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Hospitals and large health systems across the U.S. are raising concerns over a new telehealth billing mandate released in the 2026 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule Final Rule. The requirement demands detailed location reporting for all telehealth practitioners, including home addresses for clinicians who conduct virtual visits remotely.
Many organizations warn that this will dramatically increase administrative workload, compliance risk, and annual operating costs. One major U.S. health system told national associations it expects over $1 million per year in added administrative expense just to stay compliant.
> Rising Telehealth Billing Roadblocks
The biggest operational hurdle comes from CMS requiring each telehealth location to be listed, enrolled, and verified for billing. This includes every location a provider uses, office, satellite clinics, and now their own home address if working remotely.
Key challenges emerging across U.S. health systems:
〉Hundreds of individual addresses must be verified and maintained
〉Additional enrollment requests for each unique “practice location.”
〉Rising administrative costs for compliance and ongoing monitoring
〉Growing privacy concerns among physicians required to list their home address
Hospitals report that the complexity and risk of error are pushing many to consider bringing remote telehealth staff back on-site.
> Operational Strain Across Health Systems
The mandate is creating a sharp increase in administrative workload for billing and credentialing teams. Each telehealth practitioner may have multiple billing locations that must be logged, verified, and kept continuously updated.
Key operational pressures include:
〉Significant staff time spent updating PECOS and enrollment files
〉Intensive QA to ensure addresses match provider workflows
〉Increased compliance steps for providers working part-time at home
〉New internal procedures to validate “everywhere a provider practices.”
Some hospitals estimate hundreds of new location records must be processed annually.
> Financial Pressures on Hospitals & Clinics
For health systems that rely heavily on virtual care, especially blended in-person + home-based models, the financial impact is substantial.
Immediate cost pressures include:
〉Enrollment maintenance costs for dozens or hundreds of billing sites
〉Internal auditing expenses
〉Potential underpayments or claim denials if a provider location is omitted
〉Additional staffing requirements for compliance and RCM teams
One hospital’s estimate of $1M per year underscores how resource-intensive these new rules may become for large U.S. systems.
> Critical Documentation Requirements to Watch
The mandate adds several required documentation elements for telehealth billing that must be consistently captured:
〉Exact location of the provider (including home address when applicable)
〉Verification of every practice location listed in enrollment
〉Assurance that remote locations meet CMS standards
〉Compliance with privacy and security requirements for home addresses
Billing teams must build strong audit trails now to avoid reprocessing later.
> Immediate Action Steps for RCM Leaders
Until CMS clarifies several components of the rule, a proactive preparation strategy is essential.
Recommended short-term steps:
〉Identify all practitioners delivering telehealth from home
〉Create a centralized log of all provider locations
〉Review PECOS and enrollment for potential address gaps
〉Coordinate with credentialing to avoid duplicative submissions
〉Begin internal readiness planning for January 1, 2026
Many associations expect additional CMS guidance, but preparation cannot wait.
> Regulatory Updates to Expect in 2026
CMS has stated that home addresses will be suppressed on claims for privacy purposes, but hospitals argue the risk remains. Telehealth associations are urging CMS to revisit or simplify the mandate.
What clinics and hospitals should anticipate:
〉Retroactive updates or clarifications from CMS
〉Possible exceptions for full-time remote telehealth providers
〉New billing/editing rules for multi-location practitioners
〉Additional changes tied to Medicare telehealth flexibilities ending December 31, 2025
Operational adaptability will be critical through early 2026.
> How The Mandate Impacts Patients
While these changes are administrative, downstream patient effects are likely.
Delays in telehealth billing or location verification can lead to:
〉Slower claim processing
〉Unexpected patient statements
〉Extended wait times for telehealth scheduling
〉Confusion regarding coverage or visit eligibility
Clear communication will be important for maintaining patient trust, particularly for behavioral health and chronic care patients who depend on telehealth continuity.
> What Practices Should Prepare For in Early 2026
If CMS follows its historical pattern, further clarification may arrive during Q1 2026. Billing leaders should prepare for potential updates that affect:
〉Virtual care location requirements
〉Home address privacy protections
〉Place-of-service and modifier updates
〉Enrollment protocols for part-time vs. full-time telehealth providers
The transition could require rapid adjustments across credentialing, billing, and compliance teams.
> Strategic RCM Adjustments for Telehealth Compliance
As regulations tighten, RCM leaders should prioritize:
〉Strengthening QA verification for telehealth encounters
〉Aligning billing, enrollment, and credentialing workflows
〉Monitoring payer-by-payer changes closely
〉Training clinicians on documentation expectations
〉Centralizing location tracking to streamline compliance
A strong internal structure will reduce reprocessing, avoid denials, and protect revenue.
> Provider Readiness & Education
Keeping providers informed now will prevent future billing errors.
Key reminders for clinicians:
〉Document their physical location during telehealth
〉Ensure home-based telehealth setup meets compliance expectations
〉Update credentialing/billing teams immediately if location changes
〉Follow standardized telehealth documentation checklists
Proactive training will significantly reduce AR delays after January 1, 2026.
Contact us today at info@evocarebillings.com or call (323) 412-5399 to explore how we can help your practice grow with smarter, more efficient billing solutions.
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