🕒 The Big Shift is Coming
📋 Why This Change Matters
⚠️ What Will Require Prior Authorization?
🧠 Full list expected to be published in CMS documentation closer to Q4 2025.
🏥 Who Will Be Impacted?
✅ Providers in WISeR States (NJ, OH, OK, TX, AZ, WA):
❌ Providers Outside WISeR States:
🧮 What This Means for Your Revenue
Let’s be honest — prior authorization slows things down.
This pilot may seem limited, but it’s a policy shift that will likely expand in future years. That’s why smart providers — even outside the pilot states — are already preparing.
🔍 Why Is CMS Doing This?
CMS stated the goal is to “reduce wasteful and inappropriate care while preserving access to medically necessary services.”
But let’s be clear:
The real reason is cost control.
Between fraud, overuse, and inaccurate billing, Medicare loses billions each year. CMS wants to use prior auth as a filter — ensuring services are justified before dollars go out the door.
👀 What Should You Do Now?
Whether you’re in a WISeR state or not — the time to observe, learn, and prepare is now:
💼 Why This Isn’t Just a WISeR State Problem
Sure, the pilot is limited — but CMS is testing the waters. If it works, expect a nationwide rollout in 2–3 years. That means:
🔧 How Confair Helps You Stay Ahead
At Confair, we know how fast the rules change — and how slow practices often are to respond. That’s where we step in.
Here’s how we help:
🧲 Final Takeaway
This is not just a policy experiment. It’s a signal.
Medicare is no longer giving a free pass on high-cost services. Prior auth is coming — and your revenue depends on how well you adapt.
If you’re in a pilot state — call us today.
If you’re not — still call us. Because 2026 is just the beginning.
