U.S. finalizes surprise billing rule that cuts dispute fees by 93%

WASHINGTON, UNITED STATES — Federal regulators finalized a rule cutting the arbitration fee for medical billing disputes from $115 to $15 — taking effect within days under the No Surprises Act, Healthcare Dive reports.
Fee drop reshapes surprise billing arbitration
The Federal Independent Dispute Resolution (IDR) Operations Final Rule — first proposed in 2023 — sets the new $15 administrative fee per dispute. It takes effect five days after publication in the Federal Register.
The fee cut matters because of who wins in IDR arbitration. Providers prevail in 88% of cases — and when they do, arbiters award 3 to 4 times the in-network rate.
At $15 per dispute, the cost of accessing a system that heavily favors providers is now a fraction of what it was.
David Merritt, senior vice president at the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association, said the rule “makes meaningful progress” but called for additional federal action to address ineligible claims and excess awards.
New IDR gateway centralizes dispute management
The rule also introduces the IDR Gateway — a centralized portal for dispute management — launching in phases throughout 2026.
HHS projects the reformed IDR system will generate $80 million in savings over five years — with insurers and providers collectively saving more than $500 million from the lower dispute fees.
Full-system implementation costs are projected to exceed $1 billion. The federal portal carries a first-year cost of $11 million, with the IDR Gateway allocated a separate $3 million.
Batching flexibilities — allowing providers to group related disputes — take effect approximately five months after Federal Register publication. Eligibility review changes follow three months after a functionality notification from the agencies. Arbiters must issue eligibility determinations within five days.
The rule lands as health systems are managing growing volumes of denied and disputed claims — a workload that has expanded alongside wider prior authorization requirements and AI-assisted insurer review systems.
Lower dispute fees reduce the financial barrier for providers. They do not reduce the administrative labor that claims disputes generate: initial documentation, eligibility filing, follow-up, and response to arbiter determinations.
The healthcare outsourcing sector — a multibillion-dollar industry covering revenue cycle management, claims processing, prior authorization support, and medical coding — is built to manage that workflow at scale.
For providers facing a $15 filing fee and an 88% win rate, the economic case for disputing more claims is now stronger. So is the case for outsourcing the back-office capacity needed to pursue them.

Independent




