One of the most common shocks on an ambulance bill is seeing the designation ALS-1 (A0427) or ALS-2 (A0433) when you expected a standard ride. This upgrade from Basic to Advanced Life Support often adds $500 to $1,500 to the base rate.
The Paramedic Trigger
An ambulance ride is billed as ALS the moment a Paramedic (rather than an EMT) performs an "Advanced Life Support Intervention." Common triggers that justify this higher bill include:
- Starting an IV line (even if only for saline)
- Administering specialized medications (narcotics, anti-arrhythmics, etc.)
- Manual cardiac monitoring or running a 12-lead EKG to diagnose a heart attack
- Advanced airway management (CPAP, BiPAP, or intubation)
ALS Level 1 vs. Level 2
Wait, there's more. ALS Level 2 (A0433) is reserved for truly critical events. To bill at this highest level, the crew must either provide at least three different IV medications or perform a combination of high-intensity procedures like chest decompression, intraosseous (bone) IV starts, or cardiac pacing.
Dispute Tip: If you received an ALS bill but the crew only checked your blood pressure and gave you an aspirin, they may have "Upcoded" your bill. You should request the Patient Care Report (PCR)—the medic's own notes—to see exactly what interventions they documented. If the notes don't match the code, the provider must legally correct the bill.