A person opening a letter at a kitchen table for an article about medical debt relief in Arizona

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

Arizona has wiped out $429 million in medical debt for more than 352,000 residents in one of the largest state-led debt relief efforts in U.S. history. Governor Katie Hobbs announced the initiative in partnership with nonprofit Undue Medical Debt, which purchases unpaid medical bills from collection agencies and hospitals — then cancels them entirely.

At a glance

  • Medical debt relief: More than 352,000 Arizona residents have had their debt forgiven automatically, with no application required.
  • Cost-effectiveness: A $10 million state investment — drawn from COVID-19 relief funds and philanthropic support — eliminated $429 million in debt, roughly 43 dollars canceled for every dollar spent.
  • Notification process: Eligible residents receive a letter from Undue Medical Debt confirming the cancellation; the process is confidential and requires no action from recipients.

Why medical debt matters

Medical debt is not just a financial problem. It is a health problem.

Tens of millions of Americans carry unpaid medical bills, and the total national burden is estimated to exceed $81 billion. That debt can trigger wage garnishments, wreck credit scores, and — perhaps most critically — push people to delay or skip care they need. The fear of a bill becomes a reason not to seek help in the first place.

Arizona alone carries an estimated $2.4 billion in outstanding medical debt, meaning the $429 million canceled is a significant first step rather than a complete solution. Experts note that debt forgiveness works best when paired with broader reforms, including expanded coverage and greater cost transparency, to address the conditions that generate medical debt in the first place.

How the model works

Undue Medical Debt operates by purchasing distressed medical debt portfolios at a fraction of their face value — often pennies on the dollar — then erasing them entirely rather than collecting on them. The math can be striking: a modest public investment yields relief many times its size.

Arizona’s program is not the first of its kind. Similar initiatives in California, Maryland, and Washington D.C. have shown measurable results, and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has documented the downstream harms that medical debt causes to credit and financial stability. What distinguishes Arizona’s effort is its scale and the explicit use of state COVID-19 relief funds to power it — a recognition that pandemic-era financial wounds have not fully healed.

The Kaiser Family Foundation has tracked how medical debt disproportionately burdens lower-income households, people of color, and those living in states with limited Medicaid expansion — populations who often face the highest costs and the fewest safety nets.

Relief beyond the balance sheet

When a medical debt is erased, the effects ripple outward. Credit scores can improve, which affects a person’s ability to rent an apartment, qualify for a small business loan, or finance an education. Chronic financial stress — the kind that comes from an unpayable bill in collections — has documented effects on mental and physical health.

“No one should face financial ruin simply for seeking healthcare,” Governor Hobbs said, framing the initiative as part of Arizona’s broader effort to protect residents through programs like the Arizona Promise, which targets expanded access to essential services.

Public-private partnerships like this one — where nonprofit expertise, philanthropic capital, and state funding work in concert — are drawing attention from policymakers across the country. The Commonwealth Fund has noted that systemic solutions will ultimately require policy changes upstream, but models like Arizona’s demonstrate what is achievable right now, within existing constraints. Initiatives that combine direct relief with structural reform can also be seen in international contexts — much as Indigenous land rights advocacy ahead of COP30 and Ghana’s new marine protected area show how targeted action and broader policy goals can reinforce each other.

For the 352,000 Arizonans who received a letter this year telling them their debt is gone, the program is something more immediate than a policy model. It is a financial reset — and for many, a chance to stop making impossible choices between healthcare and economic survival.

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For more on this story, see: Arizona erases $429 million in medical debt

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