Title 26 › Subtitle Subtitle K— - Group Health Plan Requirements › Chapter CHAPTER 100— - GROUP HEALTH PLAN REQUIREMENTS › Subchapter Subchapter B— - Other Requirements › § 9826
Requires group health plans and the companies that run their drug benefits (called pharmacy benefit managers or PBMs) to share detailed drug cost information with the plans. For plan years that start 30 months after this law was passed, any new or renewed contract must let PBMs get and report the data they need and must not block or delay that information. PBMs must give plans reports at least every 6 months (or every 3 months if the plan asks). Reports must be written plainly and be machine-readable. They must show, for drugs covered during each report period, things like a list of drugs (by code and name), what the plan paid and what pharmacies were paid, the difference between those amounts, whether a drug is brand or generic, prices (wholesale acquisition cost for brand drugs; average wholesale price for generics) per days’ supply or per unit, counts of claims and people, net price after rebates and fees, total out-of-pocket spending by enrollees, total rebates and other payments received by the plan and by the PBM, therapeutic-class summaries (gross and net spending, average net cost per 30- or 90-day supply, number of users, formulary tier info), and special details for high-spending drugs or when the PBM has an affiliated pharmacy (including pricing comparisons and how many fills go to the affiliated pharmacy). Plans must also get a summary document to help pick PBMs and a participant-facing summary with only aggregate data and a note that members can ask for specific claim-level info. Reports must follow HIPAA privacy rules and use only allowed summary health information. Plans must tell participants each year that these reports are required. The Secretary of Health must set a standard report format and final rules within 18 months and may make short-form reports for plans tied to drug makers to avoid anti-competitive behavior. Key defined terms include: applicable entity (various drug-supply or related companies), contracted compensation (ingredient cost plus dispensing fee), gross spending (before rebates), net spending (after rebates), plan sponsor, remuneration (defined by the Secretary and reviewed every 5 years), specified large employer/plan, and wholesale acquisition cost. Participants can request a plan’s participant-facing summary and the claim-level difference between what the plan paid and what the pharmacy was paid for their own claim.
Full Legal Text
Internal Revenue Code — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
26 U.S.C. § 9826
Title 26 — Internal Revenue Code
Last Updated
Apr 18, 2026
Release point: 119-83