Title 10 › Subtitle Subtitle A— General Military Law › Part II— PERSONNEL › Chapter 55— MEDICAL AND DENTAL CARE › § 1075
The Secretary of Defense must set up a new TRICARE option called TRICARE Select by January 1, 2018. TRICARE Select must be offered everywhere and lets eligible people choose any provider without limits. People who want TRICARE Select must enroll. There are three main groups for who can enroll: active-duty family members, retirees, and reserve/young adult beneficiaries. How much people pay depends on which group they are and when the service member first enlisted. For those whose service began on or after January 1, 2018, the law sets a 2018 price table for enrollment, deductibles, copays, and a yearly out-of-pocket cap; those amounts are adjusted each year based on retired pay increases. Key 2018 amounts in that table include annual enrollment of $0 for active-duty family members and $450 (individual) / $900 (family) for retirees, and annual catastrophic caps of $1,000 for active-duty families and $3,500 for retirees. For people who joined before January 1, 2018, the Secretary generally treats cost sharing as if the old TRICARE Extra or Standard still applied, except the Secretary may set an enrollment fee of $150 (individual) / $300 (family) for certain retirees after a required review; when first set, the catastrophic cap for those retirees is set to $3,500. Some specific retirees and survivors are exempt from that fee. TRICARE for Life stays available and keeps its own cost rules. Network providers must file claims and accept set rates; contraceptive services and related care from network providers cost $0. The Secretary can waive cost sharing for the first three outpatient mental-health visits each year for certain beneficiaries for a limited time and can set up multiple provider networks and assign people to a particular network. The Comptroller General had to report to Congress by February 1, 2020 on changes in coverage, access to appointments, how many network providers take new patients, and beneficiary satisfaction. Definitions in the law: active-duty family member (dependents of active-duty members), retired (eligible retirees covered by law), reserve and young adult (other reserve-related beneficiaries), network (civilian providers under contract at pre-negotiated rates), out-of-network (civilian providers not under such contract).
Full Legal Text
Armed Forces — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
10 U.S.C. § 1075
Title 10 — Armed Forces
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60