Title 25 › Chapter CHAPTER 18— - INDIAN HEALTH CARE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III–A— - ACCESS TO HEALTH SERVICES › § 1641
Payments that Indian health programs or urban Indian organizations get from Medicare (Title XVIII), Medicaid (Title XIX), or CHIP (Title XXI) for care given to eligible Indians must not be counted when deciding how much money Congress gives for Indian health care. The Secretary cannot give care to an Indian with those coverages instead of an Indian who does not have them. Money that Indian Health Service (IHS) facilities get from Medicare or Medicaid must go into a special federal fund. The Secretary must make sure each IHS area gets 100 percent of what its facilities are owed. Those funds must first be used, as Congress allows, to fix things so the facilities meet Medicare/Medicaid rules. Extra money, after talking with the tribes served, is to help fill health resource gaps for those tribes. A tribal health program can choose to bill and get payments directly. If it does, it must use the payments to improve facilities, keep meeting program rules, and provide more health care and related services. Direct payments are subject to audits, the tribe must give the IHS its billing IDs, and the Secretary and CMS must help set up billing rules and state agreements. A tribe can stop direct billing and return billing control to the Secretary, and the Secretary can end a tribe’s direct-billing option if the tribe fails to follow the rules after notice and a chance to fix the problems.
Full Legal Text
Indians — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
25 U.S.C. § 1641
Title 25 — Indians
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73