Improving Seniors’ Timely Access to Care Act of 2025
Summary
What This Bill Does
The Improving Seniors' Timely Access to Care Act of 2025 adds Medicare Advantage prior-authorization requirements to Social Security Act section 1852. Beginning with plan years starting January 1, 2027, plans must meet transparency requirements. They must annually report every item and service subject to prior authorization, approval and denial counts and percentages by item and service, denied requests that are appealed, appeal outcomes by level including judicial review, decisions made through decision-support technology, artificial intelligence, machine learning, clinical decision technology, or other specified technology, average and median decision times, excluded incomplete requests, instances where a provider needed a different or additional service during an approved procedure, descriptions of decision technologies, prior-authorization grievances, and other CMS-specified information. Plans must give contracting providers policy and procedure information, give contracted providers criteria and documentation requirements, and give enrollees criteria on request. CMS must publish plan-level data, MedPAC must report to Congress within three years, and CMS must report biennially for up to 10 years. Beginning with plan years starting January 1, 2028, plans must establish a standards-based electronic prior authorization program; fax, nonstandard proprietary portals, and simple electronic forms do not count. Plans must also meet enrollee protection standards developed with enrollee, provider, and supplier input, allow waiver or modification of prior authorization based on provider performance, and annually review items and services subject to prior authorization. GAO must evaluate implementation by January 1, 2032. CMS and ONC must define real-time decision, publish a process for real-time decisions for routinely approved items and services, and analyze effects on access, provider and plan operations, rural and low-income disparities, and automated or AI-only decisions.
Who Benefits and How
Medicare Advantage enrollees benefit from faster, more transparent prior authorization and access to criteria on request. Physicians and suppliers benefit from standards-based electronic requests, criteria access, and potential waivers for good prior-authorization performance. Rural and low-income beneficiaries benefit if real-time decision analysis reduces access disparities. Health IT vendors benefit from demand for standards-compliant prior authorization exchange tools.
Who Bears the Burden and How
Medicare Advantage plans must build electronic prior authorization, report detailed plan-level data, disclose AI use, and review prior-authorization lists annually. CMS staff must write rules, publish data, enforce transparency, and submit recurring reports. MedPAC must analyze prior authorization data and recommend improvements. GAO and ONC must complete implementation and real-time-decision reports.
Key Provisions
- Requires Medicare Advantage prior-authorization transparency reporting beginning in plan year 2027.
- Requires standards-based electronic prior authorization beginning in plan year 2028.
- Requires reporting on approvals, denials, appeals, overturns, timing, grievances, AI use, and intra-procedure changes.
- Requires plans to disclose criteria and documentation rules to providers and, on request, enrollees.
- Creates enrollee protection standards, provider-performance waivers, and annual prior-authorization reviews.
- Requires CMS publication, MedPAC analysis, GAO implementation review, and CMS-ONC real-time-decision analysis.
Evidence Chain:
This summary is generated from the full bill text using AI analysis. Expand "Detailed Analysis" below for identified beneficiaries/burden bearers with clause-level evidence links.
At a Glance
What This Bill Does
Requires Medicare Advantage plans with prior authorization to report detailed transparency data starting in plan year 2027, implement standards-based electronic prior authorization and enrollee protection standards starting in 2028, disclose AI and decision-support use, publish plan-level data, support real-time decisions for routinely approved items and services, and face CMS, MedPAC, GAO, and congressional reporting oversight.
Key Policy Areas
Medicare Advantage, Health Care, Prior Authorization, Health IT
Primary Purpose
Requires Medicare Advantage plans with prior authorization to report detailed transparency data starting in plan year 2027, implement standards-based electronic prior authorization and enrollee protection standards starting in 2028, disclose AI and decision-support use, publish plan-level data, support real-time decisions for routinely approved items and services, and face CMS, MedPAC, GAO, and congressional reporting oversight.
Policy Domains
Resolution provisions
Identified Gains
- Medicare Advantage enrollees
- Physicians
- Medical suppliers
- Rural beneficiaries
- Health IT vendors
Identified Costs
- Medicare Advantage plans
- CMS prior-authorization staff
- MedPAC
- GAO
- ONC
Sponsors
Legislative Progress
In CommitteeMr. Kelly of Pennsylvania (for himself, Ms. DelBene, Mr. Joyce …
Referred to the Committee on Ways and Means, and in …
Introduced in House
Stakeholder Effects
cui bono?How this legislation distributes effects. Mention counts reflect frequency, not effect magnitude.
Bill Structure & Actor Mappings
Who is "The Secretary" in each section?
We use a combination of our own taxonomy and classification in addition to large language models to assess meaning and potential beneficiaries. High confidence means strong textual evidence. Always verify with the original bill text.
Learn more about our methodology