What can I do if Medicaid denies me?
If your Medicaid was denied, terminated, or reduced, federal law guarantees you the right to a fair hearing — but the deadlines are short. Read your notice today, mark the deadline, and act. You can keep your benefits during the appeal if you move fast.
Dr. Ed Weir, PhD · 20 years inside Social Security · "Former" Sergeant, USMC
Updated April 2026
What can I do if Medicaid denies me?
If Medicaid denies you, you can request a fair hearing. Federal law gives you up to ninety days from the notice to file, but many states use shorter windows — some as short as thirty days. If you file within ten days of the notice, your current benefits can continue while the appeal is pending. Free legal help is widely available.
If you also need help understanding your other coverage options while the appeal is pending, this no-cost resource can point you in the right direction.
Free help finding what you may qualify for
An appeal is the right move when Medicaid says no — but it's not your only move. While the hearing is pending, you may still qualify for marketplace coverage with subsidies, county indigent care, or community health center sliding-scale visits. A no-cost benefits navigator can map all of those options for you while Legal Aid handles the appeal itself. The two work in parallel — coverage now, fight later.
Here's what to do, in 4 steps.
If you're staring at a denial notice right now, here's the order I'd run. Don't skip step one — the notice itself tells you the deadline, and missing it is the single biggest mistake I see.
1. Read your denial notice today
The notice tells you the reason for the action, the regulation cited, and your appeal deadline. Note the date the notice was mailed — that's when your clock started. The deadline can be as short as 30 days in some states.
42 CFR Part 431 Subpart E (notice rules) ›2. File the hearing request in writing
Send a written request to your state Medicaid agency. Plain language is fine: "I am requesting a fair hearing on the denial dated [date]. I want my benefits continued during the appeal." Include the case number from the notice. Send it certified mail or by the agency's online portal so you have proof of the date.
42 CFR 431.221 (request for hearing) ›3. Get free legal help
Legal Aid serves low-income clients at no cost. The Legal Services Corporation locator finds your nearest office by ZIP code. Disability Rights organizations handle disability-based denials. Senior Legal Services helps people 60 and over. They can represent you at the hearing.
Legal Services Corporation locator ›4. Request expedited hearing if urgent
If you have a time-sensitive medical need — surgery scheduled, treatment in progress, prescription about to run out — write "REQUEST FOR EXPEDITED HEARING" on your appeal and explain why. Federal regulations allow expedited fair hearings on urgent medical issues.
42 CFR 431.221 (expedited hearings) ›The deadlines that matter.
Which of these sounds more like you?
Pick the situation that fits where you are right now. The first move depends on whether you've already filed, whether your benefits are still active, and how urgent your medical need is.
I just got a denial noticeI need to know my deadline
Pull the notice out and find two things: the date it was mailed, and the deadline to request a hearing. The mailing date starts your clock. The deadline can be as short as 30 days in some states, up to 90 days in others.
The notice also tells you the reason the state took the action and the regulation it's relying on. Read both carefully — they're what you'll be challenging at the hearing.
If the deadline is anywhere close, file the hearing request today. You can fill in details and get representation later. The first job is to stop the clock.
Don't get caught by this — some states give you only 30 days from the notice mailing date. Read the deadline today, file before it passes, and clean up the details after.
I want to keep my benefits during the appealAnd I'm willing to risk repaying if I lose
Federal regulation 42 CFR 431.230 says if you request the hearing before the date the action takes effect, the state cannot terminate or reduce your benefits until the hearing decision is rendered. The state's notice must give you at least 10 days advance warning, so the practical rule is: file within 10 days of the notice and benefits continue.
The trade-off: if you lose the hearing, the state can recoup the cost of services it paid for during the appeal. For most people this risk is worth it — keeping coverage while you fight is the right move when treatment is ongoing or a prescription is at stake.
Write "I request continued benefits during this appeal" directly on your hearing request. Don't assume the state will continue them automatically.
I've seen people lose continued coverage just because they didn't ask for it on the form. The state isn't required to give it without a request. Put the words on paper.
I think the state made a mistakeThe numbers or facts in the notice are wrong
State Medicaid agencies process millions of cases. Errors happen — wrong income figures, missing deductions, ignored medical evidence, an old address that bounced back. Document the error in writing with the correct numbers and supporting paperwork.
At the hearing, you have the right to present evidence, call witnesses, and cross-examine the state's evidence. The hearing officer must be impartial and not directly involved in the original decision. You also have the right to bring an attorney, paralegal, or any chosen advocate at the hearing.
If the error is procedural — your renewal packet was sent to the wrong address, mail came back, the state stopped responding — ask for a redetermination first. Many cases are resolved without a hearing once the paperwork is straightened out.
I'm a flashlight, not a courtroom. Document the error and get representation — Legal Aid handles thousands of these every year and knows what evidence the hearing officer will weigh.
I have an urgent medical needSurgery, treatment, or a prescription is at stake
If your medical situation cannot wait the standard hearing timeline, request an expedited fair hearing. Federal regulations require state agencies to have a process for expedited hearings on urgent medical needs.
Write "REQUEST FOR EXPEDITED HEARING" at the top of your appeal letter and describe the urgency: scheduled surgery date, ongoing chemotherapy, dialysis, mental health crisis, prescription about to expire. The shorter and more specific, the better.
While you wait, contact a Federally Qualified Health Center — they take patients regardless of insurance status on a sliding scale. Many community health centers can bridge a coverage gap until the hearing resolves.
Don't get caught by this — expedited hearings exist but you have to ask for one. The state will not flag your case as urgent unless you put the words on the request.
I think I missed the appeal deadlineIt's been more than 90 days
Some states allow late appeals for good cause — illness, hospitalization, never receiving the notice, language barriers, disability that prevented you from acting in time. Good cause rules vary by state, so don't assume you're locked out.
File the appeal anyway, with a written explanation of why you missed the deadline. Attach any documentation — medical records, returned mail, anything that supports your reason. The hearing officer decides whether good cause applies before the appeal is dismissed.
If the late-appeal route is closed, you can usually reapply for Medicaid — a new application starts a fresh process. Reapplication is sometimes faster than fighting an old denial.
I'm a flashlight, not a courtroom. Talk to Legal Aid immediately — they know your state's good-cause standard and can file a late appeal correctly the first time.
I lost the hearing — what now?I want to know my next options
Losing a fair hearing is not the end. You can usually reapply if your situation changes — income drops, household composition changes, a new disability is documented, you turn 65, or you become eligible under a different category. A new application is a fresh decision.
State court review of the hearing decision may also be available, depending on state law. The window to file in court is usually shorter than the original hearing window, so move quickly if you want to take that route. Legal Aid can advise whether court review is realistic for your situation.
In the meantime, look at marketplace coverage with subsidies, Medicare savings programs if you're 65 or over, county indigent care, or community health centers. None of these is Medicaid, but each can fill a coverage gap.
I'm helping someone fight a denialParent, spouse, or family member
If you're helping a parent, spouse, adult child, or other family member appeal a Medicaid denial, you can act as their authorized representative. Federal law lets the applicant or beneficiary designate anyone they choose — including a relative, friend, or community advocate — to file the hearing request, attend the hearing, and present evidence on their behalf.
What you'll need from them: a signed authorized representative form (the state Medicaid agency provides one), the original denial notice, and any medical records or documentation that contradicts the state's reasoning. If they cannot sign because of cognitive impairment, a power of attorney or guardianship document substitutes.
Do not wait for them to act on their own if the deadline is close. Authorized representatives can file the hearing request while the paperwork is still being collected.
My situation is more complicated than theseI need to talk to a real person
Medicaid appeals can get complex fast — multiple denials, dual coverage with Medicare, long-term care services denied, immigration-status questions, or denials tied to disability determinations. None of these resolve well from a generic page.
Get free representation. Legal Services Corporation funds Legal Aid offices in every state and territory. Disability Rights organizations specialize in disability-based Medicaid denials. Senior Legal Services serves people 60 and over. National Health Law Program tracks federal Medicaid policy and supports local advocates.
You can also call your state Medicaid ombudsman — most states have one whose job is to help beneficiaries navigate disputes. State 2-1-1 lines connect you to local resources fast.
I'm a flashlight, not a courtroom. The Legal Services Corporation locator at lsc.gov finds free legal help by ZIP. That's the right next step for anything complicated.
While the appeal is pending, here's what else you may qualify for.
An appeal can take weeks. Don't wait for the hearing to look at other coverage. Many of these run in parallel and don't conflict with your appeal.
Marketplace coverage with subsidies
If your Medicaid is denied or terminated, you may qualify for a Special Enrollment Period on the federal Health Insurance Marketplace. Premium tax credits often bring monthly costs to single-digit dollars for low-income households.
Reapply for Medicaid
If your situation changes — income drops, household composition shifts, a disability is documented, you turn 65 — you may qualify under a different Medicaid category. A new application is a fresh decision and is sometimes faster than fighting the old denial.
Medicaid recertification
If your denial came at renewal time, the recertification process itself may be where the error happened. Procedural denials — missed paperwork, returned mail — are often reversed without a hearing.
Medicaid eligibility overview
If you're not sure why you were denied, the eligibility overview walks through the main pathways — MAGI, ABD, medically needy, expansion. You may qualify under a different pathway than the one you were screened for.
SSDI / SSI appeals
If your Medicaid denial was tied to a Social Security disability denial, the underlying SSDI or SSI appeal is the leverage point. Disability-based Medicaid often follows the SSA disability determination.
Community health centers
While the appeal is pending, Federally Qualified Health Centers see patients on a sliding scale based on income, regardless of insurance status. They can bridge a coverage gap and prevent treatment interruptions.
Everything people ask me about Medicaid appeals
What can I do if my Medicaid is denied?
You have the right to a fair hearing. Federal regulation 42 CFR Part 431 Subpart E gives every Medicaid applicant and beneficiary the right to challenge a denial, termination, reduction, or suspension. File a written hearing request with your state Medicaid agency before the deadline on your notice. Free legal help through Legal Aid is widely available for low-income clients.
How long do I have to appeal a Medicaid denial?
Federal law sets the ceiling: states must allow at least a reasonable time, not to exceed 90 days from the date the notice of action was mailed (42 CFR 431.221(d)). Many states use shorter windows — some as short as 30 days. Read the deadline on your specific notice and act before it passes.
What is a Medicaid fair hearing?
A fair hearing is an administrative proceeding before an impartial hearing officer where you challenge the state's action on your Medicaid case. You can present evidence, call witnesses, cross-examine the state's evidence, and bring an attorney or chosen advocate. The hearing officer issues a written decision, typically within 90 days of your request.
Can I keep my Medicaid benefits during the appeal?
Yes, if you act fast. Under 42 CFR 431.230, if you request a hearing before the date the action takes effect, the state cannot terminate or reduce your benefits until the hearing decision is rendered. The state's notice must give you at least 10 days advance warning, so the practical rule is to file within 10 days of the notice. Note: if you lose, the state can recoup the cost of services it paid during the appeal.
Where do I get free legal help for a Medicaid appeal?
Legal Aid offices, funded by the Legal Services Corporation, serve low-income clients at no cost in every state and territory. The locator at lsc.gov/get-legal-help finds your nearest office by ZIP code. Disability Rights organizations specialize in disability-based denials, and Senior Legal Services serves people 60 and over. Many law schools also run legal clinics that take Medicaid cases.
What evidence do I need for a Medicaid appeal?
Bring whatever supports your case: pay stubs and tax returns if income is at issue, medical records if disability or medical necessity is at issue, bank statements if assets are at issue, the original denial notice, and any correspondence with the state. You can also call witnesses — a doctor, family member, or anyone with relevant knowledge.
How long does a Medicaid hearing take?
The hearing decision is typically issued within 90 days of when you filed the request, per federal regulation. Expedited hearings on urgent medical needs resolve faster. The hearing itself usually lasts 30 to 90 minutes and can be conducted in person, by phone, or by video.
What happens if I lose the Medicaid appeal?
Losing is not the end. You can usually reapply if your situation changes — income drops, household composition shifts, you turn 65, or you become eligible under a different Medicaid category. State court review of the hearing decision may also be available depending on state law. Marketplace coverage with subsidies, county indigent care, and community health centers can fill coverage gaps in the meantime.
Can I reapply instead of appealing?
Yes, and sometimes that's faster. A new application is a fresh decision. If the original denial was based on a one-time issue — missing paperwork, an income spike that's no longer current — reapplying may resolve the situation without a hearing. You can pursue an appeal and a new application at the same time.
What if I missed the appeal deadline?
Some states allow late appeals for good cause — illness, hospitalization, never receiving the notice, language barriers, disability that prevented you from acting in time. Good cause rules vary by state. File the appeal anyway with a written explanation of why you missed the deadline. Talk to Legal Aid immediately — they know your state's standard.
Sources
Every figure and rule on this page is verified against primary sources. Last verified 2026-04-28.
- Federal Medicaid fair-hearing rights are codified at 42 CFR Part 431 Subpart E. —ecfr.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- Federal law (42 USC 1396a(a)(3)) requires every state Medicaid program to provide an opportunity for a fair hearing to applicants and recipients whose claims for medical assistance are denied or not … —ecfr.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- State Medicaid agencies must send written advance notice of any action affecting a beneficiary's claim at least 10 days before the date of the action (42 CFR 431.211). —ecfr.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- States must allow a reasonable time, not to exceed 90 days from the date the notice of action was mailed, to request a fair hearing (42 CFR 431.221(d)). State regulations may set shorter windows; some … —ecfr.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- If a beneficiary requests a hearing before the date of action stated in the advance notice, the state agency may not terminate or reduce services until a hearing decision is rendered (42 CFR 431.230). … —ecfr.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- If the state's action is sustained at the hearing after continued benefits have been paid, the state may institute recovery procedures to recoup the cost of services furnished solely by reason of the … —ecfr.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- Hearing officers in Medicaid fair hearings must be impartial individuals who have not been directly involved in the initial determination of the action being appealed (42 CFR 431.240). —ecfr.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- Medicaid applicants and beneficiaries have the right to be represented at a fair hearing by counsel, a relative, friend, or other spokesperson of their choice, or to represent themselves (42 CFR … —ecfr.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- Medicaid applicants and beneficiaries have the right to present evidence, establish all pertinent facts, and confront and cross-examine any adverse witnesses at the fair hearing (42 CFR 431.242). —ecfr.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- Medicaid agencies must take final administrative action — either a hearing decision or implementation — within 90 days from the date of the hearing request (42 CFR § 431.244(f)(1)(ii)), with separate … —ecfr.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- State Medicaid agencies must provide language services at no cost to applicants and beneficiaries with limited English proficiency, including oral interpretation and written translation (42 CFR … —ecfr.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- State Medicaid agencies must provide reasonable accommodations to applicants and beneficiaries with disabilities, including in the fair hearing process, under Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act and … —ecfr.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- Federal Medicaid regulations require state agencies to have a process for expedited fair hearings when a beneficiary's medical condition cannot wait the standard hearing timeline (42 CFR 431.224). —ecfr.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- A Medicaid applicant or beneficiary who has lost a fair hearing may reapply at any time; eligibility is determined based on circumstances at the time of the new application, not the prior denial. —ecfr.gov(verified 2026-04-28)
- Free legal representation for Medicaid appeals is available through Legal Services Corporation-funded Legal Aid offices in every U.S. state and territory; under 45 CFR § 1611.3(c)(1), LSC recipients … —law.cornell.edu(verified 2026-04-28)
Helping someone appeal a Medicaid denial?
If you're helping a parent, spouse, or family member fight a Medicaid denial, you can be their authorized representative — file the hearing request, attend the hearing, present evidence on their behalf. Federal law lets them designate anyone they choose. Bring the denial notice, ID, and any medical records that contradict the state's reasoning.
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