Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 7— - SOCIAL SECURITY › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER XI— - GENERAL PROVISIONS, PEER REVIEW, AND ADMINISTRATIVE SIMPLIFICATION › Part Part A— - General Provisions › § 1320a–7h
Drug and device makers and certain group buying organizations must report every year who got money or other value from them. The first report was due March 31, 2013, and after that reports are due each year by the 90th day of the calendar year. Reports must include the recipient’s name and business address, and for doctors their specialty and National Provider Identifier; the amount and dates of the payment; the form (for example cash, in-kind items, stock, or other); the reason or nature of the payment (for example consulting, food, travel, research, grant, gift, royalty, or speaker fees); the name of any related drug, device, biological, or supply; and any other information the Secretary requires. Companies must also report physician ownership or investment interests (except ordinary public stocks and mutual funds), showing how much the physician invested, the value and terms, and any payments tied to that interest. If a payment is made to a third party at the request of a covered recipient, it must be reported under the recipient’s name. The Secretary had to set up electronic filing and a public website by October 1, 2011, with the public site posting data by September 30, 2013 and then on June 30 each year after that. The site must be searchable, downloadable, and give consumers helpful context, and it must not show physicians’ National Provider Identifiers before January 1, 2022. The Secretary must also send an annual report to Congress by April 1 each year starting in 2013 and to States by September 30, 2013 and each June 30 after that. Companies that miss reporting face civil money penalties: $1,000–$10,000 per unreported item (total capped at $150,000 per annual report), and if the failure was knowing the penalty is $10,000–$100,000 per item (total capped at $1,000,000). Collected penalties fund this program. Certain small or routine things do not have to be reported, for example transfers under $10 unless the yearly total to that person exceeds $100, patient-only items, free patient samples, patient education materials, short-term device loans (90 days or less), warranty replacements, discounts or rebates, charity care in-kind items, dividends from public securities, employee health-plan payments, and a few other narrow exceptions. Definitions: “applicable manufacturer” means a maker of covered drugs, devices, biologics, or supplies; “applicable group purchasing organization” means a U.S. group buying organization for covered products; “covered recipient” means the listed health professionals and teaching hospitals (with some employee exceptions); “payment or other transfer of value” means any transfer of value; and “physician” has the usual statutory meaning.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 1320a–7h
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73