Call your insurance company before you hire a midwife and ask if they cover "out-of-hospital birth with a licensed midwife" using CPT codes 59400 or 59510. Get the answer in writing, confirm whether your midwife needs to be in-network, and ask about your deductible and out-of-pocket maximum. Most private insurance plans and many state Medicaid programs cover home birth when a licensed midwife attends.
Getting insurance to cover your home birth isn't about fighting the system or finding loopholes. Most plans already cover birth with a licensed midwife, but you need to verify your specific coverage before you commit to a provider and know how to file claims correctly. This article walks you through exactly what to ask, what documentation you need, and what to do if your claim gets denied.
About 75% of private insurance plans cover home birth when a licensed certified professional midwife (CPM) or certified nurse-midwife (CNM) attends. Coverage is better for CNMs because they hold nursing licenses, but many plans also cover CPMs depending on your state's licensing laws.
Medicaid covers home birth in 38 states as of 2024, though reimbursement rates vary widely from $1,500 to $4,000. Some states require prior authorization while others reimburse automatically when you submit claims with the correct codes.
The Affordable Care Act requires insurance plans to cover midwifery services as part of maternity care, but it doesn't specifically mandate coverage for out-of-hospital settings. This means your plan might cover the midwife's services but not the location, or might pay less for home birth than hospital birth even though the work is identical.
Call the member services number on your insurance card and say you're pregnant and considering a home birth. Ask these specific questions and write down the representative's name, date, and reference number for your records.
First: "Do you cover out-of-hospital birth with a licensed midwife?" Use the terms "home birth" and "CPT code 59400 for vaginal delivery" or "59510 if I've had a previous cesarean." Some reps don't recognize "home birth" but understand billing codes.
Second: "Does my midwife need to be in-network, or do you cover out-of-network providers?" If only in-network counts, ask how to search for participating midwives. If out-of-network midwives are covered, ask what percentage they reimburse and whether it counts toward your out-of-pocket maximum.
Third: "What's my deductible, and how much will I pay out-of-pocket after that?" Maternity care usually involves coinsurance of 10% to 30% after you meet your deductible. Know these numbers so you can budget accurately.
Fourth: "Do I need prior authorization before the birth?" Some plans require approval in advance, and if you skip this step, they can deny the entire claim even though home birth is a covered benefit.
Most midwives charge a flat fee of $3,000 to $6,500 that covers all prenatal visits, the birth, and postpartum care. This is less than what insurance pays hospitals for uncomplicated vaginal births, which average $14,700 for delivery alone.
If your insurance covers home birth and your midwife is in-network, you typically pay your regular deductible and coinsurance. If you have a $2,000 deductible and 20% coinsurance, and your midwife bills $4,500, you'd pay $2,000 plus 20% of the remaining $2,500, which equals $2,500 total out-of-pocket.
Out-of-network coverage usually reimburses 50% to 70% of the midwife's fee after a higher deductible. Many midwives offer payment plans if you're paying cash or have high out-of-pocket costs, with monthly installments starting in early pregnancy.
Average out-of-pocket costs with insurance coverage
Source: FAIR Health 2024, National Association of Certified Professional Midwives 2024
Most midwives bill insurance directly if they're in-network or credentialed with your plan. If your midwife doesn't bill insurance, you file a claim yourself by submitting a CMS-1500 form (the standard medical claim form) with an itemized superbill from your midwife.
The superbill needs specific CPT codes: 59400 for routine vaginal delivery including prenatal and postpartum care, or 59510 for vaginal birth after cesarean (VBAC). Your midwife should also include ICD-10 diagnosis codes for pregnancy and delivery, plus their NPI number and tax ID.
Submit claims within 90 days of the birth (some plans allow up to a year, but faster is better). Include a letter of medical necessity if your plan questions the home birth setting, explaining that you're low-risk and received appropriate prenatal care. Keep copies of everything you submit.
About 20% of home birth claims get denied on first submission, usually for technical reasons like wrong codes or missing information, not because home birth isn't covered. Read the denial letter carefully to see if it's a soft denial ("we need more information") or hard denial ("this service isn't covered").
For soft denials, resubmit with the requested documentation. For hard denials, file an appeal within the timeframe listed in your denial letter, usually 180 days. Your appeal letter should reference the specific policy language about midwifery coverage, include your midwife's credentials, and cite any state laws requiring coverage.
If the first appeal fails, request a second-level appeal and ask for an external review. About 40% of denials get overturned on appeal when you include proper documentation. Some state insurance commissioners have consumer assistance programs that help with appeals at no cost.
Medicaid pays for home birth in 38 states, though reimbursement rates and requirements differ significantly. Rates range from $1,500 in some states to over $4,000 in others, which affects whether midwives in your area accept Medicaid.
Some states require you to use a CNM rather than a CPM, even if CPMs are licensed in that state. Others require prior authorization or limit coverage to certain risk categories. Check your state Medicaid program's specific rules about midwife credentials and approval processes.
Your midwife can tell you whether they're a Medicaid provider and how reimbursement works in your state. If no local midwives accept Medicaid, you can sometimes get approval to see an out-of-network provider if you document that no in-network options exist within a reasonable distance.
As of 2024
Source: National Association of Certified Professional Midwives 2024
If your insurance flat-out doesn't cover home birth, you have three options. First, you can pay out-of-pocket, which many families do because the total cost is still less than hospital deductibles and coinsurance for many plans.
Second, you can switch plans during open enrollment if another plan in your area covers home birth. Compare the annual premium difference against what you'd save in maternity costs. Sometimes paying $100 more per month in premiums saves you $3,000 in birth costs.
Third, you can work with an advocacy organization like the National Association of Certified Professional Midwives or your state midwifery association to challenge your plan's exclusion. Some employers have added home birth coverage after employees requested it, especially when they see the cost savings compared to hospital births.
Start by calling your insurance company as soon as you know you're pregnant, before you hire a midwife. Write down what they tell you about coverage, get confirmation in writing if possible, and choose a midwife based partly on whether they're in-network with your plan. If you get denied, appeal immediately with proper documentation. Most insurance coverage battles for home birth come from paperwork problems, not actual policy exclusions, so careful documentation from the start saves you time and money later.