It’s been served: The Federal IDR Operations final rule is here - McDermott+

It’s been served: The Federal IDR Operations final rule is here

It’s been served: The Federal IDR Operations final rule is here


McDermott+ is pleased to bring you Regs & Eggs, a weekly Regulatory Affairs blog by Jeffrey Davis. Click here to subscribe to future blog posts.

May 29, 2026 – Two helpings of Regs & Eggs this week! My colleague Kristen O’Brien and I just couldn’t wait to serve up a post on the Federal Independent Dispute Resolution (IDR) Operations final rule that the US Departments of Health and Human Services, Labor, and the Treasury (the Departments) released on May 28, 2026. Avid Regs & Eggs readers know that we’ve been waiting for this reg for a while and that it has been a long-standing item on the administration’s No Surprises Act regulatory “to-do list.” The proposed rule was published in the Federal Register on November 3, 2023. Much of the final rule responds to technical limitations that stakeholders have highlighted since the federal IDR process under the No Surprises Act began. These issues have led to challenges in correctly identifying which disputes are eligible for the federal IDR process and problems batching similar claims. Stakeholders have highlighted many other concerns about the IDR process, including enforcement, outliers to offers and payment determinations, and delays in award payments, but those topics were not in play for this rule, which focuses on the nuts and bolts of the IDR process. Without further ado, let’s dig in!

Dealing with the eligibility question


The question of whether a dispute is eligible for the federal IDR process remains a major concern for both payers and providers (the disputing parties) and the certified IDR entities (arbiters). It’s a tricky question, as many states have their own surprise billing laws, and only certain plans within each of those states are subject to those laws (the rest must follow the federal requirements).

The Departments finalized several policies that attempt to make it easier for everyone involved to make that determination.

First, the Departments finalized new requirements for disclosures that group health plans and health insurance issuers offering group or individual health insurance coverage must make at the time of the initial payment or notice of denial of payment. These disclosures include the business name of the plan, the business name of the plan sponsor (if applicable), and the registration identification number assigned to the health plan when it registers in a new IDR registry. The rule requires plans and issuers to communicate information by using claim adjustment reason codes (CARCs) and remittance advice remark codes (RARCs), as specified in future guidance, when providing any paper or electronic remittance advice to an entity that does not have a contractual relationship with the plan or issuer. All of that to say, the process should become clearer at the outset.

Speaking of the IDR registry, the Departments finalized their proposal to require plans and issuers subject to the federal IDR process to submit certain information to the Departments through a registry. The Departments made some adjustments to what information plans and issuers are required to submit on the registry, but the Departments hope that all this information will allow stakeholders to easily identify what plan is associated with each claim and whether the claim is eligible for the federal process.

The Departments also finalized proposals to require parties to include additional information on the notice of IDR initiation to help “confirm or update information necessary to continue negotiations and identify any information discrepancies that could impact eligibility for the Federal IDR process.” The final rule requires the party that did not initiate the dispute to formally respond to the initiating party and the Departments within three business days after the date of IDR initiation (and to note any objection to federal IDR process eligibility).

To make it easier for certified IDR entities to determine eligibility, the Departments finalized their proposal to give certified IDR entities an additional two business days to make an eligibility determination (for a total of five business days). Certified IDR entities must notify disputing parties and the Departments within five business days of determining a dispute is ineligible.

Finally, although it was not noted in the rule (since it wasn’t proposed), the Departments have publicly referenced the idea of an “IDR gateway,” which would be a new centralized federal digital platform that could track disputes as they go through the process and reduce the number of ineligible disputes. The gateway is something many stakeholders have said they are eager to hear more about.

Open negotiation process


To encourage open dialogue between parties prior to the initiation of the IDR process, the No Surprises Act mandates a 30-day open negotiation period. The departments finalized proposed changes to streamline the efficiency and effectiveness of the open negotiation process:

  • An open negotiation period must be initiated within 30 business days of the day the provider receives either an initial payment or a notice of denial of payment for the item or service from the plan or issuer.
  • To initiate the open negotiation period, a party must submit a written open negotiation notice and supporting documentation to the other party and to the Departments via the federal IDR portal.
  • The party in receipt of the notice of open negotiation must provide a written notice and supporting documentation in response to the open negotiation notice (open negotiation response notice) to the other party and the Departments through the Federal IDR portal as soon as practicable, but no later than the 15th business day of the 30-business-day open negotiation period.

The Departments also finalized their proposal to enhance the content of the notice of open negotiation (with some minor modifications) and to require use of the federal IDR portal for disputing parties to exchange the open negotiation notice and the open negotiation response notice.

Batching provisions


The Departments finalized multiple changes related to “batching,” which effectively allows a provider to lump multiple similar claims into one batch. Under current rules, multiple services can be put into a batch if the services meet the following criteria:

  • The services are billed by the same provider or group of providers.
  • Payment for the items and services is made by the same group health plan or health insurance issuer.
  • The items or services must be the same or similar, defined as having the same service code with modifiers (if applicable) or being billed under a comparable service code with modifiers (if applicable) under a different procedural code system. This requirement was vacated by the district court in Texas Medical Association IV.
  • All services were furnished within the same 30-business-day period or have open negotiation periods ending within the 90-calendar-day suspension period (also referred to as the “cooling off period”).

The Departments finalized the following changes to these rules:

New limit on line items in a batch

The proposed rule would have limited the number of services (line items) that can be in a single batch to 25. The intent was to prevent extremely large batches and to address Department concerns that certified IDR entities might not be able to process larger groupings of claims within required deadlines. After receiving input from stakeholders that a limitation of 25 was too low, the Departments finalized a cap of 50 line items per batched dispute.

“Related to the treatment of a similar condition” definition

In the proposed rule, the Departments sought comment on how to define the statutory batching criterion of claims “related to the treatment of a similar condition.”  Under the final rule, batches can satisfy this criterion by including:

  • Services that are billed under a comparable code within a different procedural code system (similar to the current “same or similar service code” interpretation).
  • Buckets of CPT codes that specific specialties typically provide.
  • All the services provided to a patient during a single encounter that billed on the same claim.

Batching criterion: “Same group health plan or health insurance issuer”

The Departments stated in the proposed rule that batching can only be among the same self-insured group health plan (regardless of whether the plan makes payments through a third-party administrator. The Departments noted that while a given third-party administrator may administer multiple self-insured plans, the self-insured group health plan generally is the responsible party for payment or reimbursement of the qualified IDR items and services, and therefore batching can only be among the same self-insured health plan. The Departments finalized this provision as proposed.

Shortened cooling off period

In the proposed rule, the Departments solicited comments on the application and length of the cooling off period following a determination in a dispute consisting of multiple items and services batched by patient encounter or CPT code ranges. The Departments sought comments on alternative shorter periods, including a duration of one business day. In the final rule, the Departments shortened the cooling off period to 30 business days. The Departments acknowledged commenters’ concerns that cooling off periods may be perpetually stacked on top of each other, creating a never-ending period where new disputes cannot be initiated. The Departments stated that they intend to publish clarifying guidance about the finalized batching provisions that will include details on how the cooling off period should be applied. The Departments noted that they did not solicit comments on whether to shorten the cooling off period for single disputes and therefore did not finalize such a policy.

Inappropriately batched items and services

Under current guidance, the Departments allow inappropriately batched disputes to be resubmitted as properly batched or single disputes. In the final rule, the Departments removed the option to resubmit inappropriately batched disputes, effective 120 days after plans and issuers are required to register in the IDR registry.

Administrative fees


There are two fees associated with the IDR process: an administrative fee that goes to the Departments and a fee that goes to the certified IDR entities. The Departments proposed a bunch of changes to the administrative fee, including:

  • The methodology of calculating the fee, which would have resulted in a fee of $150 per party per dispute (the fee is currently $115).
  • The timing of when the fee is collected.
  • The party that collects the fee (the Departments instead of certified IDR entities).
  • Reductions to the fee for ineligible and low-dollar disputes.

The Departments decided not to finalize any of these policies. However, the Departments recalculated the fee under the existing methodology and came up with a much lower fee of $15, an 85% reduction to the current amount of $115. The fee must cover the total amount that the Departments expect to spend on carrying out the federal IDR process. While the Departments increased their total spending estimate from $100.2 million to $119.4 million, that increase is more than offset by a higher projection of the number of expected disputes.

The Departments believe that the new $15 administration fee made some of the other proposed changes unnecessary, and that the lower amount will improve the accessibility of the federal IDR process for small and rural providers.

Extension of time periods for extenuating circumstances


The IDR process includes numerous timelines and deadlines, and the Departments have previously stated that those timelines can be modified in the case of extenuating circumstances at the Departments’ discretion. In the final rule, the Departments confirmed that they will determine whether an extension is necessary on a case-by-case basis. The Departments will post a public notice about any generally applicable extensions of time periods.

Waiting game: Effective dates of the policies in the rule


The rule’s official effective date is 60 days after it is published in the Federal Register (which hadn’t yet occurred at the time this blog post was published). However, not all of these new policies will be effective in the near term, and many require additional guidance in order to be fully fleshed out and implemented. In fact, in some cases it is unclear when exactly the policies will go into effect.

We’ve tried to create an effective “timeline” below, but a lot of the timing will depend on when the additional guidance is released:

  • Administrative fee (five business days post-publication). The $15 administrative fee is the first policy to become effective. It becomes effective five business days after the rule is published in the Federal Register, even before the rule itself officially goes into effect.
  • Additional disclosure requirements (60 days). The requirements for plans and issuers to disclose additional information at the time of the initial payment or notice of payment denial go into effect on the effective date of the rule.
  • Use of CARCs and RARCs (10 months). The use of CARCs and RARCs might not be effective for at least 10 months. The Departments intend to issue guidance within six months of publication of the final rule that will specify an effective date, and it is anticipated that the guidance will provide disputing parties no less than four months to come into compliance.
  • Changes to open negotiation, most batching modifications, and other IDR process improvements (up to 26 months). Many changes to the IDR process included in the final rule, such as changes to batching, the open negotiation period, and the IDR initiation process, will become effective 90 days after the Departments issue guidance on these new requirements. The Departments will release guidance on a rolling basis and anticipate that all functionality associated with these policies will be available 24 months after the effective date of the final rule.
  • Federal IDR registry (unknown). The federal IDR registry requirements will be effective 90 business days after the Departments issue guidance announcing that the registry is up and functioning. That specific timing is still up in the air.

We are still working our way through all the details in this technical reg. While the final rule does lay the groundwork for upcoming improvements to the IDR process, the long implementation timeline and the need for additional guidance to effectuate certain policies create some uncertainty about the overall impact of all these changes once they are eventually adopted.

Until next time, this is Jeffrey (and Kristen) saying, enjoy reading regs with your eggs.


For more information, please contact Jeffrey Davis. To subscribe to Regs & Eggs, please CLICK HERE.