Dialysis Package Refund: Claiming Back Unused Sessions

Reviewed on: 2026-06-12.

If you prepaid for a block of dialysis sessions and many went unused, do these four things first, in order:

  1. Pull the package paper. Find the agreement, brochure, or written quote that shows the price, the number of sessions, and any refund or cancellation clause.
  2. Count the sessions. Work out exactly how many sessions were used and how many remain unused, from your dialysis log or a session-wise statement from the centre.
  3. Get the medical reason in writing. The transplant discharge summary, the death certificate, or the referral to another centre explains why the rest were cancelled.
  4. Send a written pro-rata refund demand. Address it to the billing department and the grievance officer, claiming unused sessions multiplied by the per-session value.

Money paid in advance for dialysis sessions never delivered is, in most cases, refundable on a pro-rata basis. Start with the package terms and your bills. If the centre refuses, a delayed or denied refund for an undelivered service is a deficiency in service, and the consumer commission is your route. RTI helps only when the unit is a government hospital or a public-scheme dialysis centre.

Who this guide is for

This guide is for the patient, a family member, or the person who paid, when a long-term dialysis arrangement did not go as billed:

  • You prepaid a package and many sessions went unused after a kidney transplant or recovery.
  • The patient passed away before the package was completed and the family wants the unused amount back.
  • You shifted to another centre or city and cannot use the remaining sessions.
  • The long-term bill shows sessions never performed, consumables charged twice, or charges above the quoted rate.

It does not cover a claim that the dialysis caused harm or infection, which is a medical-negligence matter, nor health-insurance reimbursement, which follows the insurer and IRDAI route. If you need an entry in your records corrected first, see correcting wrong medical record entries.

A worked example

A family in Lucknow prepaid Rs 96,000 for a 24-session maintenance dialysis package at a private centre, working out to Rs 4,000 per session. After 9 sessions, the patient received a kidney transplant and no longer needed maintenance dialysis. That left 15 sessions unused.

The pro-rata claim was simple: 15 unused sessions multiplied by Rs 4,000 equals Rs 60,000. The family attached the package agreement, the payment receipt, the session-wise log showing 9 sessions done, and the transplant discharge summary as the medical reason. They sent a written refund demand to the billing department, asking for Rs 60,000 within 15 days. When the centre offered only Rs 40,000, the dated demand and the medical reason let them file a consumer complaint for the balance plus compensation. A clear arithmetic on one page is far harder to dismiss than a round figure.

Step-by-step

  1. Read the package terms. Look for the total price, the number of sessions, and any clause on cancellation, refund, or validity. If it is silent on refunds, that usually favours you, because a service paid for but not provided generally must be refunded. A non-refundable clause can still be challenged as unfair where the cancellation was for an unavoidable medical reason.
  2. Fix the per-session value. Divide the package price by the total sessions, unless a per-session rate is stated. Multiply the unused sessions by that rate. Keep the arithmetic on one page.
  3. Attach the medical reason. The transplant summary, death certificate, or referral answers the centre's likely claim that you simply chose to stop.
  4. Send the written demand. Submit a signed, dated refund demand to the billing department and the grievance or nodal officer. Send by email or get a dated acknowledgement.
  5. Challenge overbilling separately. If the account looks inflated, ask in writing for a fully itemised, session-wise bill. Flag sessions billed but not done, consumables charged twice, or charges above the package rate. Our guide on getting an itemised hospital bill helps when the centre stalls.
  6. Escalate to the consumer route if refused. Treat refusal or silence as a deficiency in service.

Sample refund demand

To: The Billing Department / Grievance Officer, [Centre name], [Address]
Subject: Refund of unused dialysis sessions, Patient [name], UHID [____]

1. Package paid on [date]: Rs [____] for [__] sessions.
   Per-session value: Rs [____].
2. Sessions used: [__]. Sessions unused: [__].
3. Reason the rest were cancelled: [transplant on (date) / patient passed
   away on (date) / treatment shifted to another centre on (date)].
   Proof enclosed: [discharge summary / death certificate / referral].
4. Refund claimed: [unused] x Rs [____] = Rs [____].
   [If overbilled: I also dispute these lines: (list). Please issue a
   corrected itemised bill and refund the excess.]

I request a refund of Rs [____] within 15 days and a written decision.
Failing this, I will approach the National Consumer Helpline and the
Consumer Commission for deficiency in service.

[Name, relationship to patient, mobile, email, date]

Escalation ladder

Level Where When to use
1 Hospital billing department Submit the written refund demand; get a dated acknowledgement
2 Grievance / nodal officer of the centre If billing does not respond in reasonable time
3 National Consumer Helpline (1915) If the centre refuses or ignores you
4 Consumer commission via e-Daakhil If helpline mediation fails; deficiency in service
5 RTI, only for a government / public-scheme unit To get scheme rules and approved charges

When RTI can help

The RTI Act reaches public authorities only. A private dialysis chain or corporate hospital is not a public authority, so RTI does not reach its billing. But two dialysis settings are public:

  • A government hospital dialysis unit. A district hospital, medical college, or state-run hospital running its own dialysis is a public authority. You can file an RTI for the approved charges, the refund or cancellation policy, your session records, and the file noting on your refund.
  • A public-scheme dialysis centre. Centres under the Pradhan Mantri National Dialysis Programme operate on government-set rules and charges, often through a public-private arrangement with the district health authority. RTI to the district health office or state health department can get the scheme guidelines, the rate list, the empanelment terms, and what a patient should pay or get free.

If a public-scheme centre charged above the approved rate, the RTI reply showing the official rate is strong evidence in your refund demand. See how to file RTI online, and if there is no reply, the first appeal route.

When RTI will not help

  • Private centres are not covered. RTI cannot force a private clinic to hand over your bills or refund your money. Use the written demand, then the consumer route. You are still entitled to your own treatment and billing records; ask for them directly in writing.
  • RTI does not order a refund. Even where a public authority is involved, RTI gives information, not money. Use the records you obtain as evidence; the refund comes from the centre's decision or a consumer order.

Common mistakes

  • Not reading the package terms before complaining.
  • Claiming a vague round figure instead of a pro-rata number.
  • Not attaching the medical reason, so the centre claims you simply chose to stop.
  • Only making phone calls, which leave no record and start no clock.
  • Filing RTI against a private hospital, which has no legal basis.
  • Handing over originals; always submit copies.

FAQs

Can a private dialysis centre keep money for sessions I never used?

Usually not, unless the package terms you signed clearly say the amount is non-refundable for that reason, and even then retaining money for an undelivered service can be a deficiency in service. Ask in writing for a pro-rata refund with proof of sessions used and the medical reason. If refused, the consumer commission is your route.

How do I calculate the pro-rata refund?

Divide the package price by the total number of sessions to get a per-session value, unless a rate is already stated. Multiply that by the number of unused sessions. Keep the arithmetic on one page so the centre and, later, the consumer commission can follow it.

The patient died or got a transplant before finishing. Can the family still claim?

Yes. A prepaid package is money paid in advance for a service. The unused sessions were never delivered. A legal heir or the person who paid can demand a pro-rata refund, attaching the death certificate or transplant discharge summary as the medical reason, along with proof of payment and the session count.

Can I file an RTI to get my dialysis bills from a private hospital?

No. A private dialysis chain or hospital is not a public authority, so RTI does not apply. Ask the hospital directly in writing for your records, then use the consumer route. RTI works only for a government hospital unit or a public-scheme centre.

How do I dispute overbilling on a long-term dialysis account?

Ask in writing for a fully itemised, session-wise bill and compare each line against the package rate and the sessions actually done. List every disputed line, such as sessions billed but not performed or consumables charged twice, and demand a corrected bill and a refund of the excess.

Is there a time limit to file a consumer complaint for a dialysis refund?

Yes. The Consumer Protection Act sets a limitation period running from when the centre refused the refund or failed to respond in reasonable time. Keep a dated copy of your demand and the reply, and do not let months drift, especially for a large amount or a deceased patient's claim.

Download the dialysis-package-refund checklist (PDF).

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