance bills can still be significant. It also does not cover situations where you voluntarily choose an out-of-network provider and sign a consent form acknowledging the cost. Additionally, it does not apply to grandfathered health plans or most short-term health plans.
If you receive a surprise bill that you believe violates the No Surprises Act, you can file a complaint with the CMS No Surprises Help Desk at 1-800-985-3059. Providers found in violation can face penalties of up to $10,000 per violation.
Step 6: How Can I Negotiate or Reduce an Out-of-Network Medical Bill I’ve Already Received?
If you have already received an out-of-network bill, you have several legitimate options to reduce it — including requesting an itemized bill, disputing charges, negotiating directly with the provider, and applying for financial assistance. Most providers would rather settle for less than send your account to collections.
How to Do This
Work through these steps in order:
- Request an itemized bill immediately. Ask for a line-by-line statement with CPT codes (billing codes) for every service. Errors in medical billing are common — a 2020 study found billing errors in roughly 80% of medical bills, according to Medical Billing Advocates of America.
- Cross-reference with your Explanation of Benefits (EOB). Your insurer sends an EOB after every claim. Compare the provider’s bill to the EOB to identify what your insurer paid, what was denied, and what your plan says you owe.
- File an appeal with your insurer. If the denial seems incorrect or the out-of-network charge seems excessive, file a formal appeal. Under the ACA, you have the right to an internal appeal and, if denied, an external review by an independent organization.
- Negotiate directly with the provider’s billing department. Ask if they will accept the in-network rate, offer a lump-sum settlement at a discount, or set up an interest-free payment plan. Many hospitals have charity care programs for patients below certain income thresholds — ask specifically about financial assistance.
- Hire a medical billing advocate. For large bills, a professional advocate typically charges 20–35% of the savings they achieve — often worth it for five-figure bills.
What to Watch Out For
Never pay a disputed bill in full before resolving your appeal. Once you pay, providers have little incentive to adjust the charge. Also, do not ignore bills — even disputed ones. Accounts can go to collections as quickly as 60–90 days after the bill date, which damages your credit. Instead, send a written letter stating that the bill is under dispute while you pursue resolution.

When negotiating, reference the Medicare rate for the same procedure as your starting point. Providers routinely accept 110–150% of Medicare rates as a fair settlement — far less than typical out-of-network charges. You can look up Medicare rates using the CMS Physician Fee Schedule lookup tool.
Understanding the full cost picture of your health insurance — including how premiums, deductibles, and network restrictions all interact — is essential. Our overview of what the real cost of insurance looks like breaks down every component of what you’re actually paying for.
“Patients often don’t realize they have the right to ask for a discount, a payment plan, or charity care. Hospitals and large practices almost always have these options — but they rarely volunteer them. You have to ask, in writing, and be persistent.”
Frequently Asked Questions
What happens if I go to an out-of-network doctor by accident?
If you accidentally see an out-of-network provider, you may owe significantly more than anticipated — but you have options. First, contact your insurer immediately and explain the situation; many plans have provisions for accidental out-of-network care. If the provider was at an in-network facility or the service was emergency-related, the No Surprises Act may limit your liability to in-network cost-sharing rates. Document every conversation and request an appeal if your insurer applies out-of-network cost-sharing to what you believe should be a protected situation.
Does my out-of-network deductible count toward my in-network deductible?
In most plans, out-of-network spending does not count toward your in-network deductible — they are tracked separately. Some plans use a single combined deductible that applies to both, but this is less common. Check your plan’s Summary of Benefits and Coverage document, which all ACA-compliant plans are required to provide, to confirm how your specific plan tracks these costs. If you are unsure which type of plan you have, reviewing the basics of HMO vs PPO plan structures can clarify your cost-sharing architecture.
Can I get a referral to go out-of-network and have it covered like in-network care?
A referral alone does not change your cost-sharing — it only authorizes you to see a specialist. To get out-of-network care covered at in-network rates, you typically need a formal prior authorization combined with a documented request for a network gap exception, which most insurers grant when no qualified in-network provider is available within a reasonable distance. Contact your insurer’s member services and request the network adequacy exception process in writing before receiving the care.
Do out-of-network costs count toward my out-of-pocket maximum?
For most employer-sponsored and ACA marketplace plans, out-of-network costs have a separate, higher out-of-pocket maximum — or in some cases, out-of-network spending does not count toward your in-network maximum at all. The ACA’s annual out-of-pocket maximum limits (set at $9,450 for individuals and $18,900 for families in 2025) apply only to in-network essential health benefits. Balance billing amounts, in particular, are not counted toward any cap. Always review your plan’s Schedule of Benefits to understand which costs are protected.
Is out-of-network coverage different for emergencies vs. planned care?
Yes — emergency care receives much stronger protections than planned out-of-network care. Under the No Surprises Act and longstanding ACA rules, emergency care must be covered at in-network cost-sharing rates regardless of the facility’s network status. Planned out-of-network care, by contrast, is subject to your plan’s standard out-of-network rules — higher deductibles, higher coinsurance, and potential balance billing — unless you have obtained a prior authorization or network exception. The distinction matters enormously for your final bill.
Why would a doctor be in-network for one plan but not another from the same insurance company?
Insurance companies often run multiple, separate provider networks under the same brand umbrella. A physician may contract with BlueCross BlueShield’s PPO network but not their HMO or EPO network. This is because each network is negotiated separately, and providers choose which products they participate in. When verifying network status, always use your specific plan name — not just your insurer’s name — and call both the insurer and the provider to confirm participation in your exact product.
What is balance billing and is it legal?
Balance billing occurs when an out-of-network provider bills you for the difference between their charge and what your insurer paid. It is legal in many circumstances — for example, when you voluntarily choose an out-of-network provider for planned care. However, it is prohibited in emergencies and for certain services at in-network facilities under the No Surprises Act. Many states have additional balance billing protections that go beyond federal law. You can check your state’s specific rules through your state insurance commissioner’s website.
Should I get a PPO just to have out-of-network coverage as a backup?
Choosing a PPO primarily for out-of-network coverage is a legitimate strategy — but it comes at a cost. PPO plans typically carry premiums 20–30% higher than comparable HMO plans, and out-of-network cost-sharing is still substantial even with PPO coverage. The better approach is to verify that your preferred providers are in-network with any plan you are considering before enrolling. If you travel frequently or live in an area with limited specialists, PPO coverage may genuinely be worth the added premium. For a full comparison, see our guide on HMO vs PPO plans and how to choose.
How do in-network vs out-of-network rules work differently for mental health care?
Mental health care is subject to the same in-network vs out-of-network cost rules as medical care, but network adequacy for mental health is often worse. A 2022 report by the American Psychiatric Association found that patients are more than twice as likely to see an out-of-network provider for mental health than for medical care, largely because fewer therapists and psychiatrists participate in insurance networks. Under the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act, insurers must apply the same cost-sharing rules to mental health care as to medical care — meaning if your plan covers out-of-network medical care, it must cover out-of-network mental health care on equal terms.
Sources
- KFF — Surprise Billing and Balance Billing: Issue Brief
- Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services — No Surprises Act Overview
- Health Affairs — Surprise Medical Billing and Balance Billing Study
- CMS — Medicare Physician Fee Schedule Lookup Tool
- CMS — HHS Report on Network Adequacy and Provider Directory Accuracy
- American Psychiatric Association — Mental Health Parity Report
- HealthCare.gov — Out-of-Pocket Maximum Glossary
- HealthCare.gov — Health Insurance Network Glossary
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau — What to Do If You Can’t Pay a Medical Bill
- U.S. Department of Labor — Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act



