Fedhealth Reviews 3

TrustScore 3 out of 5

2.8

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2.8

Average

TrustScore 3 out of 5

3 reviews

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Rated 1 out of 5 stars

TERMINATION AND STILL DEBITED

I had emailed FEDHEALTH on 6 February 2026, to terminate the medical aid, to which I got feedback as per emailed received from FEDHEALTH
Termination date 31 March 2026
Last Debit order will be 1 March 2026 which you billed in arrears, all good I accepted,
1 April I was debited- and get a response, I used savings>>>(load of rubbish) which I did not use the medical aid at all, Then I get told that the amount debited on 1 April is billed in arrears, to date I am still awaiting my refund.
Since Fedhealth is being this way, I am now liable to take this matter further, get lawyers involved, as I have proof on emails from them.
THIS IS WORSE MEDICAL AID TO BE ON....

February 6, 2026
Unprompted review
Rated 1 out of 5 stars

Beware with Fedhealth

Fedhealth relies heavily on PMB technicalities to deny cover, with no partial contribution and no clear written explanation of why claims are declined. Decisions involving significant costs are communicated verbally, but promised follow-up emails with reasons never arrive, even though all other Fedhealth emails come through without issue.

The biggest problem is lack of transparency. You’re left guessing why something is denied, with no proper paper trail to appeal or plan financially.

After repeated denials and non-existent communication, I moved my medical aid back to Discovery, where rules, authorisations, and decisions are at least clearly documented. I had already stated in a previous review that if this admin trend continued, I would change, even at a higher premium.

If you only want true emergency cover (and I mean emergency, not quality-of-life or necessary non-urgent care), this plan might work. If you want clarity, predictability, or shared risk for real-world medical needs, I would not recommend Fedhealth.

The “cheap” premium is misleading: one non-PMB surgery (~R100k out of pocket) equals 6–8 years of paying a higher monthly premium on a plan that actually contributes. If you ever need non-emergency but necessary care, you carry the full financial risk, and that’s not real insurance.

January 6, 2026
Unprompted review

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