Regulations last checked for updates: Nov 22, 2024
Title 45 - Public Welfare last revised: Nov 19, 2024
§ 158.110 - Reporting requirements related to premiums and expenditures.
(a) General requirements. For each MLR reporting year, an issuer must submit to the Secretary a report which complies with the requirements of this part, concerning premium revenue and expenses related to the group and individual health insurance coverage that it issued. Reporting requirements of this part that apply to expenses incurred directly by the issuer also apply to expenses for functions outsourced to or services provided by other entities retained by the issuer.
(b) Timing and form of report. The report for each of the 2011, 2012, and 2013 MLR reporting years must be submitted to the Secretary by June 1 of the year following the end of an MLR reporting year, on a form and in the manner prescribed by the Secretary. Beginning with the 2014 MLR reporting year, the report for each MLR reporting year must be submitted to the Secretary by July 31 of the year following the end of an MLR reporting year, on a form and in the manner prescribed by the Secretary.
(c) Transfer of Business. Issuers that purchase a line or block of business from another issuer during an MLR reporting year are responsible for submitting the information and reports required by this part for the assumed business, including for that part of the MLR reporting year that was prior to the purchase.
[75 FR 74921, Dec. 1, 2010, as amended at 76 FR 76592, Dec. 7, 2011; 78 FR 15539, Mar. 11, 2013; 85 FR 29262, May 14, 2020]
§ 158.120 - Aggregate reporting.
(a) General requirements. For purposes of submitting the report required in § 158.110 of this subpart, the issuer must submit a report for each State in which it is licensed to issue health insurance coverage that includes the experience of all policies issued in the State during the MLR reporting year covered by the report. The report must aggregate data for each entity licensed within a State, aggregated separately for the large group market, the small group market and the individual market. Experience with respect to each policy must be included on the report submitted with respect to the State where the contract was issued, except as specified in § 158.120(d) of this subpart.
(b) Group Health Insurance Coverage in Multiple States. Group coverage issued by a single issuer that covers employees in multiple States must be attributed to the applicable State based on the situs of the contract. Group coverage issued by multiple affiliated issuers that covers employees in multiple States must be attributed by each issuer to each State based on the situs of the contract.
(c) Group Health Insurance Coverage With Dual Contracts. Where a group health plan involves health insurance coverage obtained from two affiliated issuers, one providing in-network coverage only and the second providing out-of-network coverage only, solely for the purpose of providing a group health plan that offers both in-network and out-of-network benefits, experience may be treated as if it were all related to the contract provided by the in-network issuer. However, if the issuer chooses this method of aggregation, it must apply it for a minimum of 3 MLR reporting years.
(d) Exceptions. (1) For individual market business sold through an association or trust, the experience of the issuer must be included in the State report for the issue State of the certificate of coverage.
(2) For employer business issued through a group trust or multiple employer welfare association (MEWA), the experience of the issuer must be included in the State report for the State where the employer (if sold through a trust) or the MEWA (if the MEWA is the policyholder) has its principal place of business.
(3) An issuer with policies that have a total annual limit of $250,000 or less must report the experience from such policies separately from other policies.
(4) An issuer with group policies that provide coverage to employees, substantially all of whom are: Working outside their country of citizenship; working outside of their country of citizenship and outside the employer's country of domicile; or non-U.S. citizens working in their home country, must aggregate and report the experience from these policies on a national basis, separately for the large group market and small group market, and separately from other policies.
(5) An issuer in the student market must aggregate and report the experience from these policies on a national basis, separately from other policies.
[75 FR 74921, Dec. 1, 2010, as amended at 75 FR 82278, Dec. 30, 2010; 76 FR 76592, Dec. 7, 2011; 77 FR 16469, Mar. 21, 2012; 77 FR 28790, May 16, 2012]
§ 158.121 - Newer experience.
If, for any aggregation as defined in § 158.120, 50 percent or more of the total earned premium for an MLR reporting year is attributable to policies newly issued in that MLR reporting year, then the experience of these policies may be excluded from the report required under § 158.110 for that same MLR reporting year. If an issuer chooses to defer reporting of newer business as provided in this section, then the excluded experience must be added to the experience reported in the following MLR reporting year.
[81 FR 94183, Dec. 22, 2016]
§ 158.130 - Premium revenue.
(a) General requirements. An issuer must report to the Secretary earned premium for each MLR reporting year. Earned premium means all monies paid by a policyholder or subscriber as a condition of receiving coverage from the issuer, including any fees or other contributions associated with the health plan.
(1) Earned premium is to be reported on a direct basis except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section.
(2) All earned premium for policies issued by one issuer and later assumed by another issuer must be reported by the assuming issuer for the entire MLR reporting year during which the policies were assumed and no earned premium for that MLR reporting year must be reported by the ceding issuer.
(3) Reinsured earned premium for a block of business that was subject to indemnity reinsurance and administrative agreements effective prior to March 23, 2010, for which the assuming entity is responsible for 100 percent of the ceding entity's financial risk and takes on all of the administration of the block, must be reported by the assuming issuer and must not be reported by the ceding issuer.
(b) Adjustments. Earned premium must include adjustments to:
(1) Account for assessments paid to or subsidies received from Federal and State high risk pools.
(2) Account for portions of premiums associated with group conversion charges.
(3) Account for any experience rating refunds incurred, excluding any rebate paid based upon an issuer's MLR.
(4) Account for unearned premium.
(5) Account for the net payments or receipts related to the risk adjustment, risk corridors (using an adjustment percentage, as described in § 153.500 of this subchapter, equal to zero percent), and reinsurance programs under sections 1341, 1342, and 1343 of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, 42 U.S.C. 18061,18062,18063.
[75 FR 74921, Dec. 1, 2010, as amended at 77 FR 28790, May 16, 2012; 78 FR 15539, Mar. 11, 2013; 79 FR 13842, Mar. 11, 2014]
§ 158.140 - Reimbursement for clinical services provided to enrollees.
(a) General requirements. The report required in § 158.110 must include direct claims paid to or received by providers, including under capitation contracts with physicians, whose services are covered by the policy for clinical services or supplies covered by the policy. In addition, the report must include claim reserves associated with claims incurred during the MLR reporting year, the change in contract reserves, reserves for contingent benefits and the medical claim portion of lawsuits, and any incurred experience rating refunds. Reimbursement for clinical services, as defined in this section, is referred to as “incurred claims.” All components of and adjustments to incurred claims, with the exception of contract reserves, must be calculated based on claims incurred only during the MLR reporting year and paid through March 31st of the following year. Contract reserves must be calculated as of December 31st of the applicable year.
(1) If there are any group conversion charges for a health plan, the conversion charges must be subtracted from the incurred claims for the aggregation that includes the conversion policies and this same amount must be added to the incurred claims for the aggregation that provides coverage that is intended to be replaced by the conversion policies. If an issuer transfers portions of earned premium associated with group conversion privileges between group and individual lines of business in its Annual Statement accounting, these amounts must be added to or subtracted from incurred claims.
(2) Incurred claims must include the current year's unpaid claims reserves, including claims reported in the process of adjustment, percentage withholds from payments made to contracted providers, claims that are recoverable for anticipated coordination of benefits (COB), and claim recoveries received as a result of subrogation.
(3) Incurred claims must include claims incurred but not reported based on past experience, and modified to reflect current conditions such as changes in exposure, claim frequency or severity.
(4) Incurred claims must include changes in other claims-related reserves.
(5) Incurred claims must include incurred experience rating refunds and exclude rebates paid as required by § 158.240 based upon prior MLR reporting year experience.
(b) Adjustments to incurred claims. (1) Adjustments that must be deducted from incurred claims:
(i)(A) For MLR reporting years before 2022, prescription drug rebates received by the issuer;
(B) Beginning with the 2022 MLR reporting year, prescription drug rebates and other price concessions received and retained by the issuer, and prescription drug rebates and other price concessions that are received and retained by an entity providing pharmacy benefit management services to the issuer and are associated with administering the issuer's prescription drug benefits.
(ii) Overpayment recoveries received from providers.
(iii) Cost-sharing reduction payments received by the issuer to the extent not reimbursed to the provider furnishing the item or service.
(2) Adjustments that must be included in incurred claims:
(i) Market stabilization payments or receipts by issuers that are directly tied to claims incurred and other claims based or census based assessments.
(ii) State subsidies based on a stop-loss payment methodology.
(iii) The amount of incentive and bonus payments made to providers that are tied to clearly-defined, objectively measurable, and well-documented clinical or quality improvement standards that apply to providers.
(iv) The amount of claims payments recovered through fraud reduction efforts not to exceed the amount of fraud reduction expenses.
(3) Adjustments that must not be included in incurred claims:
(i) Amounts paid to third party vendors for secondary network savings.
(ii) Amounts paid to third party vendors for network development, administrative fees, claims processing, and utilization management. For example, if an issuer contracts with a behavioral health, chiropractic network, or high technology radiology vendor, or a pharmacy benefit manager, and the vendor reimburses the provider at one amount but bills the issuer a higher amount to cover its network development, utilization management costs, and profits, then the amount that exceeds the reimbursement to the provider must not be included in incurred claims.
(iii) Amounts paid, including amounts paid to a provider, for professional or administrative services that do not represent compensation or reimbursement for covered services provided to an enrollee. For example, medical record copying costs, attorneys' fees, subrogation vendor fees, compensation to paraprofessionals, janitors, quality assurance analysts, administrative supervisors, secretaries to medical personnel and medical record clerks must not be included in incurred claims.
(iv) Amounts paid to a provider for services that do not represent reimbursement for covered services provided to an enrollee and are directly covered by a student administrative health fee.
(4) Adjustments that must be either included in or deducted from incurred claims:
(i) Payment to and from unsubsidized State programs designed to address distribution of health risks across issuers via charges to low risk issuers that are distributed to high risk issuers must be included in or deducted from incurred claims, as applicable.
(ii) Receipts related to the transitional reinsurance program and net payments or receipts related to the risk adjustment and risk corridors programs (calculated using an adjustment percentage, as described in § 153.500 of this subchapter, equal to zero percent) under sections 1341, 1342, and 1343 of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, 42 U.S.C. 18061,18062,18063.
(5) Other adjustments to incurred claims:
(i) Affiliated issuers that offer group coverage at a blended rate may choose whether to make an adjustment to each affiliate's incurred claims and activities to improve health care quality, to reflect the experience of the issuer with respect to the employer as a whole, according to an objective formula that must be defined by the issuer prior to January 1 of the MLR reporting year, so as to result in each affiliate having the same ratio of incurred claims to earned premium for that employer group for the MLR reporting year as the ratio of incurred claims to earned premium calculated for the employer group in the aggregate.
(ii) [Reserved]
[75 FR 74921, Dec. 1, 2010, as amended at 75 FR 82278, Dec. 30, 2010; 77 FR 16469, Mar. 21, 2012; 77 FR 28790, May 16, 2012; 78 FR 15539, Mar. 11, 2013; 79 FR 13842, Mar. 11, 2014; 80 FR 10876, Feb. 27, 2015; 85 FR 29262, May 14, 2020; 87 FR 27393, May 6, 2022]
§ 158.150 - Activities that improve health care quality.
(a) General requirements. The report required in § 158.110 must include expenditures directly related to activities that improve health care quality, as such activities are described in this section.
(b) Activity requirements. Activities conducted by an issuer to improve quality must meet the following requirements:
(1) The activity must be designed to:
(i) Improve health quality.
(ii) Increase the likelihood of desired health outcomes in ways that are capable of being objectively measured and of producing verifiable results and achievements.
(iii) Be directed toward individual enrollees or incurred for the benefit of specified segments of enrollees or provide health improvements to the population beyond those enrolled in coverage as long as no additional costs are incurred due to the non-enrollees.
(iv) Be grounded in evidence-based medicine, widely accepted best clinical practice, or criteria issued by recognized professional medical associations, accreditation bodies, government agencies or other nationally recognized health care quality organizations.
(2) The activity must be primarily designed to:
(i) Improve health outcomes including increasing the likelihood of desired outcomes compared to a baseline and reduce health disparities among specified populations.
(A) Examples include the direct interaction of the issuer (including those services delegated by contract for which the issuer retains ultimate responsibility under the insurance policy), providers and the enrollee or the enrollee's representative (for example, face-to-face, telephonic, web-based interactions or other means of communication) to improve health outcomes, including activities such as:
(1) Effective case management, care coordination, chronic disease management, and medication and care compliance initiatives including through the use of the medical homes model as defined in section 3502 of the Affordable Care Act.
(2) Identifying and addressing ethnic, cultural or racial disparities in effectiveness of identified best clinical practices and evidence based medicine.
(3) Quality reporting and documentation of care in non-electronic format.
(4) Health information technology to support these activities.
(5) Accreditation fees directly related to quality of care activities.
(6) Commencing with the 2012 reporting year and extending through the first reporting year in which the Secretary requires ICD-10 as the standard medical data code set, implementing ICD-10 code sets that are designed to improve quality and are adopted pursuant to the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), 42 U.S.C. 1320d-2,as,limited.3 percent of an issuer's earned premium as defined in § 158.130.
(B) [Reserved]
(ii) Prevent hospital readmissions through a comprehensive program for hospital discharge. Examples include:
(A) Comprehensive discharge planning (for example, arranging and managing transitions from one setting to another, such as hospital discharge to home or to a rehabilitation center) in order to help assure appropriate care that will, in all likelihood, avoid readmission to the hospital;
(B) Patient-centered education and counseling.
(C) Personalized post-discharge reinforcement and counseling by an appropriate health care professional.
(D) Any quality reporting and related documentation in non-electronic form for activities to prevent hospital readmission.
(E) Health information technology to support these activities.
(iii) Improve patient safety, reduce medical errors, and lower infection and mortality rates.
(A) Examples of activities primarily designed to improve patient safety, reduce medical errors, and lower infection and mortality rates include:
(1) The appropriate identification and use of best clinical practices to avoid harm.
(2) Activities to identify and encourage evidence-based medicine in addressing independently identified and documented clinical errors or safety concerns.
(3) Activities to lower the risk of facility-acquired infections.
(4) Prospective prescription drug Utilization Review aimed at identifying potential adverse drug interactions.
(5) Any quality reporting and related documentation in non-electronic form for activities that improve patient safety and reduce medical errors.
(6) Health information technology to support these activities.
(B) [Reserved]
(iv) Implement, promote, and increase wellness and health activities:
(A) Examples of activities primarily designed to implement, promote, and increase wellness and health activities, include—
(1) Wellness assessments;
(2) Wellness/lifestyle coaching programs designed to achieve specific and measurable improvements;
(3) Coaching programs designed to educate individuals on clinically effective methods for dealing with a specific chronic disease or condition;
(4) Public health education campaigns that are performed in conjunction with State or local health departments;
(5)(i) For MLR reporting years before 2021, actual rewards, incentives, bonuses, and reductions in copayments (excluding administration of such programs) that are not already reflected in premiums or claims should be allowed as a quality improvement activity for the group market to the extent permitted by section 2705 of the PHS Act;
(ii) Beginning with the 2021 MLR reporting year, actual rewards, incentives, bonuses, reductions in copayments (excluding administration of such programs) that are not already reflected in premiums or claims, to the extent permitted by section 2705 of the PHS Act;
(6) Any quality reporting and related documentation in non-electronic form for wellness and health promotion activities;
(7) Coaching or education programs and health promotion activities designed to change member behavior and conditions (for example, smoking or obesity); and
(8) Health information technology to support these activities.
(B) [Reserved]
(v) Enhance the use of health care data to improve quality, transparency, and outcomes and support meaningful use of health information technology consistent with § 158.151 of this subpart.
(c) Exclusions. Expenditures and activities that must not be included in quality improving activities are:
(1) Those that are designed primarily to control or contain costs;
(2) The pro rata share of expenses that are for lines of business or products other than those being reported, including but not limited to, those that are for or benefit self-funded plans;
(3) Those which otherwise meet the definitions for quality improvement activities but which were paid for with grant money or other funding separate from premium revenue;
(4) Those activities that can be billed or allocated by a provider for care delivery and which are, therefore, reimbursed as clinical services;
(5) Establishing or maintaining a claims adjudication system, including costs directly related to upgrades in health information technology that are designed primarily or solely to improve claims payment capabilities or to meet regulatory requirements for processing claims, including maintenance of ICD-10 code sets adopted pursuant to the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), 42 U.S.C. 1320d-2,as.
(6) That portion of the activities of health care professional hotlines that does not meet the definition of activities that improve health quality;
(7) All retrospective and concurrent utilization review;
(8) Fraud prevention activities;
(9) The cost of developing and executing provider contracts and fees associated with establishing or managing a provider network, including fees paid to a vendor for the same reason;
(10) Provider credentialing;
(11) Marketing expenses;
(12) Costs associated with calculating and administering individual enrollee or employee incentives;
(13) That portion of prospective utilization that does not meet the definition of activities that improve health quality; and
(14) Any function or activity not expressly included in paragraph (a) or (b) of this section, unless otherwise approved by and within the discretion of the Secretary, upon adequate showing by the issuer that the activity's costs support the definitions and purposes in this part or otherwise support monitoring, measuring or reporting health care quality improvement.
[75 FR 74921, Dec. 1, 2010, as amended at 76 FR 76592, Dec. 7, 2011; 77 FR 28790, May 16, 2012; 79 FR 30352, May 27, 2014; 85 FR 29262, May 14, 2020; 87 FR 27393, May 6, 2022]
§ 158.151 - Expenditures related to Health Information Technology and meaningful use requirements.
(a) General requirements. An issuer may include as activities that improve health care quality such Health Information Technology (HIT) expenses as are required to accomplish the activities allowed in § 158.150 of this subpart and that are designed for use by health plans, health care providers, or enrollees for the electronic creation, maintenance, access, or exchange of health information, as well as those consistent with Medicare and/or Medicaid meaningful use requirements, and which may in whole or in part improve quality of care, or provide the technological infrastructure to enhance current quality improvement or make new quality improvement initiatives possible by doing one or more of the following:
(1) Making incentive payments to health care providers for the adoption of certified electronic health record technologies and their “meaningful use” as defined by HHS to the extent such payments are not included in reimbursement for clinical services as defined in § 158.140 of this subpart;
(2) Implementing systems to track and verify the adoption and meaningful use of certified electronic health records technologies by health care providers, including those not eligible for Medicare and Medicaid incentive payments;
(3) Providing technical assistance to support adoption and meaningful use of certified electronic health records technologies;
(4) Monitoring, measuring, or reporting clinical effectiveness including reporting and analysis of costs related to maintaining accreditation by nationally recognized accrediting organizations such as NCQA or URAC, or costs for public reporting of quality of care, including costs specifically required to make accurate determinations of defined measures (for example, CAHPS surveys or chart review of HEDIS measures and costs for public reporting mandated or encouraged by law.
(5) Tracking whether a specific class of medical interventions or a bundle of related services leads to better patient outcomes.
(6) Advancing the ability of enrollees, providers, issuers or other systems to communicate patient centered clinical or medical information rapidly, accurately and efficiently to determine patient status, avoid harmful drug interactions or direct appropriate care, which may include electronic Health Records accessible by enrollees and appropriate providers to monitor and document an individual patient's medical history and to support care management.
(7) Reformatting, transmitting or reporting data to national or international government-based health organizations for the purposes of identifying or treating specific conditions or controlling the spread of disease.
(8) Provision of electronic health records, patient portals, and tools to facilitate patient self-management.
(b) [Reserved]
§ 158.160 - Other non-claims costs.
(a) General requirements. The report required in § 158.110 of this subpart must include non-claims costs described in paragraph (b) of this section and must provide an explanation of how premium revenue is used, other than to provide reimbursement for clinical services covered by the benefit plan, expenditures for activities that improve health care quality, and Federal and State taxes and licensing or regulatory fees as specified in this part.
(b) Non-claims costs other than taxes and regulatory fees. (1) The report required in § 158.110 of this subpart must include any expenses for administrative services that do not constitute adjustments to premium revenue as provided in § 158.130 of this subpart, reimbursement for clinical services to enrollees as defined in § 158.140 of this subpart, or expenditures on quality improvement activities as defined in §§ 158.150 and 158.151 of this subpart.
(2) Expenses for administrative services include the following:
(i) Cost-containment expenses not included as an expenditure related to an activity at § 158.150 of this subpart.
(ii) Loss adjustment expenses not classified as a cost containment expense.
(iii) Direct sales salaries, workforce salaries and benefits.
(iv) Agents and brokers fees and commissions.
(v) General and administrative expenses.
(vi) Community benefit expenditures.
(vii) Beginning with the 2022 MLR reporting year, prescription drug rebates and other price concessions that are received and retained by an entity providing pharmacy benefit management services to the issuer and are associated with administering the issuer's prescription drug benefits.
[75 FR 74921, Dec. 1, 2010, as amended at 85 FR 29262, May 14, 2020]
§ 158.161 - Reporting of Federal and State licensing and regulatory fees.
(a) Licensing and regulatory fees included. The report required in § 158.110 must include statutory assessments to defray operating expenses of any State or Federal department, transitional reinsurance contributions assessed under section 1341 of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, 42 U.S.C. 18061,and.
(b) Licensing and regulatory fees excluded. The report required in § 158.110 must include fines and penalties of regulatory authorities, and fees for examinations by any State or Federal departments other than as specified in § 158.161(a) as other non-claims costs, but not as an adjustment to premium revenue.”
[75 FR 82279, Dec. 30, 2010, as amended at 78 FR 15539, Mar. 11, 2013]
§ 158.162 - Reporting of Federal and State taxes.
(a) Federal taxes. The report required in § 158.110 of this subpart must separately report:
(1) Federal taxes excluded from premium under subpart B which include all Federal taxes and assessments allocated to health insurance coverage reported under section 2718 of the PHS Act.
(2) Federal taxes not excluded from premium under subpart B of this part which include Federal income taxes on investment income and capital gains, as well as Federal employment taxes, as other non-claims costs.
(b) State taxes and assessments. The report required in § 158.110 of this subpart must separately report:
(1) State taxes and assessments excluded from premium under subpart B which include:
(i) Any industry-wide (or subset) assessments (other than surcharges on specific claims) paid to the State directly, or premium subsidies that are designed to cover the costs of providing indigent care or other access to health care throughout the State.
(ii) Guaranty fund assessments.
(iii) Assessments of State industrial boards or other boards for operating expenses or for benefits to sick employed persons in connection with disability benefit laws or similar taxes levied by States.
(iv) Advertising required by law, regulation or ruling, except advertising associated with investments.
(v) State income, excise, and business taxes other than premium taxes.
(vi) State premium taxes plus State taxes based on policy reserves, if in lieu of premium taxes.
(vii) Payments made by a Federal income tax exempt issuer for community benefit expenditures as defined in paragraph (c) of this section, limited to the highest of either:
(A) Three percent of earned premium; or
(B) The highest premium tax rate in the State for which the report is being submitted, multiplied by the issuer's earned premium in the applicable State market.
(viii) In lieu of reporting amounts described in paragraph (b)(1)(vi) of this section, an issuer that is not exempt from Federal income tax may choose to report payment for community benefit expenditures as described in paragraph (c) of this section, limited to the highest premium tax rate in the State for which the report is being submitted multiplied by the issuer's earned premium in the applicable State market.
(2) State taxes and assessments not excluded from premium under subpart B which include:
(i) State sales taxes if the issuer does not exercise options of including such taxes with the cost of goods and services purchased.
(ii) Any portion of commissions or allowances on reinsurance assumed that represent specific reimbursement of premium taxes.
(iii) Any portion of commissions or allowances on reinsurance ceded that represents specific reimbursement of premium taxes.
(iv) State employment and similar taxes and assessments.
(c) Community benefit expenditures. Community benefit expenditures means expenditures for activities or programs that seek to achieve the objectives of improving access to health services, enhancing public health and relief of government burden. This includes any of the following activities that:
(1) Are available broadly to the public and serve low-income consumers;
(2) Reduce geographic, financial, or cultural barriers to accessing health services, and if ceased to exist would result in access problems (for example, longer wait times or increased travel distances);
(3) Address Federal, State or local public health priorities such as advancing health care knowledge through education or research that benefits the public;
(4) Leverage or enhance public health department activities such as childhood immunization efforts; and
(5) Otherwise would become the responsibility of government or another tax-exempt organization.
[75 FR 74921, Dec. 1, 2010. Redesignated and amended at 75 FR 82279, Dec. 30, 2010; 76 FR 76593, Dec. 7, 2011; 78 FR 15540, Mar. 11, 2013; 80 FR 10876, Feb. 27, 2015]
§ 158.170 - Allocation of expenses.
(a) General requirements. Each expense must be reported under only one type of expense, unless a portion of the expense fits under the definition of or criteria for one type of expense and the remainder fits into a different type of expense, in which case the expense must be pro-rated between types of expenses. Expenditures that benefit lines of business or products other than those being reported, including but not limited to those that are for or benefit self-funded plans, must be reported on a pro rata share.
(b) Description of the methods used to allocate expenses. The report required in § 158.110 must include a detailed description of the methods used to allocate expenses, including incurred claims, quality improvement expenses, Federal and State taxes and licensing or regulatory fees, and other non-claims costs, to each health insurance market in each State. A detailed description of each expense element must be provided, including how each specific expense meets the criteria for the type of expense in which it is categorized, as well as the method by which it was aggregated.
(1) Allocation to each category should be based on a generally accepted accounting method that is expected to yield the most accurate results. Specific identification of an expense with an activity that is represented by one of the categories above will generally be the most accurate method. If a specific identification is not feasible, the issuer should provide an explanation of why it believes the more accurate result will be gained from allocation of expenses based upon pertinent factors or ratios such as studies of employee activities, salary ratios or similar analyses.
(2) Many entities operate within a group where personnel and facilities are shared. Shared expenses, including expenses under the terms of a management contract, must be apportioned pro rata to the entities incurring the expense.
(3) Any basis adopted to apportion expenses must be that which is expected to yield the most accurate results and may result from special studies of employee activities, salary ratios, premium ratios or similar analyses. Expenses that relate solely to the operations of a reporting entity, such as personnel costs associated with the adjusting and paying of claims, must be borne solely by the reporting entity and are not to be apportioned to other entities within a group.
(c) Disclosure of allocation methods. The issuer must identify in the report required in § 158.110 of this subpart the specific basis used to allocate expenses reported under this part to States and, within States, to lines of business including the individual market, small group market, large group market, supplemental health insurance coverage, health insurance coverage offered to beneficiaries of public programs (such as Medicare and Medicaid), and group health plans as defined in § 145.103 of this chapter and administered by the issuer.
(d) Maintenance of records. The issuer must maintain and make available to the Secretary upon request the data used to allocate expenses reported under this part together with all supporting information required to determine that the methods identified and reported as required under paragraph (b) of this section were accurately implemented in preparing the report required in § 158.110 of this subpart.
[75 FR 74921, Dec. 1, 2010, as amended at 87 FR 27393, May 6, 2022]
source: 75 FR 74921, Dec. 1, 2010, unless otherwise noted.
cite as: 45 CFR 158.151