Consumers in New York are protected from surprise bills when treated by an out-of-network provider at a participating hospital or ambulatory surgical center in their health plan’s network. Additionally, consumers with health insurance coverage provided by an insurer or HMO are protected from surprise bills when a participating doctor refers them to a non-participating provider. Consumers in New York are also protected from bills for emergency services in hospitals, including inpatient care following emergency room treatment.
The following information explains what you need to know about these important protections if:
Surprise bills happen when an out-of-network provider treats you at an in-network hospital or ambulatory surgical center OR you are referred by an in-network doctor to an out-of-network provider. (In-network means in your health plan’s network.) You only have to pay your in-network cost-sharing for a surprise bill.
It’s A Surprise Bill At An In-Network Hospital or Ambulatory Surgical Center if an Out-of-Network Provider Treats You and:
It is NOT a surprise bill if you chose to receive services from an out-of-network provider instead of from an available in-network provider before you got to the hospital or ambulatory surgical center.
Beginning January 1, 2022, the following services will usually be a surprise bill when provided by an out-of-network provider in a hospital or ambulatory surgical center: emergency medicine, anesthesia, pathology, radiology, laboratory, neonatology, assistant surgeon, hospitalist, or intensivist services.
If your health care services were before January 1, 2022, you are only protected from a surprise bill if you were treated by an out-of-network physician (and not other health care providers) at an in-network hospital or ambulatory surgical center.
It’s a Surprise Bill When Your In-Network Doctor Refers You to an Out-of-Network Provider if:
If You Get a Surprise Bill Because An Out-of-Network Provider Treats You At An In-Network Hospital Or Ambulatory Surgical Center OR Your Doctor Refers You To An Out-of-Network Provider:
The Federal No Surprises Act protections from surprise medical bills from an out-of-network provider in an in-network hospital or ambulatory surgical center apply if your employer or union self-funds your coverage for plans issued or renewed on and after January 1, 2022.
You are only responsible for paying your in-network cost-sharing (copayment, coinsurance, or deductible) for a surprise bill.
For more information about the Federal consumer protections, visit the CMS No Surprises Act website.
For plans issued or renewed before January 1, 2022, you may qualify for an independent dispute resolution (IDR) through New York State by submitting an IDR application to dispute the bill. To be eligible, services must be provided by a doctor at a hospital or ambulatory surgical center and you aren’t given all the required information about your care. See Information Your Doctor and Other Health Care Professionals Must Give You and Information Your Hospital Must Give You for a list of the information that must be provided to you.
Application
Complete an IDR Patient Application and send it to NYS Department of Financial Services, Consumer Assistance Unit/IDR Process, One Commerce Plaza, Albany, NY 12257.
If you are uninsured, or you are insured but you don’t plan to file a claim with your health plan, health care providers must give you a good faith estimate of what their expected charges will be before you get health care services.
Providers must give you the good faith estimate:
The good faith estimate will include:
For more information about good faith estimates, visit the CMS No Surprises Act website.
If you are billed for an amount that is at least $400 more than the amount on the good faith estimate you got from your health care provider, you (or your authorized representative) may dispute the charges in the Federal patient-provider dispute resolution process. You have to ask for the review within 120 days of getting the bill. An independent reviewer will look at the good faith estimate, the bill, and information from the provider to decide the amount, if any, that you have to pay for each service.
You can use the Federal patient-provider dispute resolution process starting in 2022 for billing disputes with the provider that scheduled the service for you. Later, the process will allow you to dispute bills from other providers that gave you related services.
For more information about the patient-provider dispute resolution process, visit the CMS No Surprises Act website.
If your provider doesn’t give you a good faith estimate and you feel the charge is unreasonable, you may qualify for an independent dispute resolution (IDR) through New York State by submitting an IDR application to dispute the bill. To be eligible, services must be provided by a doctor at a hospital or ambulatory surgical center and you aren’t given all the required information about your care. See Information Your Doctor and Other Health Care Professionals Must Give You and Information Your Hospital Must Give You for a list of the information that must be provided to you.
Complete an IDR Patient Application and send it to NYS Department of Financial Services, Consumer Assistance Unit/IDR Process, One Commerce Plaza, Albany, NY 12257.
Your doctor and other health care professionals, including a group practice of providers, a diagnostic and treatment center, and a health center must give patients and prospective patients the following information:
Hospitals must post on their websites:
Hospitals must, in registration or admission materials that they give you before non-emergency hospital services:
You only have to pay your in-network cost-sharing (copayment, coinsurance, and deductible) for bills for out-of-network emergency services in a hospital.
The Federal No Surprises Act protections for bills for out-of-network emergency services apply if your employer or union self-funds your coverage for plans issued or renewed on and after January 1, 2022. This includes inpatient care following emergency room treatment (post-stabilization services).
You are only responsible for paying your in-network cost-sharing (copayment, coinsurance, or deductible) for emergency services.
For more information about the Federal consumer protections, visit the CMS No Surprises Act website.
For plans issued before January 1, 2022, you may qualify for an independent dispute resolution (IDR) through New York State by submitting an IDR application to dispute the bill. You will have to pay the fee for the IDR (up to $395) if your provider’s bill is upheld unless your household income is below 250% of the Federal Poverty Level. Complete an IDR Patient Application and send it to NYS Department of Financial Services, Consumer Assistance Unit/IDR Process, One Commerce Plaza, Albany, NY 12257.
If you are uninsured, you may file a dispute through the New York State independent dispute resolution (IDR) process if you receive a bill for emergency services in New York that you believe is excessive. You will have to pay the fee for the IDR (up to $395) if your provider’s bill is upheld unless your household income is below 250% of the Federal Poverty Level.
Complete an IDR Patient Application and send it to NYS Department of Financial Services, Consumer Assistance Unit/IDR Process, One Commerce Plaza, Albany, NY 12257.
You may only bill your patient for their in-network cost-sharing (copayment, coinsurance, or deductible) for a Surprise Bill in a Hospital or Ambulatory Surgical Center or for a Surprise Bill When Your Patient Received A Referral. Health plans must pay out-of-network providers directly for a surprise bill.
A Bill For Services In a Hospital or Ambulatory Surgical Center is a Surprise Bill If:
(*If health care services were before January 1, 2022, the surprise bill protections only apply to the services of out-of-network physicians (and not other health care providers) at an in-network hospital or ambulatory surgical center.)
A Bill For Services Referred By An In-Network Doctor To An Out-of-Network Provider Is A Surprise Bill If:
Surprise Bill Certification Form. An out-of-network provider may ask their patient to sign a Surprise Bill Certification Form at the time that services are provided. An out-of-network provider must send a copy to the patient’s health plan. For services at an in-network hospital or ambulatory surgical center, an out-of-network provider can sign the Surprise Bill Certification Form and send it to the health plan with the claim for dates of service on and after January 1, 2022.
Disclosure of Balance Billing Protections. Providers must make publicly available (post in the provider’s public location), post on their public websites, and provide to patients, a one-page notice in clear and understandable language containing information on:
Model Disclosure Form. Department of Financial Services has a model disclosure form that providers can use that will satisfy these disclosure requirements.
Providers or insurers submitting a dispute involving a surprise bill or bill for emergency services for an insured patient must log onto the DFS portal to obtain a case number.
If it is your first time using the DFS Portal you will need to create a Portal account, then use the Ask for Apps tab to request access to NY IDR. Once you submit the IDR, you will receive an IDR case number:
Once you have the case number:
If your patient is uninsured, a bill will be a surprise bill if: Services are provided by a doctor at a hospital or ambulatory surgical center and the patient is not given all the required information about their care. See Information Your Doctor and Other Health Care Professionals Must Give You and Information Your Hospital Must Give You for a list of the information that must be provided to patients. In such cases, your patient may dispute the amount of the bill through the New York State independent dispute resolution process.
The Federal No Surprises Act protections from surprise medical bills from an out-of-network provider in an in-network hospital or ambulatory surgical center apply if your patient has employer or union self-funded coverage for plans issued or renewed on and after January 1, 2022. Your patient is only responsible for paying their in-network cost-sharing (copayment, coinsurance, or deductible) for a surprise bill.
For more information about the Federal IDR process for surprise bills visit the CMS No Surprises Act website.
For plans issued or renewed before January 1, 2022, your patient may qualify for an independent dispute resolution (IDR) through New York State by submitting an IDR application to dispute the bill. A bill will be a surprise bill if services are provided by a doctor at a hospital or ambulatory surgical center and the patient is not given all the required information about their care. See Information Your Doctor and Other Health Care Professionals Must Give You and Information Your Hospital Must Give You for a list of the information that must be provided to patients.
When You Bill A Patient. If you are an out-of-network provider that provided emergency services in a hospital, including inpatient services that follow an emergency room visit, you are prohibited from billing a patient for any amount over their in-network cost-sharing (copayment, coinsurance, or deductible).
Payment for emergency services. Health plans are required to pay out-of-network providers directly for emergency services.
Independent Dispute Resolution (IDR). Health care providers (including hospitals) that are not in a health plan’s network may dispute the amount they are paid by the health plan for emergency services in a hospital, including payment for inpatient services that follow an emergency room visit, through the New York State independent dispute resolution process.
Providers or insurers submitting a dispute involving a surprise bill or bill for emergency services for an insured patient must log onto the DFS portal to obtain a case number.
If it is your first time using the DFS Portal you will need to create a Portal account, then use the Ask for Apps tab to request access to NY IDR. Once you submit the IDR, you will receive an IDR case number:
Once you have the case number:
The Federal No Surprises Act protections from bills for emergency services apply if your patient has employer or union self-funded coverage for plans issued on and after January 1, 2022. Your patient is only responsible for paying their in-network cost-sharing for emergency services.
For more information about the Federal IDR process for emergency services visit the CMS No Surprises Act website.
For plans issued or renewed before January 1, 2022, your patient may qualify for an independent dispute resolution (IDR) through New York State by submitting an IDR application to dispute the bill.
Your patient may dispute the amount of the bill through the New York State independent dispute resolution process.
Providers or insurers submitting a dispute involving a surprise bill or bill for emergency services for an insured patient must log onto the DFS portal to obtain a case number.
If it is your first time using the DFS Portal you will need to create a Portal account, then use the Ask for Apps tab to request access to NY IDR. Once you submit the IDR, you will receive an IDR case number:
Once you have the case number:
IDR Entity Reviews. Disputes are reviewed by independent dispute resolution entities (IDREs). Decisions will be made by a reviewer with training and experience in health care billing and reimbursement in consultation with a licensed physician in active practice in the same or similar specialty as the physician providing the service that is the subject of the dispute.
30 Day Timeframe. The IDRE will make a determination within 30 days of receipt of the dispute. Parties to the dispute must submit all necessary information with their IDR application and immediately when contacted by the IDRE, or the information will not be considered.
IDRE Determines The Fee. For disputes involving health plans, the IDRE chooses either the out-of-network provider’s bill or the health plan’s payment. For disputes submitted by uninsured patients, the IDRE determines the fee.
IDRE Considers These Factors When Making a Determination:
IDRE may direct a good faith negotiation for settlement. In cases when settlement is likely, or if the health plan's payment and the provider's fee are unreasonably far apart, the IDRE may direct the parties to negotiate.
Review is Binding. The review is binding but admissible in court.
Disputes Between a Provider and a Health Plan, Involving an Insured Patient.
Disputes involving an Uninsured Patient.
If you have questions about IDR, or need help completing an application, call (800) 342-3736 or email [email protected] . Where applicable, please indicate the date(s) of service in your inquiry as different laws and processes may apply depending on when you received the services.
For further information on how to become a certified Independent Dispute Resolution Entity (“IDRE”) please visit our IDRE information page or email [email protected] .
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