If the ICU part of a hospital bill looks padded or unclear, here is a calm, weekend-ready plan to get the itemised breakdown, challenge the wrong charges, and recover any excess.
Reviewed on: 2026-05-29.
When the ICU portion of a hospital bill looks too high, a calm, line-by-line check of the itemised bill is where every refund starts.
Quick answer
If your family disputes the ICU charges on a hospital bill, the first move is the same everywhere: get the full itemised bill and the discharge summary in writing, then mark each line you question — ICU bed and monitoring days, duplicate consumables, doctor visit charges, and anything not actually used. Put the dispute in writing to the hospital's billing or grievance officer and ask for a corrected bill. If they will not fix it, escalate through the National Consumer Helpline and, if needed, a consumer commission on e-Daakhil, because medical care is a paid 'service' under consumer law.
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 (like PM-JAY, CGHS or ECHS) when a private hospital overcharged you beyond the approved package. RTI does not reach a private hospital you paid out of pocket, and it does not force a refund — that comes from the hospital, the scheme, your insurer, or a consumer forum.
This guide is for you if the intensive-care portion of a hospital bill seems inflated, padded, or impossible to verify. Common situations:
Ask the hospital for the complete itemised bill (every line, not a summary) and the discharge summary, in writing. If a relative is still admitted, request a detailed interim or running bill. Photograph or scan every page you already have so nothing goes missing.
Sit with the itemised bill and the discharge summary together and go line by line. Tick what matches the treatment and circle every charge your family disputes.
Organise everything into one folder — itemised bill, 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 |
|---|---|
| Complete itemised hospital bill | The line-by-line bill (bed, ICU, drugs, consumables, tests, fees) is the core document — you cannot dispute charges you cannot see. |
| Discharge summary | Shows the actual diagnosis, ICU dates and treatment; you match the bill against it to spot extra days or unused items. |
| All payment receipts and the admission deposit slip | Prove exactly what your family has already paid, including any cash deposit taken at admission, so any refund 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, this letter lists the deductions; you need it to challenge the insurer, not the hospital. |
| Doctor's notes, prescriptions and test reports | Independent proof of what was actually advised and done, useful when a charge looks padded or invented. |
| Your written dispute and the hospital's acknowledgement | The dated complaint and its reference number start your escalation clock and travel through every later step. |
| A short dated timeline you write yourself | A one-page sequence of admission, treatment, billing and your complaint keeps the case clear at every 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 listing disputed line items; 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 |
| 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 package and claim records | As per the scheme's grievance timeline |
| Insurer / Insurance Ombudsman | Your insurer's grievance cell, then IRDAI and the Insurance Ombudsman | IRDAI Bima Bharosa at bimabharosa.irdai.gov.in, then the Ombudsman office | Several weeks |
| 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: Disputed ICU charges on bill no. [bill number] dated [date] — request for corrected bill and refund of excess (Patient: [name], UHID [number])
To: The Billing / Grievance Redressal Officer [Hospital name], [City] Subject: Dispute over ICU and related charges — request for a corrected itemised bill and refund of excess Dear Sir / Madam, My [relation, e.g. father] [patient name], UHID/IP number [number], was admitted on [admission date] and discharged on [discharge date], including [number] day(s) in the ICU. I am writing on the family's behalf to dispute certain charges in bill no. [bill number] dated [date]. After checking the itemised bill against the discharge summary, I dispute the following: 1) [line item / description], amount [amount] — reason: [e.g. billed for ICU days beyond actual ICU stay]. 2) [line item / description], amount [amount] — reason: [e.g. consumable charged twice]. 3) [line item / description], amount [amount] — reason: [e.g. item billed but 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]. The family was nonetheless charged [amount] in excess of the approved package, for which I request an explanation and refund. I request you to (a) provide a complete, corrected itemised bill, (b) refund the excess of [total disputed amount, if known], and (c) acknowledge this complaint in writing with a reference number. I am attaching the itemised bill, 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 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 serious 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 or a consumer commission, because they show the official rate or the 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 a correction.
For a private out-of-pocket bill, your real remedies are: a written dispute to the hospital's billing and grievance officer demanding a corrected itemised bill, 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. If the real problem is an insurer or TPA deducting heavily on the ICU claim, that is an insurance dispute — use the insurer's grievance cell, then IRDAI's Bima Bharosa portal, then the Insurance Ombudsman (cioins.co.in). Note that CPGRAMS (pgportal.gov.in) is for government departments and public hospitals or scheme offices — it is not the channel for a purely private hospital bill.
Get the complete itemised bill and the discharge summary in writing. A lump-sum total is not enough. Then sit with both, tick what matches the treatment, and circle every line your family disputes — extra ICU days, duplicate consumables, unused items. That marked-up bill is the basis for your written complaint and any refund.
You are entitled to a clear, broken-down bill rather than a single total, and to your discharge summary. If the hospital gives only a lump sum, ask in writing for the full itemised version. A refusal to break the bill down is itself a strong point to raise with the grievance officer and, later, a consumer commission.
No. A private hospital is not a public authority under the RTI Act, so you cannot RTI it for its billing files. Use the hospital's grievance channel, the National Consumer Helpline, and a consumer complaint on e-Daakhil. RTI fits only a government or public hospital, or a government scheme office.
RTI helps when a public body holds the record: a government or public hospital (for its official rate list 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 you extra. It gives you evidence, not a refund.
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.
Usually not. If the gap is because your insurer or TPA deducted heavily — for example on room-rent-linked proportionate cuts or items it calls non-payable — that is an insurance dispute. Take it up with the insurer's grievance cell, then IRDAI's Bima Bharosa portal, and finally the Insurance Ombudsman, separately from any hospital billing error.
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. 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.
Keep the complete itemised bill, the discharge summary, every payment receipt and the admission deposit slip, any scheme or insurance pre-authorisation and settlement letter, doctor's notes and test reports, and your written complaint with its reference number. Add a short dated timeline. These are needed at every escalation level and before a consumer commission.