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Medical Debt and Bankruptcy in South Dakota [2026]: Rules and Options

State-specific rules, federal bankruptcy filing data, and practical guidance for South Dakota residents.

Medical Debt in South Dakota: What You Need to Know

Medical debt is the leading cause of personal bankruptcy in the United States. In South Dakota, the combination of federal consumer protections, state-specific laws, and hospital charity care programs determines how much leverage you have before filing becomes necessary.

South Dakota follows the federal CFPB framework for medical debt on credit reports. Under the federal rule, paid medical collections, medical debt under $500, and debt less than 12 months old cannot appear on consumer credit reports. No additional state-level protection applies in South Dakota.

South Dakota Medical Debt Rules

ProtectionSouth Dakota Rule
Credit ReportingFollows federal CFPB rule.
Consumer ProtectionNo state-level medical debt credit reporting ban.
Hospital LiensHospital liens allowed.

Federal Protections That Apply in South Dakota

Every South Dakota resident also benefits from these federal rules:

  • No Surprises Act - bans most out-of-network surprise billing in emergency care and in-network facilities. See our No Surprises Act guide.
  • CFPB medical debt rule - medical collections under $500 and debt less than 12 months old excluded from credit reports; paid medical collections excluded.
  • Section 501(r) - nonprofit hospitals must have a written financial assistance policy and charge presumptively-eligible patients no more than amounts generally billed to insured patients.
  • Fair Debt Collection Practices Act - third-party medical collectors must follow notice and verification rules.

Hospital Charity Care in South Dakota

If your income is below the threshold set by South Dakota charity care rules (typically 200-400% of the federal poverty level), you may qualify for:

  • Free or steeply discounted hospital care for inpatient and emergency services.
  • Retroactive application - charity care can sometimes be applied to bills already sent to collections.
  • Waiver of interest and collection fees.

Ask the hospital's billing office for the financial assistance application (501(r) for nonprofit hospitals). See our charity care guide for the full process.

Bankruptcy as an Option in South Dakota

When medical debt cannot be negotiated down or covered by charity care, bankruptcy is a legitimate tool:

  • Chapter 7 wipes out medical debt in about 90 days. Unsecured medical bills are among the easiest debts to discharge.
  • Chapter 13 pays a percentage of unsecured medical debt over 3-5 years and discharges the rest at plan completion.

Use the South Dakota means test calculator to check Chapter 7 eligibility, and the 1328(f) screener to check prior-case bars.

Medical Debt and South Dakota Bankruptcy Exemptions

Bankruptcy does not mean losing your property -- South Dakota exemptions protect most household goods, a vehicle, retirement accounts, and (usually) your home. See South Dakota exemptions for the full list.

Medical debt is unsecured (no collateral), so the medical collector has no claim against your exempt property. Filing bankruptcy on medical debt is one of the cleanest fact patterns in consumer bankruptcy.