Kelsey-Seybold Billing: What Patients Need to Know

Navigating medical bills can be stressful. If you receive care from Kelsey-Seybold Clinic, understanding how their billing works, your payment options, and where to get help will save time and reduce surprises. This post walks through the main things patients ask about: who to call, how to pay (including guest and portal options), recent in-clinic payment changes, financial-help resources, and a few tips to keep your account in good shape.

Who to call first

If you have questions about a statement, the fastest place to start is the Kelsey-Seybold Business Office. The clinic lists the Business Office phone number as the primary contact for billing issues; customer service hours are weekdays, and agents can explain charges, check account status, and open inquiries when something looks incorrect. If you prefer general contact information or other department numbers, the main Contact Center can also direct you to the right team. 

Pay online: portal, guest pay, and quick options

Kelsey-Seybold gives patients two main online choices to pay a bill. If you already use the MyKelseyOnline patient portal, you can log in to view statements, enroll payment methods, set up payment plans, and keep a history of transactions. For one-time or infrequent payments there’s a Guest Pay option that doesn’t require full portal registration — useful when you just need to clear a single statement quickly. Both routes are intended to be secure and convenient, and the portal also surfaces payment-plan options if you need them. 

In-clinic payment policy (important change)

Effective April 1, 2024, Kelsey-Seybold clinics stopped accepting cash and checks for in-clinic payments. The clinics now accept debit and credit cards, HSA/FSA cards, and digital wallets (for example, Apple Pay). This change matters if you usually rely on cash or paper checks — plan to use a card or pay online instead. If you have concerns about the policy or need an exception for hardship, contact the Business Office to discuss available options. 

Understanding your statement: key line items to watch

Medical statements can include multiple charge types: clinic visits and provider fees, lab or imaging charges, surgical/ASC fees, and sometimes pharmacy or durable-medical-equipment bills. Insurance adjustments—what your insurer negotiated with the clinic—often show as reductions; the remaining patient responsibility is what Kelsey-Seybold will ask you to pay. If something looks duplicative or you see an unexpected out-of-network charge, call the Business Office and request an itemized explanation; many issues can be resolved quickly with documentation or a corrected insurance filing. 

Payment plans and financial assistance

If you can’t pay a balance in a single payment, ask about payment-plan options through MyKelseyOnline or by calling the Business Office. For patients facing serious financial hardship, Kelsey-Seybold partners with charitable and assistance programs that may offer relief. The Kelsey Research Foundation’s Patient Assistance Fund and other local resources can sometimes help cover medically necessary care for eligible patients; contact the foundation or the clinic’s financial counseling team to learn whether you qualify and how to apply. 

Surprise billing and out-of-network care

If you receive care from an out-of-network provider during a visit (for example, an outside anesthesiologist at an ASC), you might get a separate bill from that provider. Kelsey-Seybold provides information about your rights and the potential for balance billing under state and federal rules. If you get a surprise bill, contact the clinic’s billing office and your insurer right away; many disputes can be resolved through negotiation or by using applicable surprise-billing protections.

Practical tips to make billing smoother

  1. Sign up for MyKelseyOnline: it centralizes statements, payments, and secure messages with billing staff. 

  2. Keep claims and explanation-of-benefits (EOB) emails from your insurer until the bill is resolved — they explain what the insurer paid and why. turn0search3

  3. If you disagree with a charge, ask for an itemized bill and an insurance-claims trace so you can see how the insurer and provider posted payments. turn0search0

  4. Beware of scams: official communications will direct you to the Kelsey-Seybold domains and phone numbers; never pay settlement or claim-processing fees to third parties. turn0search2

When to escalate

If billing questions aren’t solved by the Business Office, ask to speak to a supervisor or a patient-billing advocate. You can also request a written summary of the dispute and any next steps. If you suspect a broader insurance-contract problem or persistent balance-billing that seems improper, consider contacting your insurance plan’s customer service or your state’s department of insurance for guidance.

Final word

Dealing with medical bills is rarely welcome, but Kelsey Seybold billing provides clear channels — phone support, MyKelseyOnline, Guest Pay, and financial-assistance pathways — to resolve questions and set up manageable payments. Start with the Business Office, use the portal for convenience, and don’t hesitate to ask about payment plans or charitable help if you need it. Paying attention to EOBs and preserving documentation will make any dispute easier to resolve.

If you’d like, I can draft a short email or script you can use when you call the Business Office to dispute a charge or request a payment plan. 

 
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