If your final hospital bill is far higher than the package estimate you were quoted, here is a calm, weekend-ready plan to compare the two, challenge undisclosed extras, and recover the excess.
Reviewed on: 2026-05-29.
When the final hospital bill towers over the package estimate you were quoted, comparing the two documents side by side is where every refund starts.
Quick answer
If your hospital bill is much higher than the package estimate you were given, the first move is to put both documents side by side: the original written estimate or quotation from admission, and the final itemised bill. Then mark every charge that pushed the total above the estimate, and split them into two groups — genuine package exclusions (an implant, extra ICU days, complications, extra tests) and items that were never disclosed or consented to before they were billed. Write to the hospital's billing or grievance officer, ask for a line-by-line explanation of each overrun, and ask them to reverse anything that was not disclosed in advance.
Whether RTI helps depends entirely on who holds the records and who you are disputing with. RTI works against a government or public hospital, or against a government health scheme (PM-JAY, CGHS, ECHS or a state scheme) when an empanelled private hospital charged beyond the approved package. RTI does not reach a private hospital you paid out of pocket, and it never forces a refund — that comes from the hospital, the scheme, your insurer, or a consumer commission.
This guide is for you if you were quoted a package or estimate before treatment and the final bill came in far higher. Common situations:
Gather your two key papers: the original package estimate or quotation you were given at admission, and the complete itemised bill (every line, not a summary). Ask the hospital in writing for any document you do not have, including the discharge summary. Photograph or scan every page so nothing goes missing.
Sit with the estimate and the itemised bill together and compare them line by line. Tick what matches the original package and circle everything that pushed the total higher.
Organise everything into one folder — the estimate, the itemised bill, the discharge summary, payment receipts, scheme or insurance papers, and a short dated timeline. Draft your written dispute to the hospital's billing or grievance officer using the template below.
| Document or evidence | Why it matters / where to get it |
|---|---|
| Original package estimate or quotation | The estimate sheet, quote, or pre-admission costing is the document the whole dispute turns on — it is the benchmark the final bill is measured against. |
| Complete itemised hospital bill | The line-by-line bill (bed, drugs, consumables, tests, implants, fees) lets you see exactly which charges took the total above the estimate. |
| Discharge summary | Shows the actual diagnosis, days of stay, and treatment given, so you can tell a genuine clinical escalation from an undisclosed add-on. |
| Consent and any written 'extras may apply' notes | If the hospital says you agreed to variable costs, the signed consent and any cost notes show what was actually disclosed to you, and when. |
| All payment receipts and the admission deposit slip | Prove exactly what you have already paid, including any cash deposit taken at admission, so any refund of the excess is calculated correctly. |
| Pre-authorisation / approval letter (scheme or insurance) | For PM-JAY, CGHS, ECHS, a state scheme, or health insurance, this shows the approved package or sum — the benchmark for what you should have paid. |
| Insurer / TPA settlement or deduction letter | If a claim was short-paid and that is why you owe the gap, this letter lists the deductions and is needed to challenge the insurer, not the hospital. |
| A short dated timeline you write yourself | A one-page sequence of the estimate, admission, treatment, billing and your complaint keeps the case clear at every escalation level. |
| Step | Who to approach | How to reach them | Typical timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hospital billing / grievance officer | Hospital's billing desk or patient grievance cell | Written complaint or email comparing estimate with the final bill; ask for a reference | First reply usually within a few days |
| Medical superintendent / management | Senior hospital authority or nodal officer | Letter or email escalating the unresolved billing dispute | A week or two |
| State health authority / clinical establishments authority | The state health department or clinical-establishments registering authority, where one exists | Written grievance about overcharging or no proper estimate; RTI for the notified rate list | As per the authority's grievance timeline |
| Scheme authority (PM-JAY / CGHS / ECHS / state) | The State Health Agency or scheme office for empanelled-hospital overcharging | Scheme grievance channel; RTI to the scheme authority for the approved package and claim records | As per the scheme's grievance timeline |
| National Consumer Helpline | Department of Consumer Affairs helpline | Register at consumerhelpline.gov.in or the UMANG app / 1915 | A few days to acknowledge; mediation varies |
| Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission | District or State Consumer Commission | File online on e-Daakhil at edaakhil.nic.in | Varies by location and case load |
Adapt the bracketed parts. Keep a copy of everything you send.
Subject: Final bill no. [bill number] dated [date] far exceeds the package estimate of [estimated amount] — request for explanation and refund of undisclosed charges (Patient: [name], UHID [number])
To: The Billing / Grievance Redressal Officer [Hospital name], [City] Subject: Final bill exceeds the package estimate given at admission — request for a written explanation and refund of undisclosed charges Dear Sir / Madam, My [relation, e.g. wife] [patient name], UHID/IP number [number], was admitted on [admission date] and discharged on [discharge date] for [treatment / procedure]. At admission we were given a package estimate of approximately [estimated amount] [for / covering: state what the estimate covered]. The final bill no. [bill number] dated [date] is [final amount], which exceeds that estimate by [difference]. After comparing the itemised bill against the estimate and the discharge summary, I dispute the following overruns: 1) [line item / description], amount [amount] — this was not disclosed to us as an extra cost before it was incurred. 2) [line item / description], amount [amount] — reason: [e.g. charged beyond the days/scope in the package without prior intimation]. 3) [line item / description], amount [amount] — reason: [e.g. item billed but not shown to us / not used]. [If a scheme/insurance applied:] This admission was covered under [PM-JAY / CGHS / ECHS / state scheme / insurer name], pre-authorised for [approved package / amount, if known]. We were nonetheless charged [amount] in excess of the approved package, for which I request an explanation and refund. I request you to (a) provide a written, line-by-line explanation of every charge that exceeded the estimate, stating where and when each was disclosed to us, (b) reverse or refund any charge that was not disclosed and consented to before it was incurred, and (c) acknowledge this complaint in writing with a reference number. I am attaching the package estimate, the itemised bill, the discharge summary, payment receipts, the admission deposit slip, and the scheme/insurance papers. If this is not resolved within a reasonable time, I will be constrained to escalate to the appropriate state health authority, the scheme authority, the National Consumer Helpline, and the Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission via e-Daakhil. Kindly treat this as urgent, as it concerns a recent admission. Thank you. Name: [your name] Relation to patient: [relation] Patient name & UHID: [name, number] Mobile: [number] Email: [email] Date: [date]
RTI is genuinely useful here when a public authority holds the record — but as an evidence and pressure tool, not as a refund. The strongest cases are:
These answers carry real weight at a scheme grievance forum, a state health authority, or a consumer commission, because they show the official rate or approved package next to what you were actually billed.
RTI will not force a refund and will not, by itself, correct your bill. It is also the wrong tool against a private hospital you paid out of pocket, because a private hospital is not a public authority under the RTI Act. You cannot file an RTI to make a private hospital hand over its internal billing files or to compel it to honour the estimate.
For a private out-of-pocket bill, your real remedies are: a written dispute to the hospital's billing and grievance officer demanding an explanation of every overrun; the state health or clinical-establishments authority where one exists; the National Consumer Helpline at consumerhelpline.gov.in; and a complaint before the Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission via e-Daakhil at edaakhil.nic.in, since medical care is a paid service and a bill far above a promised estimate can be an unfair or deficient service. If the real problem is that your insurer or TPA short-paid the claim and that is why you owe the gap, that is an insurance dispute — use the insurer's grievance cell, then IRDAI's Bima Bharosa portal, then the Insurance Ombudsman. Note that CPGRAMS (pgportal.gov.in) is for government departments, public hospitals, and scheme offices — not for a purely private hospital bill.
Put the original package estimate next to the complete itemised bill and the discharge summary. Add up the gap so you know the exact amount in dispute. Then mark each charge that took the total above the estimate, and note which extras were never disclosed to you before they were billed. That comparison is the basis for your written complaint.
An estimate is not always a fixed price, and genuine extras — an implant, extra ICU days, complications, or extra tests — can raise the bill. What matters is whether those extras were disclosed and consented to before being incurred. A large, unexplained gap, or charges you were never told about, is a fair point to raise with the grievance officer and a consumer commission.
Yes. Write down what you were quoted, by whom, and when, as soon as you can. Then ask the hospital in writing to explain every charge that exceeded what you were told. The absence of a clear written estimate is itself a point in your favour, especially where state rules expect hospitals to give a cost estimate — verify what applies in your state.
RTI helps when a public body holds the record: a government or public hospital (for its official rate list or package rates and your charge-sheet), or a government scheme such as PM-JAY, CGHS or ECHS (for the approved package and your claim file) when an empanelled private hospital charged extra. It gives you evidence to set against your bill, not a refund.
No. A private hospital is not a public authority under the RTI Act, so you cannot RTI it for its billing files or to force it to honour the estimate. Use the hospital's grievance channel, your state health authority where one exists, the National Consumer Helpline, and a consumer complaint on e-Daakhil. RTI fits only a government or public hospital, or a government scheme office.
Under a cashless government scheme, an empanelled hospital generally should not charge you beyond the approved package for covered treatment. Raise it with the scheme's grievance channel and, in parallel, file an RTI with the scheme authority for your pre-authorisation and the approved package. Keep every receipt for the cash you paid so it can be refunded.
Usually not. If you owe the gap because your insurer or TPA deducted heavily — for example proportionate room-rent cuts or items it calls non-payable — that is an insurance dispute, separate from the estimate overrun. Take it up with the insurer's grievance cell, then IRDAI's Bima Bharosa portal, and finally the Insurance Ombudsman.
Escalate inside the hospital to the medical superintendent or nodal grievance officer in writing. In parallel, register with the National Consumer Helpline at consumerhelpline.gov.in, and with your state health or clinical-establishments authority where one exists. If the unfair charge is still not corrected, file before the District or State Consumer Commission on e-Daakhil at edaakhil.nic.in with your full evidence.