When Big Discounts Become the Norm

When Big Discounts Become the Norm

As much as I love a state fair, it isn’t something I write about very often, because usually, the primary risk one would associate with the fair would be eating or spending too much.

But I understand that this year, the Minnesota Attorney General’s Office (AG) has a theme for their State Fair booth: hospital pricing.

The AG could have chosen a wide range of topics to emphasize. The selection of hospital pricing sends a clear message that scrutiny over prices, discounts, and collection issues will remain intense for the foreseeable future. 

I think it’s possible that the most frequent question I’m getting these days is “can we offer patients with a high-deductible plan a discount off of our regular prices?”

The reality is that this is one of those situations where you are a bit damned if you do, and damned if you don’t. Let me explain why, and how you can take steps to minimize risk, going forward.

It’s quite common in the healthcare industry for the chargemaster or list price for a service to be materially above the rate most third-party payers pay.

In my experience, having a private payer pay somewhere between 60 and 80 percent of the billed charge is routine.

Because such significant discounts are so common, trying to make a patient pay your full list price can cause trouble. Patients can quite reasonably argue that your stated charge isn’t your actual charge, because discounts are so widespread that almost no one is paying the full chargemaster price. Therefore, refusing to give a discount can be a problem.

But if you allow high-deductible patients to pay something less than your billed charge, you’re really undermining your ability to argue that the billed charge is real. If a patient walking in off the street gets a 40-percent discount, isn’t your real charge the amount on the bill, discounted by 40 percent?

While very few people or entities are paying your full chargemaster rate, if anyone is, that party can credibly argue that you’re misrepresenting your billed charge to them. That is why giving the discount can be a problem.

There’s really only one valid solution to this dilemma: have your billed charge be very close to the rate paid by most of your payers.

To the extent you’re negotiating discounts off your billed charges, try to keep those discounts in the 5-10 percent range, not in the 30-50 percent range. I’ll readily acknowledge that if you’ve got lots of contracts set up with big discounts, making this change will be a logistical nightmare.

But the current pricing rubric is the sort of thing that’s going to attract the attention of attorneys general across the country until we bring more intellectual consistency to pricing.

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn

David M. Glaser, Esq.

David M. Glaser is a shareholder in Fredrikson & Byron's Health Law Group. David assists clinics, hospitals, and other health care entities negotiate the maze of healthcare regulations, providing advice about risk management, reimbursement, and business planning issues. He has considerable experience in healthcare regulation and litigation, including compliance, criminal and civil fraud investigations, and reimbursement disputes. David's goal is to explain the government's enforcement position, and to analyze whether this position is supported by the law or represents government overreaching. David is a member of the RACmonitor editorial board and is a popular guest on Monitor Mondays.

Related Stories

Where is the OCR?

The articles describe a significant 2026 dispute over the misuse of health information exchanged by asserting a treatment purpose through Carequality. (Raths) The core allegation

Read More

Leave a Reply

Please log in to your account to comment on this article.

Featured Webcasts

AI, Audits, and the Future of the Revenue Cycle

Artificial intelligence is rapidly transforming healthcare revenue cycle operations, from coding and auditing to compliance and denials. Join industry leaders Pam Warren (MaineHealth) and Raemarie Jimenez (AAPC) for a live fireside chat exploring how AI is changing workflows, workforce roles, payer-provider dynamics, and compliance risk—and what organizations should be doing now to prepare.

June 17, 2026

Trending News

Featured Webcasts

CMS CRUSH: What You Need to Know About the Next Wave of Program Integrity and Payment Oversight

CMS CRUSH (Comprehensive Regulations to Uncover Suspicious Healthcare) signals a new era of data-driven program integrity oversight that extends far beyond coding and CDI. As federal scrutiny of claims, documentation, billing practices, provider enrollment, and payment accuracy intensifies, healthcare organizations must be prepared to identify and address vulnerabilities before they result in audits, denials, repayments, or enforcement actions. Join us for this timely webcast to learn what CMS CRUSH could mean for your organization and discover practical strategies to strengthen documentation, claims integrity, compliance readiness, and reimbursement defensibility.

July 14, 2026

Ask Dr. Hirsch: Clarifying Medicare’s Most Misunderstood Rules – Part 2

Medicare regulations are complex and even seasoned professionals struggle to apply them consistently. Due to overwhelming demand, Dr. Hirsch returns for Part 2 of Ask Dr. Hirsch: Clarifying Medicare’s Most Misunderstood Rules to answer even more of Medicare’s most misunderstood questions, covering inpatient status, observation, SNF access, Medicare Advantage denials, and more. Join Dr. Hirsch as he provides clear, referenced answers to real-world questions submitted by your peers, helping you navigate Medicare compliance with confidence and clarity.

June 18, 2026

Reengineering Utilization Management: Building an Adaptive Model for the New Payer Era

Traditional utilization management models can no longer keep pace with regulatory shifts, payer scrutiny, and operational pressures. In this webcast, Tiffany Ferguson, LMSW, CMAC, ACM, ACPA-C, introduces an Adaptive Model strategy that modernizes UM through role specialization, technology-driven workflows, and proactive, team-based processes. Attendees will learn how to restructure programs to improve efficiency, strengthen clinical collaboration, and enhance financial performance in a rapidly changing healthcare environment.

May 20, 2026

Compliance for the Inpatient Psychiatric Facility (IPF-PPS): Minimizing Federal Audit Findings by Strengthening Best Practices

Federal auditors are intensifying their focus on inpatient psychiatric facilities, using advanced data analytics to spotlight outliers and pursue high‑dollar repayments. In this high‑impact webcast, Michael Calahan, PA, MBA, Compliance Officer and V.P., Hospital & Physician Compliance, breaks down what regulators are really targeting in IPF-PPS admissions, documentation, treatment and discharge planning. Attendees will learn practical steps to tighten processes, avoid common audit triggers and protect reimbursement and reduce the risk of multimillion-dollar repayment demands.

April 9, 2026

Trending News

Celebrate Lab Week with MedLearn! Sign up to win one year of our Laboratory All Access Pass! Click here to learn more →

Have a Medicare regulation question you’d love Dr. Hirsch to answer? Now is your chance! CLICK HERE to learn more→

Happy National Doctor’s Day! Learn how to get a complimentary webcast on ‘Decoding Social Admissions’ as a token of our heartfelt appreciation! Click here to learn more →

This Memorial Day, we honor those who gave all for our freedom. Take 20% off sitewide through May 29 with code MEMORIAL26 at checkout

CYBER WEEK IS HERE! Don’t miss your chance to get 20% off now until Dec. 1 with code CYBER25

CYBER WEEK IS HERE! Don’t miss your chance to get 20% off now until Dec. 2 with code CYBER24