an ambulance is driving down the street

That “free ride” story got real

If you’ve ever helped someone get to a doctor visit, you know rides matter. Medicaid’s non-emergency rides are supposed to be a simple bridge to care. In New York, a federal audit says that bridge got abused in a big way.

The issue is not the idea of the benefit. It’s the billing and oversight behind the scenes. Here’s what investigators found, what it means for taxpayers and patients, and how New Yorkers can report suspicious activity.

young woman doctor taking care of senior woman at a

What NEMT is supposed to do

Non-emergency medical transportation, or NEMT, helps people get to covered medical appointments. It’s for situations that are not emergencies, but still medically necessary. Think dialysis visits, therapy, routine checkups, and follow-ups after treatment.

States run NEMT in different ways, and many use brokers to schedule rides. The goal is reliability, safety, and the right type of vehicle for a patient’s needs. When that system breaks, people can miss care and money can leak fast.

medicaid costs

The audit that set off alarms

A U.S. Health and Human Services Inspector General audit looked at NYC NEMT payments from 2018 and 2019. It reviewed a large pool of payments and then closely checked a sample. The findings suggested major documentation and compliance problems.

The audit estimated New York improperly claimed $84,329,893 in federal Medicaid reimbursement. It also estimated another $112,028,279 was tied to payments that may not have complied and needed review. Those two numbers explain why this story keeps resurfacing.

an ambulance took the patient to the clinic with the

Ghost rides and made-up trips

One of the biggest red flags is “rides” that never happened. Investigators describe billing for trips with missing support or unclear proof the ride matched Medicaid rules. When paperwork is weak, it becomes easy to invent a trip on a screen.

That kind of fraud hits twice. It drains money meant for real healthcare access. It also makes it harder to trust the program when patients truly need transportation to get treatment.

young handsome male paramedic talking by portable radio

When drivers and vehicles aren’t cleared

Another risk is rides provided without meeting required standards. The OIG recommended better proof that drivers and vehicles met state requirements. That includes proper documentation and checks tied to the service level being billed.

When providers cut corners, safety can suffer. It also means Medicaid may pay for a service that wasn’t allowed under program rules. Better verification is boring, but it’s often the difference between a clean program and a money pit.

Team brainstorming discussing with paper graph chart in the office.

Missing prior approval and paperwork gaps

Some NEMT trips require prior authorization or a medical practitioner’s order. The audit flagged weak controls around keeping that documentation complete and on file. If approval records are missing, it’s hard to prove the trip was valid.

This is where “mismanagement” can look like fraud from the outside. A ride might have been needed, but the paperwork wasn’t done correctly. Either way, Medicaid can end up paying claims that don’t meet requirements.

ambulance in motion

Upcoding, mileage padding, and fake add-ons

Not all fraud is a totally fake ride. Some schemes inflate the cost of a real trip by stretching mileage or adding charges that weren’t real. New York’s Attorney General has described tactics like fake tolls and extended mileage.

These are the “small tweaks” that quietly add up. A few extra miles here and there can snowball across thousands of claims. That’s why auditors focus so much on trip logs, routing, and consistent documentation.

Little-known fact: Federal rules require state Medicaid programs to ensure transportation to and from providers, and NEMT is treated as a required Medicaid benefit under federal regulation.

nurse helping senior man enter a van

Kickbacks pull patients into the scheme

Some cases allege providers paid cash or rewards to Medicaid enrollees to use their ID for billing. That turns a patient into a tool for fraud, even if they don’t understand the consequences. It also creates pressure on vulnerable people to “go along” for quick money.

Enforcement officials have repeatedly warned that kickbacks are a serious crime. They can also disrupt care, because scheduling becomes about billing, not what the patient actually needs. A real benefit gets twisted into a hustle.

Little-known fact: The HHS OIG audit reviewed a universe of 4,768,858 NYC NEMT payments totaling $269,584,249 (federal share) across 2018–2019.

new york city manhattan street panorama with yellow new york

New York’s crackdown is already active

New York’s Attorney General Letitia James has been pursuing transportation fraud for years. In January 2025, the AG announced cease-and-desist notices to 54 transportation companies. The message was basically, “Stop now, or expect bigger consequences.”

On June 30, 2025, the AG announced additional settlements and lawsuits, reporting more than $13 million recovered from multiple transportation companies and new legal actions against others. The enforcement focus is clear: fake trips, inflated charges, and unlicensed drivers are all on the radar. It’s not just talk.

Little-known fact: CMS publishes guidance that includes common NEMT fraud schemes and prevention tips for states and providers.

Money recovered, but losses still loom

The state has recovered real dollars from providers tied to these investigations. The AG said more than $13 million was secured from 16 transportation companies through settlements announced in June 2025; additional companies remain the subject of ongoing lawsuits and enforcement actions. That’s significant, but it’s small next to what the federal audit estimated.

The OIG findings also included a federal repayment recommendation for the improper claims estimate. That kind of action can push states to tighten controls quickly. Nobody wants to refund tens of millions after the fact.

magnifying glass highlighting the word fraud on notebook with financial

Why this matters beyond New York City

It’s easy to read “Medicaid fraud” and tune out. But NEMT exists because missed rides can mean missed treatment. If a program gets a reputation for abuse, the people who rely on it can face more hurdles.

There’s also a nationwide lesson here. CMS has warned states about common NEMT fraud schemes and prevention steps. Better verification tools, smarter audits, and clear documentation rules can protect both access and budgets.

an ambulance is driving down the street

How New York schedules these rides

In New York, the Department of Health says it contracts with a transportation broker, Medical Answering Services (MAS). The broker helps schedule trips and manage the process. That setup can improve access, but it also means oversight must be strong.

Brokers and providers both need guardrails. The OIG recommendations included strengthening procedures around documentation, authorization, and proof that the billed service matches what was actually delivered. Without that, fraud can hide inside routine paperwork.

Medical fraud is spreading across the U.S. See why Minnesota’s massive welfare fraud scandal is getting big and why Americans can’t ignore anymore.

red medicaid label on a us hundred dollar bill

What to watch for as a consumer

If you’re on Medicaid, your ID should never be treated like a “coupon.” If someone offers cash or gifts for your number, that’s a red flag. Also watch for ride records you don’t recognize, like trips on days you never left home.

If you’re helping a family member, ask simple questions. Who scheduled the ride, where did it go, and did it match the appointment time. A little attention can protect benefits and stop bad actors from using someone else’s care as cover.

Want to know what else going on in the New York City? Check out the recent budget gamble that could push more companies out of New York and who’s behind it.

Have you ever used Medicaid rides or helped someone book one, and did it feel easy or confusing? Share your thoughts and your view in the comments.

This slideshow was made with AI assistance and human editing.

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Nauris Pukis
Somewhere between tourist and local. I've always been remote-first. Home is my anchor, but the world is my creative fuel. I love to spend months absorbing each destination, absorbing local inspiration into my work, proving that the best ideas often have foreign accents.

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