[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 42, Volume 2]
[Revised as of October 1, 2006]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 42CFR413.13]

[Page 621-623]
 
                         TITLE 42--PUBLIC HEALTH
 
                    CHAPTER IV--CENTERS FOR MEDICARE
                          & MEDICAID SERVICES,
                        DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
                             HUMAN SERVICES
 
PART 413_PRINCIPLES OF REASONABLE COST REIMBURSEMENT; PAYMENT FOR END-STAGE 
 
                Subpart A_Introduction and General Rules
 
Sec.  413.13  Amount of payment if customary charges for services furnished 
are less than reasonable costs.

    (a) Definitions. As used in this section--
    Customary charges means the regular rates that providers charge both 
beneficiaries and other paying patients for the services furnished to 
them.
    Fair compensation means the reasonable cost of covered services.
    Nominal charge means a charge equal to 60 percent or less of the 
reasonable cost of a service.
    Public provider means a provider operated by a Federal, State, 
county, city, or other local government agency or instrumentality.
    Reasonable cost means cost actually incurred, to the extent that 
cost is necessary for the efficient delivery of the service, and subject 
to the exclusions specified in paragraph (d) of this section.
    (b) Application of the lesser of costs or charges (LCC) principle.--
(1) General

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rule. Except as provided in paragraph (c) of this section, CMS pays 
providers the lesser of the reasonable cost or the customary charges for 
services furnished to Medicare beneficiaries. Reasonable cost and 
customary charges are compared separately for Part A services and Part B 
services.
    (2) Example. (i) A provider's reasonable cost for covered services 
furnished to Medicare beneficiaries during a cost reporting period is 
$125,000.
    (ii) The provider's customary charges for those services is 
$110,000.
    (iii) CMS pays the provider $110,000 less the deductible and 
coinsurance amounts for which the beneficiaries are responsible.
    (c) Exceptions to the LCC principle--(1) Providers not subject to 
the LCC principle. CMS pays the following providers the fair 
compensation for the services they furnish:
    (i) CORFs.
    (ii) Public providers that furnish services free of charge or at a 
nominal charge.
    (iii) Any provider that requests payment of fair compensation and 
can demonstrate to its intermediary that a significant portion of its 
patients are low income and that its charges are less than costs because 
its customary practice is to charge patients on the basis of their 
ability to pay.
    (2) Services not subject to the LCC principle. The following 
services are not subject to the LCC principle:
    (i) Part A inpatient hospital services. Inpatient hospital services 
are not subject to the LCC principle if they are subject to either of 
the following:
    (A) The prospective payment system under part 412 of this chapter.
    (B) The rate of increase limits set forth in Sec.  413.40.
    (ii) Facility services related to ambulatory surgical procedures 
performed in outpatient hospital departments. Facility services related 
to ambulatory surgical procedures performed in hospital outpatient 
departments are subject to the payment methodology set forth in Sec.  
413.118.
    (iii) Services furnished by a critical access hospital (CAH). 
Inpatient and outpatient services furnished by a CAH are subject to the 
payment methodology set forth in Sec.  413.70.
    (iv) Hospital outpatient radiology services. Hospital outpatient 
radiology services are subject to the payment methodology set forth in 
Sec.  413.122.
    (v) Other diagnostic procedures performed by a hospital on an 
outpatient basis. Other outpatient diagnostic procedures are subject to 
the payment methodology set forth in Sec.  413.122.
    (vi) Skilled nursing facility services. Skilled nursing facility 
services subject to the payment methodology set forth in Sec. Sec.  
413.330 et seq.
    (d) Exclusions from reasonable cost. For purposes of comparison with 
customary charges under this section, reasonable cost does not include 
the following:
    (1) Payments made to a provider as reimbursement for bad debts 
arising from noncollection of Medicare deductible and coinsurance 
amounts, as provided in Sec.  413.89.
    (2) Amounts that represent the recovery of excess depreciation 
resulting from termination from the Medicare program or a decrease in 
Medicare utilization applicable to prior cost reporting periods, as 
provided in Sec.  413.134.
    (3) Amounts that result from disposition of depreciable assets, 
applicable to prior cost reporting periods, as provided in Sec.  
413.134.
    (4) Payments to funds for the donated services of teaching 
physicians, as provided in Sec.  413.85.
    (5) Except as provided in paragraph (f)(2)(iii) of this section for 
making nominal charge determinations in special situations, graduate 
medical education costs.
    (e) Reductions in customary charges. Customary charges are reduced 
in proportion to the ratio of the aggregate amount actually collected 
from charge-paying non-Medicare patients to the amount that would have 
been realized had customary charges been paid, if the provider--
    (1) Did not actually impose charges on most of the patients liable 
for payment for its services on a charge basis; or
    (2) Failed to make a reasonable effort to collect those charges.
    (f) Nominal charge determinations. In determining whether a 
provider's customary charges equal 60 percent or less

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of its reasonable costs, the following rules apply:
    (1) General rule. The determination is based on charges actually 
billed to charge-paying, non-Medicare patients, and (except for clinical 
diagnostic laboratory tests that are paid under section 1833(h) of the 
Act) is made separately for Part A services and Part B services.
    (2) Determination in special situations. (i) Charges based on 
ability to pay. For providers that have a sliding scale or discounted 
charges based on patients' ability to pay, the determination--
    (A) Is based on charges billed to all charge-paying patients;
    (B) Uses the ratio of the sliding scale charges to the provider's 
full customary charges; and
    (C) Applies the ratio to the discounted charges to equate those 
charges to customary charges.
    (ii) HHA services. In determining nominal charges for HHAs, all Part 
A and Part B services, with the exception of DME, are considered 
together.
    (iii) Graduate medical education. When making the nominal charge 
determination, graduate medical education payments (or the provider's 
reasonable costs for that education, if supported by appropriate data) 
are included in reasonable costs.

[65 FR 8661, Feb. 22, 2000, as amended at 70 FR 47487, Aug. 12, 2005]