Ultimate Guide to Home Birth Insurance Reimbursement

The following is simply my opinion on what will help most in getting your insurance company to reimburse you fully for an out of hospital birth. I am not a medical professional, insurance biller, insurance agent, lawyer, nor have I ever worked in any of those fields. I am simply a birth worker and a mother who has gone through this process herself, and has helped others do the same, so I’ve done a fair bit of research to form the opinions and suggestions expressed here. I do have experience working as a consumer relations representative so I know how these departments tend to work and generally what to say to get a better response.

Art Shaped Photography

The vast majority of birthing people in the United States are still having babies in a hospital setting. This is our “normal”, but it’s relatively new given human history. While we are certainly thankful for modern technology and its ability to help the people who need it, unnecessary intervention and cesarean rates continue to remain high. More and more families are seeking an alternative to maternity care with an OBGYN and a hospital – the problem then becomes that they no longer fit within the current healthcare system that relies so heavily on medical insurance.

My hope is that with the information contained here, those of us choosing an out of hospital birth with midwives can begin a small revolution by getting insurance companies to see that undisturbed birth can be safer and less expensive, thereby shifting the culture that birth needs to always be considered a complicated and dangerous medical event. I want to #normalizebirth by getting insurance companies to pay for ALL births like they do for the ones in the hospital!

Initial Considerations

The most common way to get your out of hospital (OOH for short) birth covered, is by paying your midwife up front and getting the insurance company to reimburse you after your baby is born. This means you will need to be able to afford the midwife’s services initially (many midwives also take payment plans). If you cannot, you can ask friends and family for help donating to your “home birth fund” in lieu of traditional baby gifts, of which many are often not necessary in the first month of baby’s life anyway. Alternatively, I know some people get a credit card or loan with 0% interest for the first year and pay it off completely prior to the end of that year. Do not assume the insurance company will reimburse you, and end up in a stressful financial pickle – you’ll still have a baby to care for!!

This process will require strong motivation, dedication, and perseverance because it can be lengthy and difficult. It may require dozens of phone calls, even making the same phone call multiple times in the hopes you’ll get a friendly voice on the other end. DO NOT GIVE UP! Insurance companies like to say “no”, and it’s easy for them to say “no”, until they realize you are not going away. Also, some birth centers and midwives use billing services to help you get reimbursement from insurance. From my experience, relying on these people is hit or miss. For one, the insurance companies aren’t super motivated to work things out with a third party such as the biller – you are their customer, you’ll be much more influential. Secondly, the biller isn’t super motivated to really fight for you against the insurance carrier – again; it’s not their birthing experience so they just aren’t intrinsically motivated like you are. So, you may simply want to pass on using their biller and attempt all of this by yourself. More work? Heck yes, but likely a higher success rate as well.

My personal experience with getting my home birth reimbursed was through an HMO but I’ve learned many tricks to getting PPO coverage as well. You can listen to my podcast interview about my experience getting reimbursed over on Birthful.

The only exceptions that I feel pretty strongly that this information wouldn’t work for are:

  1. Kaiser Permanente
  2. Any government run health insurance like Medicare (or your state’s equivalent)
  3. Military insurance (like Tricare, which actually does seem to be covering OOH providers more and more)

HOWEVER it doesn’t hurt to try anyway!! In California, Medi-cal recently got approved to begin contracting with Certified Professional/Licensed Midwives (as well as Certified Nurse Midwives) so it’s a step in the right direction, and the power of the consumer should not be understated. Kaiser is actually one of the biggest HMO systems that employs Certified Nurse Midwives (CNM) so that’s pretty great – in fact some of the ones here in Orange County, CA often work for the birth centers as well, and attend home births in that setting. As of now, most Kaisers won’t allow for home births with these midwives, but hey maybe with enough pressure from their customer base they will start to consider it. In fact in Washington I believe Kaiser has an option for home birth with their CNM’s and I have heard about some Kaiser’s allowing water birth within their facilities too so I KNOW shifts are happening! More and more insurance companies are feeling the push to cover out of hospital birth - Cigna recently announced this change too.

The main arguments that you will be making to your insurance company is that the services you want covered are:

  1. A basic human right, despite not being in network with ANY provider (all birthing people deserve to birth wherever and with whomever they feel safest)
  2. Statistically proven to be safe
  3. Significantly less expensive than even the most straightforward vaginal hospital birth
  4. If you have trauma from a previous hospital birth, preventing that for subsequent births is absolutely worth mentioning

Have questions about anything you are reading here? Need clarification, or simply advice on how to proceed next? Please reach out to me! I want you to be successful.

Important Suggestions Prior to Starting