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State guide · AK ·

Dispute a medical bill in Alaska.

Alaska gives you stronger protections than federal law alone. Audra audits your bill against Federal No Surprises Act + Alaska Division of Insurance, the federal No Surprises Act, and your insurer's contracted rates — then drafts a ready-to-send appeal letter in 60 seconds.

The law

Federal No Surprises Act + Alaska Division of Insurance

Cite: Alaska Stat. title 21 + federal NSA

Alaska primarily relies on the federal No Surprises Act. The Alaska Division of Insurance regulates state-licensed plans; the federal IDR process handles cross-jurisdictional disputes.

Your rights

What Alaska protects you from.

  • 01

    Federal NSA: in-network cost-sharing for emergency + in-network-facility out-of-network services.

  • 02

    Alaska Division of Insurance complaint portal at commerce.alaska.gov/web/ins.

  • 03

    Federal good-faith estimate requirement applies.

  • 04

    Air ambulance balance billing fully prohibited under federal NSA — particularly relevant in Alaska given air-medevac frequency.

How Audra helps

From upload to appeal in 60 seconds.

01

Upload your bill

Drop a PDF, photo, or EOB into Audra. Encrypted in your browser before it leaves your device.

02

We check it against the law

Audra cross-references every line item against Federal No Surprises Act + Alaska Division of Insurance, the federal No Surprises Act, your insurer's contracted rates, and CMS billing rules.

03

Get a ready-to-send appeal

We draft a letter citing the specific AK statute and any federal protections that apply, formatted for your insurer and provider. Print it, email it, or send it from inside Audra.

In-state coverage

Works for bills from any Alaska provider.

Audra audits bills from every major hospital system in Alaska, including:

Providence Alaska Medical CenterAlaska Native Medical CenterMat-Su Regional Medical CenterFairbanks Memorial HospitalBartlett Regional Hospital+ every other in-state provider

If your bill comes from an out-of-state provider, Audra still works — federal protections apply nationwide.

If the provider won't budge

File a complaint with the AK Attorney General.

If your appeal letter doesn't resolve the bill within 30 days, escalate to the Alaska Department of Law — Consumer Protection Unit. They have authority to investigate billing complaints and, in some cases, subpoena provider records.

Official complaint portal

Alaska Department of Law — Consumer Protection Unit

www.law.alaska.gov/department/civil/consumer/cpindex.html

Stop paying what you don't owe.

Your first audit is free. After that, $30 per bill, or $15/mo for up to 25 audits/month.

Other states

Audra also covers