State Insurance Mandates for Hearing Aids

Certain insurance plans are exempt from state mandates. Please contact your plan administrator to see if your plan includes state mandated hearing aid insurance benefits.)

Colorado, Delaware, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, New Jersey, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Oregon, TennesseeTexas, and Vermont require that health benefits plans in their state pay for hearing aids for children. Arkansas, Connecticut, Illinois, New Hampshire, and Rhode Island require coverage for both children and adults. Wisconsin requires coverage for both hearing aids and cochlear implants for children. Requirements vary state by state for

  • ages covered
  • amount of coverage
  • benefit period
  • provider qualifications

Existing laws in these states are summarized below with a link to each statute. The information is reviewed on an annual basis. Please be advised that laws, regulations, and policies may change at any time, so always check with your state for the most up-to-date information.

Arkansas

Requires insurance companies to offer coverage to employers in the state. If the employer chooses to add this option, the health plan must provide hearing aid coverage of no less than $1,400 per ear every three years for individuals of all ages.

Citation: Arkansas Code Ann. § 23-79-1401

Colorado

Requires insurance providers to cover hearing aids for children under 18 years of age when medically necessary. Coverage must include a new hearing aid every five years, a new hearing aid when alterations to the existing hearing aid cannot meet the needs of the child, and services and supplies such as the initial assessment, fitting, adjustments, and auditory training.

Citation: Colorado Rev. Stat. § 10-16-104

Connecticut

Requires individual and group health insurance policies to provide coverage for hearing aids for children 12 years old or younger; classifies hearing aids as durable medical equipment and allows policies to limit the benefit to $1,000 every 24 months. As a result of the Affordable Care Act’s prohibition on discriminatory benefit design based on age, the Connecticut Insurance Department is requiring insurance policies to remove age limits on hearing aid benefits for policies issued or renewed after January 1, 2016.

Citation: Connecticut Gen. Statute § 38a-490b and § 38a-516b. Bulletin HC-102 [PDF]

Delaware

Requires individual and group health insurance contracts to provide coverage for hearing aids of up to $1,000 per ear, every 3 years, for children under 24 years of age, covered as a dependent by the policy holder.

Citation: Delaware Code Ann. tit. 18 § 3357

Georgia

Requires health benefit policy to provide coverage of up to $3,000 per ear every 48 months for covered individuals 18 years and under.

Citation: Ga. Code Ann § 33-24-59.21 [PDF] [as created by S.B. 206 (2017)] 

Illinois

Requires insurers to provide coverage for all insured individuals, subject to all applicable co-payments, co-insurance, deductibles, and out-of-pocket limits, for hearing aids once every 12 months, unless there is a significant change in the insured’s hearing status.

Citation: 215 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/356z.29 (as created by HB 4516 (2018)) 

Kentucky

Requires health benefit plans to provide coverage for the full cost of one hearing aid per hearing-impaired ear up to $1,400 every 36 months for individuals under 18 years of age as needed, and all related services necessary to assess, select, and fit the hearing aid. The insured may choose a higher price hearing aid and pay the difference in cost; the hearing aid must be prescribed by a licensed audiologist and dispensed by a licensed audiologist or hearing instrument specialist.

Citation: Kentucky Rev. Stat. Ann. § 304.17A-132 

Louisiana

Requires individual and group insurers to provide coverage for hearing aids for a child under the age of 18 if the hearing aids are fitted and dispensed by a licensed audiologist or licensed hearing aid specialist following medical clearance by a physician licensed to practice medicine and an audiological evaluation medically appropriate to the age of the child. The insurer may limit the benefit payable to $1,400 per hearing aid for each hearing-impaired ear every 36 months. The insured may purchase a hearing aid priced higher than the benefit payable and pay the difference to the hearing aid provider.

Requires any insurer that also provides coverage of hearing aids to individuals aged eighteen and over to allow the insured the option to choose a hearing aid priced higher than the benefit payable under the policy. Any additional amounts payable to the hearing aid provider shall be paid by the covered individual.

Citation: La. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 22:1038

Maine

Requires health insurance policies to provide coverage for hearing aids; coverage may be limited to $3,000 per hearing aid every 36 months.

Citation: Maine Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 24-A § 33-2762 as amended by LD 38.

Maryland

Requires insurers to provide coverage for hearing aids for a minor child if the hearing aids are prescribed, fitted, and dispensed by a licensed audiologist; coverage may be limited to $1,400 per hearing aid for each hearing-impaired ear every 36 months; insured may choose a more expensive hearing aid and pay the difference.

Citation: Maryland Code § 15-838

Massachusetts

Requires certain health plans to provide to any minor 21 years of age or younger coverage for the full cost of one hearing aid per hearing-impaired ear up to $2,000 for each hearing aid, every 36 months upon a written statement from such minor's treating physician that the hearing aids are medically necessary. The insured may choose a higher priced hearing aid and may pay the difference in cost above the $2,000 limit without any financial or contractual penalty to the insured or to the provider of the hearing aid.

Citation: Mass. Gen. Laws:

Minnesota

Requires health plans to cover hearing aids for children under the age of 18 year for hearing loss that is not correctable by other covered procedures. The coverage is limited to one hearing aid per ear every three years.

Citation: Minnesota Stat. § 62Q.675

Missouri

Requires health insurance and Medicaid coverage for infant hear screening, re-screening (if necessary), audiological assessment and follow-up, and initial amplification, including hearing aids.

Citation: Missouri Rev. Stat. § 376.1220

Montana

Requires health insurance coverage to provide coverage for diagnosis and treatment of hearing loss for a covered child 18 years of age or younger. Treatment may not include more than one hearing device for each ear every 3 years.

Citation: Mont. Code Ann. §33-22 [PDF]

New Hampshire

Effective January 1, 2011, insurers are required to cover the cost of no less than $1,500 per hearing aid every 60 months. The insured may choose a higher price hearing aid and pay the difference in cost.

Citation: New Hampshire Rev. Stat. Ann. § 415-6p and § 415:18-u

New Jersey

Requires health insurers, State Health Benefits Program and NJ FamilyCare to provide coverage for medically necessary expenses incurred in the purchase of a hearing aid for covered children 15 years of age or younger. Coverage includes the $1,000 per hearing aid for each hearing-impaired ear every 24 months when medically necessary and prescribed or recommended by a licensed physician or audiologist. The insured may choose a more expensive hearing aid and pay the difference between the price of the hearing aid and the benefit.

Citation: New Jersey Stat. Ann. § 17:48-6gg; § 17:48A-7dd; § 17:48E-35.31; § 17B:26-2.1aa; § 17B:27-46.1gg; § 17B:27A-7.14; § 17B:27a-19.18; § 26:2J-4.32; § 52:14-17.29n; § 30:4J-12.2

New Mexico

Requires individual and group health insurance policies to cover $2,200 per hearing aid every three years for children under 18 years of age, or under 21 years of age if still attending high school. The insured may choose a higher priced hearing aid and may pay the difference in cost. Coverage includes fitting and dispensing services, including providing ear molds as necessary to maintain optimal fit, provided by an audiologist, a hearing aid dispenser or a physician, licensed in New Mexico.

Citation: New Mexico Stat. Ann.§ 13-7-10; § 59A-22-34.5; § 59A-23-7.8; § 59A-46-38.5; § 59A-47-37.1

North Carolina

Effective January 1, 2011, health plans are required to provide coverage for one hearing aid per hearing-impaired ear up to two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) per hearing aid every 36 months for covered individuals under the age of 22 years.

Citation: North Carolina Gen. Stat. § 58-3-285 [PDF]

Oklahoma

Requires any group health insurance or health benefit plan to provide coverage for audiological services and hearing aids for children up to 18 years of age; adds requirement of hearing aid prescription and dispensing by a licensed audiologist; allows hearing aid benefit every 48 months without a dollar limit.

Citation: Oklahoma Stat. tit. 36 § 6060.7 [RTF]

Oregon

Requires health benefits plans to cover one hearing aid per hearing impaired ear for enrollees under 18 years of age, or 18 years of age or older if eligible as a dependent under the plan and enrolled in an accredited educational institution. Hearing aids must be prescribed, fitted and dispensed by a licensed audiologist with the approval of a licensed physician and the maximum benefit amount is $4,000 every 48 months; however, an enrollee may purchase a hearing aid priced higher than the benefit amount and pay the difference in cost.

Citation: Oregon Rev. Stat. § 743A.141

Tennessee

Requires every individual or group health insurance policy renewed on or after January 1, 2012 to provide coverage of one thousand dollars ($1,000) per individual hearing aid per ear, every three (3) years, for every child under 18 years of age covered by such policy whether as a dependent of the policy holder. An insured may purchase a hearing aid priced higher than the benefit amount and pay the difference in cost.

Citation: Tennessee Code Ann. § 56-7-2368

Texas

Requires a health benefit plan to provide coverage for the cost of a medically necessary hearing aid or cochlear implant and related services and supplies for a covered individual who is 18 years of age or younger. Coverage is limited to one hearing aid in each every three years and one cochlear implant in each ear with internal replacement as medically or audiologically necessary.

Citation: Tex. Ins. Code Ann. § 1367.251 [as created by H.B. 490 (2017)]

Vermont

Requires health insurance plan to cover the cost of a hearing aid for each ear and the associated hearing aid professional services when the hearing aid or aids are prescribed, fitted, and dispensed by a hearing care professional, every three years, or sooner if medically necessary. The coverage shall include hearing aid batteries when prescribed by a hearing care professional. The requirements take effect to health plans issued or renews on or after January 1, 2024.

Requires Vermont Medicaid to provide coverage for medically necessary hearing aids and audiology services, including audiologic examinations, hearing screenings, fitting of hearing aids, and prescriptions for hearing aid batteries.

Citation: 8 V.S.A. §40881 (as created by H. 266 [2022]) [PDF]

Rhode Island

Requires individual and group insurance policies to provide coverage for $1,500 per individual hearing aid, every three years, for children under the age of 19, and $700 per individual hearing aid for those over 19 years of age.

Citation: Rhode Island Gen. Laws § 27-18-60

Wisconsin

Requires health insurance plans and policies to pay for cochlear implants, hearing aids and related treatment that are prescribed by a physician or audiologist for any child under the age of 18. Coverage for hearing aids includes the cost of one hearing aid per ear per child once every three years.

Citation: Wisconsin Stat. § 609.86; § 632.895 (16)

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