Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 6A— - PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER XXV— - REQUIREMENTS RELATING TO HEALTH INSURANCE COVERAGE › Part Part D— - Additional Coverage Provisions › § 300gg–111
Health plans and insurers must cover emergency care in hospital emergency rooms and in separate freestanding emergency departments without prior approval. You pay no more cost-sharing than you would for the same emergency care from an in-network provider. Any copays, coinsurance, or deductible payments you make for those emergency visits must count toward your in‑network deductible and out‑of‑pocket maximum. If the visit is billed by an out‑of‑network provider or facility, the plan must send an initial payment or a denial to that provider within 30 calendar days of getting the bill and then pay the provider the remaining amount the plan owes. The same protections also apply for non‑emergency items or services at a participating facility when you did not give notice and consent. The federal government (Health and Human Services, with Labor and Treasury) must make rules and audits to enforce how plans calculate the plan’s standard payment amount (“qualifying payment amount”). Those rules are due by July 1, 2021 and audits must be set up by October 1, 2021 (audits of up to 25 plans a year start in 2022). The law also creates a single independent dispute process. After a provider or plan gets an initial payment or denial, they may negotiate for 30 days. If they don’t agree, either can start the dispute process within 4 days. The parties have 3 business days to jointly pick a certified reviewer; if they don’t, the Secretary picks one within 6 business days. Each side sends an offer and evidence; the reviewer chooses one offer within 30 days of selection. The losing party generally pays the reviewer’s fees. The plan must pay the provider within 30 days after the reviewer’s decision. The law also requires quarterly public reporting (starting 2022) and that ID cards show your deductible, out‑of‑pocket maximum, and a phone number and website for help. Key terms: emergency department — hospital emergency area; independent freestanding emergency department — a separate licensed emergency facility; emergency services — screening and stabilizing care; qualifying payment amount — the plan’s standard payment method; participating/nonparticipating provider or facility — in or out of the plan’s network; recognized amount/out‑of‑network rate — amounts used to calculate payments; cost‑sharing — copays, coinsurance, deductibles.
Full Legal Text
The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 300gg–111
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73