Brief - The Hustle

The nonprofit that buries medical debt

Written by Juliet Bennett Rylah | Aug 16, 2022 8:08:43 AM

Forty-one percent of Americans carry medical debt they cannot pay. But some may receive a letter announcing their debt is gone.

Nonprofit RIP Medical Debt buys bundles of debt owed by patients making 4x the poverty level or less, then erases it, per NPR.

Co-founders Craig Antico and Jerry Ashton are ex-debt collectors who  were inspired after talking with Occupy Wall Street activists in 2011.

Since launching RIP in 2014, they have:

  • Bought $6.7B in debt
  • Unburdened 3.6m people

How it works

Hospitals sell patients’ debt to debt buyers for a fraction of the amount owed. Buyers profit by collecting on the original amount.

RIP raises money to buy debt — either directly from hospitals or on the secondary market — and forgives it.

Donors include:

  • MacKenzie Scott, who gave $50m in 2020.
  • “Last Week Tonight,” which partnered with RIP in this episode to buy ~$15m, freeing ~9k people
  • Hospitals themselves. Heywood Healthcare in Massachusetts donated $800k of debt in January

The bummer? Americans owed ~$195B in medical debt in 2019, and RIP estimates it could be up to $1T now.

The bright side? Some legislative progress is being made, including a recent change that eliminates some medical debt from credit scores.

More: Check out nonprofit Rolling Jubilee, which absolves all kinds of debt.