About Independent Dispute Resolution

The No Surprises Act created new protections against out-of-network balance billing and established a new process called independent dispute resolution (IDR), which is managed by the Department of Health and Human Services, the Department of Labor, and the Department of the Treasury (the Departments).

Providers (including air ambulance providers), facilities, and health plans can use the process to determine the payment rates for certain out-of-network charges.

When a provider or facility gets a payment denial notice or an initial payment from a health plan for certain out-of-network services, the health plan, provider, or facility must start an open negotiation period that lasts 30 business days. At the end of the negotiation period, if the health plan and provider or facility have not agreed on a payment amount, either party can begin the IDR process.

The Federal IDR process

In the Federal IDR process:

Note: A dispute cannot be initiated until the required 30-business-day open negotiation period has ended, and must be initiated within 4 business days after the open negotiation period has ended, except when extensions are made by the Departments. See the Notices page for information about any current extensions.

Have the following information ready: