State-level averages from federally-required Hospital Price Transparency files. Real prices vary widely by hospital; click any code for the national distribution and the specific hospitals at the high and low ends.
Audit it against Guam-specific benchmarks — in 60 seconds.
Upload your bill. Our system identifies the billing facility, looks up its specific federal Hospital Price Transparency file, and benchmarks every line against four data sources: CMS Medicare rates, NADAC drug benchmarks, hospital chargemaster files, and CMS bundling rules.
2 hospitals in Guam are tracked by CMS Care Compare as of the most recent refresh. Of these, 1 are registered as voluntary non-profit (eligible to offer charity care under ACA §501(r)) and 1 have a published CMS overall rating.
Which Guam hospitals offer charity care?
Every voluntary non-profit hospital in Guam is required by Section 501(r) of the IRS code to offer financial assistance to patients meeting income criteria. The 1 non-profit hospitals listed below all fall in this category. Each hospital's specific Financial Assistance Policy is on its billing webpage; eligibility is typically tied to a multiple of the Federal Poverty Level.
How are these prices determined?
The prices in the comparison table below come from federally-required Hospital Price Transparency machine-readable files (45 CFR §180.50), aggregated across all reporting hospitals in Guam. Hospital chargemaster prices are the gross billed amounts before any discounts or insurance contracts; median commercial is the typical insurer rate; Medicare allowed is the federally-set baseline. Real bills depend on the specific facility, payer, and service setting.
What's the difference between chargemaster and what I'll actually pay?
Chargemaster is the hospital's published gross price — rarely what anyone actually pays. Insured patients pay their plan's negotiated rate (typically 30-60% of chargemaster). Self-pay patients can usually negotiate down further (often by 25-50%) or apply for charity care if the facility is a non-profit. The chargemaster matters as the starting point for self-pay billing and the reference for some insurance contracts.