A woman reading a letter at a kitchen table for an article about Arizona medical debt relief

Arizona erases 29 million in medical debt for 352,000 residents

More than 352,000 Arizona residents woke up this year to find a medical debt they couldn’t pay had simply disappeared. Governor Katie Hobbs announced the cancellation of $429 million in unpaid medical bills — one of the largest state-led debt relief efforts in U.S. history — through a partnership with nonprofit Undue Medical Debt that required nothing from recipients except opening a letter.

At a glance

  • Medical debt relief: Arizona canceled $429 million in unpaid medical bills for more than 352,000 residents, with no application required from those who benefited.
  • Return on investment: A $10 million state investment — drawn from COVID-19 relief funds and philanthropic support — wiped out roughly 43 dollars of debt for every dollar spent.
  • How recipients find out: Eligible Arizonans receive a confidential letter from Undue Medical Debt confirming the cancellation; the process requires no action on their part.

Why medical debt is a health crisis, not just a financial one

Tens of millions of Americans carry unpaid medical bills. The national burden is estimated to exceed $81 billion, according to KFF, and its consequences extend well beyond a damaged credit score.

Medical debt triggers wage garnishments and derails people’s ability to rent apartments or secure small loans. More critically, the fear of another bill becomes a reason to avoid care entirely. People skip follow-up appointments. They delay treatment for symptoms they can’t afford to investigate. The debt itself makes the underlying health problem worse.

Arizona carries an estimated $2.4 billion in outstanding medical debt, so this cancellation — substantial as it is — addresses roughly 18% of the total. That gap matters, and experts consistently note that debt relief works best when paired with upstream reforms like expanded coverage and greater cost transparency.

How Undue Medical Debt makes the numbers work

The mechanics of this model are worth understanding, because they explain how a $10 million investment can cancel more than 40 times its value.

Undue Medical Debt purchases distressed medical debt portfolios from hospitals and collection agencies at a fraction of their face value — often just pennies on the dollar. Instead of attempting to collect on that debt, the nonprofit cancels it outright. The result is that modest public funding yields relief at a scale no direct payment program could match.

Arizona’s program is not the first of its kind. California, Maryland, and Washington, D.C. have run similar initiatives with measurable results. What distinguishes Arizona’s effort is its scale and the explicit redirection of pandemic-era relief funds toward financial wounds that haven’t fully healed. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has documented how medical debt damages credit and financial stability in cascading ways — making this kind of targeted erasure a practical intervention, not just a symbolic one.

Who this reaches — and what debt forgiveness actually changes

Medical debt does not fall evenly. KFF research shows it disproportionately burdens lower-income households, people of color, and residents of states with limited Medicaid expansion — people who often face the highest out-of-pocket costs and the fewest safety nets. Arizona’s program reached into that population directly.

When a debt disappears, the effects are concrete. Credit scores can rise, which changes what housing, business financing, and educational opportunities look like. Chronic financial stress — the documented, physical kind that comes from an unpayable bill in collections — eases. “No one should face financial ruin simply for seeking healthcare,” Governor Hobbs said, linking the effort to Arizona’s broader Promise initiative for expanded access to essential services.

Public-private partnerships combining nonprofit expertise, philanthropic capital, and state funding are drawing serious attention from policymakers across the country. The Commonwealth Fund has noted that systemic solutions ultimately require upstream policy changes — but models like Arizona’s demonstrate what is achievable right now, within existing constraints, for hundreds of thousands of real people.

For the 352,000 Arizonans who received that letter, the program is not a policy model. It is a financial reset — and, for many, permission to seek the care they had been putting off.

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For more on this story, see: Arizona Governor’s Office announcement

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