In total, the Medical Debt Relief Program has abolished more than $345 million for nearly 270,000 since the program began.
“We started this program with a simple premise: in a healthy and functioning society, no one should be in financial ruin simply because they get sick,” said Gov. JB Pritzker. “This program makes a major impact on the lives of the most vulnerable Illinoisans while also maintaining our commitment to fiscal responsibility with a fantastic return on investment—the gold standard for this kind of work.”
The Department of Healthcare and Family Services partners with Undue Medical Debt, a national charity, to administer the program.
The initiative was launched in 2024 with the goal of erasing $1 billion of medical debt over several years.
The program targets residents with a household income at or below 400% of the federal poverty level, or those whose medical debt is at or exceeds 5% of their household income.
For each dollar spent on medical debt buyback, the relief program erases approximately $170 in medical debt for patients.
So far, the state has spent $2 million on the program, with a $15 million appropriation in the Fiscal Year 2026 budget.
According to the Governor’s Office, “Medical debt disproportionately affects people of color—Black Illinoisans are 50% more likely to accrue medical debt than their white peers.”
The program has partnered with hospitals throughout the state to provide medical debt relief for their patience.
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