Prior authorization is required by health insurance providers to check that a certain medical service or medication meets set rules for coverage. While PA helps control costs and protect patient safety by avoiding treatments that are not needed, the process has usually been manual, hard, and slow.
According to the 2024 CAQH Index Report, healthcare providers spend about 24 minutes processing manual prior authorization requests. Even when some steps use health plan websites, this time goes down to about 16 minutes per request. These manual tasks include phone calls, faxing, emails, and logging into many different systems. The cost per PA request is around $3.41 when done manually but drops to just $0.05 with automation—more than 98% less.
These slow methods can cause big delays in patient care, sometimes lasting days or weeks, and cause stress for providers and patients. Providers say that doing a lot of PA work takes time away from seeing patients. A JAMA study found that 88% of doctors feel stressed by the paperwork related to prior authorization.
In January 2024, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) made the Interoperability and Prior Authorization Final Rule (CMS-0057-F). This rule aims to modernize PA. It sets clear rules for faster decisions, more openness, and better data sharing between patients, providers, and payers.
Starting in 2026, health plans under CMS rules—including Medicare Advantage, Medicaid, CHIP, and Qualified Health Plans on Federal Exchanges—must:
To give enough time for technical updates and workflow changes, CMS delayed the deadline for Patient Access and Provider Access API rules to January 1, 2027. This allows healthcare groups to use either FHIR-only or a mix of FHIR and the older X12 278 system without penalties under HIPAA rules.
CMS Administrator Chiquita Brooks-LaSure said that letting health data “flow freely and securely” will help improve health results and the healthcare experience. Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra said reducing wait times from prior authorization delays will help patients get care faster.
Besides government rules, important healthcare groups are working together to lessen prior authorization problems. The American Hospital Association, American Medical Association, America’s Health Insurance Plans, American Pharmacists Association, Blue Cross Blue Shield Association, and Medical Group Management Association have joined forces to improve openness, lower unnecessary PA requests, and keep care continuous.
They want to reach these goals by 2026-2027:
AMA President Dr. Bobby Mukkamala said prior authorization is “costly, inefficient, unclear, and often risky for patients.” He said the AMA supports reforms that keep medical decisions between patients and doctors.
These teamwork efforts respond to the complex paperwork that overwhelms providers and causes patient care delays. Cutting down unneeded PA requests and standardizing electronic methods will help providers give treatments on time and reduce work hours spent on forms.
A big problem with prior authorization has been old manual systems like fax machines and call centers where waits last 20 to 30 minutes. Providers often use many payer portals that need typing the same data again and again, making mistakes and delays more likely.
The CMS final rule supports linking prior authorization with providers’ Electronic Health Records (EHR) and practice management systems. This link has several benefits:
Switching to EHR-linked prior authorization can save providers about 14 minutes per request. This lowers administrative work and helps clinicians spend more time with patients.
The 2023 CAQH Index Report estimates that fully electronic PA processes could save the healthcare industry about $494 million each year. Yet, only 31% of providers use ePA systems now, showing room to grow.
Standards like FHIR® and projects like the Da Vinci Project help make smooth data exchange between EHRs and payer systems. Technology firms such as HealthAxis support working together to adopt these tools, improving both efficiency and patient experience while controlling costs.
Artificial intelligence (AI) and automation tools are helping improve prior authorization work. Smart systems handle large data, make rule-based decisions, and reduce manual work.
Key features of AI in prior authorization include:
This technology helps meet CMS rules for Health Level Seven Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR) APIs, which ensure data flows well and on time between payers and providers.
Organizations that invest in smart AI and workflow tools will see smoother work, lower admin costs, and faster patient care approvals. This helps medical practices adjust to new rules more easily.
Making prior authorization easier helps not just providers and payers but also patients by improving care quality and speed. By cutting paperwork and speeding up approvals, patients get treatments sooner, which can improve health and satisfaction.
Key benefits of better PA processes include:
Both government and healthcare leaders agree that fixing prior authorization problems is important for a better healthcare system in the U.S.
People who manage healthcare operations need to know about and adjust to these changes in prior authorization. CMS’s new rules and industry efforts show a move to automation, electronic processes, and AI use—all made to simplify work and cut admin tasks.
Healthcare groups should focus on:
The goal is a system where providers, payers, and patients share information easily, make decisions faster, and avoid the old frustrations related to prior authorization.
By taking advantage of these changes, medical practice administrators, owners, and IT managers can help make prior authorization a smoother step. This lets providers focus more on giving good patient care in the United States healthcare system.
The CMS Interoperability and Prior Authorization Final Rule aims to make prior authorizations faster, easier, and more efficient while saving $15 billion over 10 years by streamlining processes for patients, physicians, and payers.
The rule impacts Medicare Advantage organizations, Medicaid and CHIP fee-for-service programs, Medicaid and CHIP managed care plans, and issuers of Qualified Health Plans on Federally-Facilitated Exchanges.
Payers must send decisions within 72 hours for expedited, urgent requests and within one week for standard, non-urgent requests starting in 2026.
Payers are required to provide a specific reason for denying prior authorization requests to facilitate easier resubmissions or appeals.
CMS mandates implementation of a Health Level 7 (HL7) Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR) Prior Authorization API to automate and streamline the end-to-end prior authorization process.
HHS will exercise enforcement discretion allowing covered entities to use a FHIR-only or FHIR plus X12 278 combination API without penalty, providing flexibility in meeting the CMS interoperability requirements.
The compliance deadline for expanded Patient Access APIs and Provider Access APIs to include prior authorization data is delayed to January 1, 2027.
Payers must provide patient claims, encounters, clinical, and prior authorization data via APIs with patient consent, enabling better data exchange among providers and payers.
By speeding up decision times, increasing transparency on denials, and enabling secure, interoperable data exchange, the rule aims to reduce patient wait times and administrative barriers.
CMS intends to break down barriers for providers, enhance data flow between patients, providers, and payers, and promote efficiency to improve health outcomes and the overall healthcare experience.