General Distribution FAQs

Which types of providers are eligible to receive a Phase 1 – General Distribution Provider Relief Payment? (Modified 6/12/2020)

To be eligible for a Phase 1 – General Distribution payment, providers must have billed Medicare fee-for-service (Parts A or B) in Calendar Year 2019. Additionally, under the Terms and Conditions associated with payment, these providers are eligible only if they provide or provided after January 31, 2020, diagnoses, testing, or care for individuals with possible or actual cases of COVID-19. HHS broadly views every patient as a possible case of COVID-19.

All providers retaining funds must sign an attestation and accept the Terms and Conditions associated with payment.

Why am I receiving an email requesting that I submit my financial information in response to the payment I received as part of Phase 1 of the General Distribution? (Added 9/3/2020)

The Terms and Conditions for payments received on or around April 24, 2020, as part of the additional $20 billion under Phase 1 of the General Distribution require that recipients submit their revenue information.  Based on HHS's records, due in some instances to system issues, the Department did not receive your required revenue information necessary for program integrity purposes and consideration for additional payments.  In order to be considered for an additional payment, recipients must submit this revenue information by September 13, 2020.  If a health care provider rejected the funds received on or around April 24 and does not want to keep any additional funds received as a result of submitting revenue, they may return a payment by going into the attestation portal within 90 days of receiving payment and indicating they are rejecting the funds.  Providers must return the payment within 15 calendar days of rejecting the payment.

I received an email from the Provider Relief Fund's DocuSign application web portal informing me that my CARES Act Provider Relief Fund Application DocuSign submission ("envelope") has expired. Does this mean I am not eligible to receive a General Distribution payment? (Modified 7/14/2020)

No. You received an automated email sent by DocuSign to providers who initiate one or more entries that were not completed or submitted. A number of providers opened duplicate entries in the DocuSign web portal, resulting in one or more of the entries (referred to as "envelopes" by DocuSign) becoming "orphaned" and incomplete. The expiration status of one DocuSign entry does not affect any other submissions by that provider. If an application was completed and submitted, no further action is required on the healthcare provider's part.

I am a health care provider that received a previous Phase 1 – General Distribution payment and I submitted my revenue information through the Provider Relief Fund Payment Portal. Why am I not receiving an additional payment? (Modified 6/12/2020)

HHS is distributing an additional $20 billion of the General Distribution to providers to augment their initial allocation so that $50 billion is allocated proportional to providers' share of 2018 gross receipts or sales/program service revenue. Payments are determined based on the lesser of 2% of a provider's 2018 (or most recent complete tax year) gross receipts or the sum of incurred losses for March and April. If the initial General Distribution payment you received between April 10 and April 17 was determined to be at least 2% of your annual gross receipts or sales/program service revenue, you may not receive additional General Distribution payments. There may be additional distributions in the future for which providers are eligible.

Why might a provider that bills Medicare fee-for-service not have received a payment from the initial $30 billion Phase 1 – General Distribution? (Added 6/15/2020)

To be eligible for the General Distribution, a provider must have billed Medicare fee-for-service in CY2019.  Phase 1 – General Distribution payments were made to the billing organization according to its Taxpayer Identification Number (TIN).  Payments to providers and practices that are part of larger medical groups went to the group's central billing office.

Some providers who did bill Medicare fee-for-service in CY2019 were not eligible for payment because either the provider is terminated from participation in Medicare or precluded from receiving payment through Medicare Advantage or Part D; is currently excluded from participation in Medicare, Medicaid, and other Federal health care programs; or currently has Medicare billing privileges revoked as determined by either the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services or the HHS Office of Inspector General.

If the provider's TIN that was intended for payment identifies both a social security number of an individual Medicare provider and another Medicare provider's employer identification number, that TIN was excluded from the General Distribution.  Providers were also excluded from the General Distribution if there was incomplete banking information and/or personal contact information. HHS is working to determine eligibility for a General Distribution payment for those affected providers. 

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Determining Additional Payments

How can I estimate the total payment amount I can anticipate through the Phase 1 – General Distribution? (Modified 6/12/2020)

In general, providers can estimate payments from the Phase 1 – General Distribution of approximately 2% of 2018 (or most recent complete tax year) gross receipts or sales/program service revenue. To estimate your payment, use this equation:

(Individual Provider Revenues/$2.5 Trillion) X $50 Billion = Expected Combined General Distribution.
Providers should work with a tax professional for accurate submission.

This includes any payments under the first $30 billion General Distribution as well as under the $20 billion General Distribution allocations. Providers may not receive a second distribution payment if the provider received a first distribution payment of equal to or more than 2% of gross receipts.

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Provider Relief Fund Payment Portal – Phase 1 - General Distribution

An organization has prescription sales as part of its revenue.  Can these sales be captured in the data submitted as "gross sales or receipts" or "program service revenue?" (Modified 6/22/2020)

Generally no.  Only patient care revenues from providing diagnoses, testing, or care for individuals with possible or actual cases of COVID-19 may be included.  Patient care revenues do include savings obtained by providers through enrollment in the 340B Program.

What information is HHS collecting for Phase 1 – General Distribution in the Provider Relief Fund Payment Portal?

The Provider Relief Fund Payment Portal has been deployed to collect information from providers who received Phase 1 – General Distribution payments prior to April 24, 2020 at 5:00 pm EST.

The Provider Relief Fund Payment Portal collects four pieces of information to allocate remaining Phase 1 – General Distribution funds:

  1. A provider's "Gross Receipts or Sales" or "Program Service Revenue" as submitted on its federal income tax return;
  2. The provider's estimated revenue losses in March 2020 and April 2020 due to COVID;
  3. A copy of the provider's most recently filed federal income tax return;
  4. A listing of the TINs for any of the provider's subsidiary organizations that received relief funds but DO NOT file separate tax returns.

This information may also be used to allocate other Provider Relief Fund distributions.

HHS is collecting: the "gross receipt or sales" or "program service revenue" data to have an understanding of a provider's usual operations; the revenue loss information to have an understanding of COVID impact; and, tax forms to verify the self- reported information. HHS is collecting information about organizational structure and subsidiary TINs so that we do not overpay or underpay providers who file tax returns covering multiple legal entities (e.g. consolidated tax returns).

Providers meeting the following criteria are required to submit a separate portal application:

  1. Provider has received Provider Relief Fund payments as of 5:00pm EST Friday April 24, 2020 AND
  2. Provider has filed a federal income tax return for 2017, 2018, or 2019.

As such, each entity that files a federal income tax return is required to file an application even if it is part of a provider group. However, a group of corporations that files one consolidated return will have only the tax return filer apply.

Each provider submitting an application is required to list the TINs of each subsidiary that (a) has received Provider Relief Fund payments as of 5:00 EST Friday April 24, 2020 AND (b) has not filed federal income tax returns for 2017, 2018, or 2019.

Do not list any subsidiary's TIN that has filed a federal income tax return, because such subsidiary is required to submit a separate application.
For example:

  1. A parent entity and two subsidiaries received Provider Relief Fund payments. The parent filed a federal income tax return, but the two subsidiaries did not as they are consolidated with the parent.

The parent should submit an application and list the subsidiary TINs therein. The subsidiaries cannot submit an application as they did not file a tax return.

  1. A parent entity and two subsidiaries A and B received Provider Relief Fund payments. The parent and subsidiary A filed a federal income tax return, but the subsidiary B did not as it is consolidated with the parent.

The parent and subsidiary A should submit separate applications. The parent would list the TIN subsidiary B in its application.

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Data Sharing

Why am I being redirected to DocuSign to fill out certain elements?

HHS is using DocuSign to securely pass encrypted data to HHS. Neither DocuSign nor UnitedHealth Group will have access to your data.

What is DocuSign doing with my data?

DocuSign is securely passing your data to HHS in encrypted files. Neither DocuSign nor UnitedHealth Group will have access to your data.

What information is shared with UnitedHealth Group, UnitedHealthcare, Optum, or any other subsidiary of UnitedHealth Group?

UnitedHealth Group and its subsidiaries will not have access to any information collected from providers, nor do they participate in determining the methodology used to allocate Provider Relief Fund payments.  UnitedHealth Group will know the amounts of relief funding paid to providers, as UnitedHealth Group is processing the payments.

Who has access to my revenue data?

HHS will have access to your revenue data to optimally allocate Provider Relief Funds. HHS will not share your revenue data with any other entities, in or outside of government, except as prescribed by law.

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Phase 2

Overview and Eligibility

Who is eligible for Phase 2 – General Distribution? (Modified 9/1/2020)

To be eligible to apply, the applicant must meet all of the following requirements:

  1. Either
    1. Must have either (i) directly billed their state Medicaid/CHIP programs or Medicaid managed care plans for health care-related services during the period of January 1, 2018, to December 31, 2019, or (ii) own (on the application date) an included subsidiary that has either directly billed their state Medicaid/CHIP programs or Medicaid managed care plans for health care-related services during the period of January 1, 2018, to December 31, 2019; or
    2. Must be a dental service provider who has either (i) directly billed health insurance companies for oral health care-related services, or (ii) owns (on the application date) an included subsidiary that has directly billed health insurance companies for oral health care-related services; or
    3. Must be a licensed dental service provider who does not accept insurance and has either (i) directly billed patients for oral health care-related services, or (ii) who owns (on the application date) an included subsidiary that does not accept insurance and has directly billed patients for oral health care-related services;
    4. Must have billed Medicare fee-for-service during the period of January 1, 2019 and December 31, 2019;
    5. Must be a Medicare Part A provider that experienced a change in ownership and billed Medicare fee-for-service in 2019 and 2020 that prevented the otherwise eligible provider from receiving a Phase 1 - General Distribution payment; or
    6. Must be an state-licensed/certified assisted living facility.
  2. Must have either (i)  filed a federal income tax return for fiscal years 2017, 2018 or 2019 or (ii) be an entity exempt from the requirement to file a federal income tax return and have no beneficial owner that is required to file a federal income tax return. (e.g. a state-owned hospital or health care clinic); and
  3. Must have provided patient care after January 31, 2020; and
  4. Must not have permanently ceased providing patient care directly, or indirectly through included subsidiaries; and
  5. If the applicant is an individual, have gross receipts or sales from providing patient care reported on Form 1040, Schedule C, Line 1, excluding income reported on a W-2 as a (statutory) employee.

Providers who have received a payment under Phase 1 of the General Distribution are no longer prohibited from submitting an application under Phase 2 of the General Distribution.  Providers who received a previous Phase 1 – General Distribution payment are eligible to apply and, if they have not yet received a payment that is approximately 2% of annual revenue from patient care, may receive additional funds.

What was the methodology/formula used to calculate provider payment? (Modified 9/1/2020)

The Phase 2 – General Distribution methodology will be based upon 2% of (revenues * percent of revenues from patient care) from the applicant's most recent federal income tax return for 2017, 2018 or 2019 and with accompanying submitted tax documentation. Payments will be made to applicant providers who are on the filing TIN curated list submitted by states to HHS or whose applications underwent additional validation by HHS.

I applied for funds as part of Phase 2 of the General Distribution. Why have I not yet received a payment? (Added 1/15/2021)

Many applicants that believe that their organization has not yet been paid under Phase 2 have received funds that can only be accessed after setting up an Automated Clearing House (ACH) account. Organizations with revenue greater than $5,000,000 are required to set up ACH accounts to allow the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to most effectively and quickly deliver funds to providers, as well as maximize program integrity and fraud avoidance. For assistance in setting up an ACH account, please contact the Provider Support Line at (866) 569-3522 (for TTY, dial 711).

Other applicants may have received Phase 2 funds in November or December that the applicant believes were part of Phase 3 of the General Distribution. Additionally, HHS has requested that a small number of applicants resubmit their application and financial information for data verification. In some instances, HHS has not received the requested resubmissions, and therefore, cannot adjudicate those applications.

Will Phase 2 - General Distribution payments be made to the billing TIN or filing TIN for those who received a payment that was less than 2% of revenue as part of the Phase 1 - General Distribution? (Added 8/10/2020)

In line with the policies established for the Phase 2 - General Distribution, HHS will be making payments to applicants based on filing TIN for all those who apply as part of this newer distribution.

Will practices or facilities that experienced a change in ownership that prevented them from receiving a Targeted Distribution payment, such as a Skilled Nursing Facility payment or Safety Net Hospital payment, be eligible for more than 2% of revenue from patient care? (Modified 12/4/2020)

At this time, HHS is only expanding eligibility to the Phase 2 - General Distribution to those health care providers that experienced a change in ownership that prevented them from receiving a Phase 1 - General Distribution payment. Providers that experienced a change in ownership may be eligible for future Targeted Distributions.

What are the reasons that I would not be eligible for a Phase 2 – General Distribution payment? (Modified 8/10/2020)

You must meet the five eligibility requirement for the Phase 2 – General Distribution; must not be currently terminated from participation in Medicare or precluded from receiving payment through Medicare Advantage or Part D; must not be currently excluded from participation in Medicare, Medicaid, and other Federal health care programs; and must not currently have Medicare billing privileges revoked.  In addition, your billing TIN must be included in the State-provided list of eligible Medicaid and CHIP providers, the HHS-created list of dental providers, the list of providers who received a Phase 1 – General Distribution payment, the list of Medicare Part A providers that experienced a change in ownership in 2019 or 2020, or your application must pass additional validation by HHS.

Does payment from the Phase 1 – General Distribution affect what I may receive as a Phase 2 – General Distribution payment? (Modified 8/10/2020)

Yes.  Payments received as part of the Phase 1 - General Distribution will be taken into account when determining payment amounts for the Phase 2 - General Distribution.  If a health care provider has not yet received a payment that equals approximately 2% of revenue from patient care, it may now be eligible for a Phase 2 - General Distribution payment. 

Additionally, prior payment in a Provider Relief Fund Targeted Distribution (like the High Impact Area, Rural, Indian Health Service, and Skilled Nursing Facility Targeted Distributions) does not affect eligibility for, or amount of, a possible payment.

Will payments be sent at one time or disbursed in phases? (Added 6/9/2020)

Payments will be disbursed on a rolling basis, as information is validated. HHS may seek additional information from providers as necessary to complete its review.

Tax Identification Number (TIN) Validation Process

What if an applicant's TIN is flagged as invalid because it is not on the filing TIN list submitted by states/territories to CMS or the curated list of eligible providers? (Modified 10/1/2020)

Payments will be made to applicant providers who are in the filing TIN curated list from CMS if they are a Medicaid or CHIP provider. If a TIN is not on the curated list of state-submitted eligible Medicaid/CHIP providers or T-MSIS, it will be flagged as invalid. In these cases, HHS will work with the states/territories to verify whether the TIN should be included as a valid Medicaid or CHIP provider in good standing.

If a TIN is not on the curated list of dental providers, HHS will conduct additional analysis related to the TIN and any active dental providers associated with the TIN.

If a TIN is not on a curated list of assisted living facilities, HHS will conduct additional analysis related to the TIN and any currently operating assisted living facilities associated with the TIN.

If the TIN is subsequently marked as valid, the provider will be notified to proceed submitting data into DocuSign even if validation occurs after the September 13, 2020 deadline. Applicants validated after that date will have until October 4, 2020, 11:00pm EST to submit an application to be considered for funding under Phase 2.  TINs that cannot be validated will not receive funding. Please note, the additional TIN validation may result in a delay in processing the application.

When is the deadline to submit an application? (Modified 10/1/2020)

The deadline to submit a TIN for validation for the Phase 2 – General Distribution is September 13, 2020. Applications must submitted by October 4, 2020, 11:00pm EST. Applications that are not completed by the October 4 deadline will be voided and applicants will have the opportunity to submit an application for Phase 3 by going back into the portal and clicking on "Get Started."

Will health care providers that have not had their TINs validated by the application deadline of September 13, 2020 be able to submit an application after that date? (Modified 10/1/2020)

Yes. A health care provider must submit their TIN for validation by end of day September 13, 2020. If they receive the results of that validation after September 13, they must submit an application by October 4, 2020, 11:00pm EST for consideration under Phase 2. Applications that are not completed by the October 4 deadline will be voided and applicants will have the opportunity to submit an application for Phase 3 by going back into the portal and clicking on "Get Started."

If my TIN will take more than 15 days to be validated, when will I be notified? (Modified 10/1/2020)

If your TIN cannot be validated within 15 days of submission, you will receive an email 13 days after submission notifying you that additional verification is required by the State/Territory Medicaid or CHIP agency. If you do not receive an email, please contact the Provider Support Line at (866) 569-3522 (for TTY, dial 711). Please note that it may take additional time to validate your TIN in these instances, particularly when close to deadlines. If you receive the results of that validation after September 13, you must submit an application by October 4, 2020, 11:00pm EST for consideration under Phase 2. Applications that are not completed by the October 4 deadline will be voided and you will have the opportunity to submit an application for Phase 3 by going back into the portal and clicking on "Get Started."

Application Process

How should a parent organization that files taxes on behalf of its subsidiaries report NPIs if the NPIs are associated with the subsidiaries' TINs, not the filing TIN? (Modified 9/4/2020)

If the parent organization does not have an NPI, the applicant should insert the subsidiary Group NPI that is best representative of the health care services delivered by the parent organization's subsidiaries. If the parent organization and its subsidiaries do not have an NPI, the applicant should enter "not applicable." The field cannot be left blank.

What is the difference between the first Provider Relief Fund Payment Portal and the Provider Relief Fund Application and Attestation Portal for the Phase 2 – General Distribution? (Modified 7/17/2020)

The first Provider Relief Fund Payment Portal was used for providers who received a General Distribution payment prior to Friday, April 24th.  These providers were required to submit financial information in order to receive approximately 2% of revenues derived from patient care. 

HHS has developed the new Provider Relief Fund Application and Attestation Portal for providers who bill Medicaid and CHIP (e.g., pediatricians, long-term care, and behavioral health providers) or are dental providers.  HHS has since expanded eligibility to other  providers, including those who may not have received additional funds as part of the Phase 1 – General Distribution.

What specific revenue information should I enter into the application portal? (Modified 7/17/2020)

Applicants should enter the most recent revenues number from its federal tax return of 2017, 2018, or 2019.  If the applicant for tax purposes is a:

  • Sole proprietor or disregarded entity owned by an individual: Enter Line 3 from IRS Form 1040, Schedule C excluding any income reported on W-2.
  • Partnership: Enter Line 1c minus Line 12 from IRS Form 1065.
  • C corporation: Enter Line 1c minus Line 15 from IRS Form 1120.
  • S corporation: Enter Line 1c minus Line 10 from IRS Form 1120-S.
  • Tax-exempt organization: Enter Line 9 from IRS Form 990 minus any joint venture income, if included in Part VIII lines 2a – 2f.
  • Trust or estate: Enter Line 3 from IRS Form 1040, Schedule C.
  • Entity not required to file any of the previously mentioned IRS forms: Enter a "net patient service revenue" number or equivalent from the applicant's most recent audited financial statements (or management-prepared financial statements)
  • Applicants with gross revenue adjustments should enter an adjusted gross revenues number as calculated using the Gross Revenues Worksheet in Field 15 available at: https://www.uhcprovider.com/content/dam/provider/docs/public/other/PRF-Gross-Revenues-Worksheet.xlsx.

How long will it take from portal submission to payment decision or receipt? (Added 6/9/2020)

HHS is working to process all providers' submissions as quickly as possible. HHS may seek additional information from providers as necessary to complete its review.

What documentation must be uploaded to the application form? (Added 6/9/2020)

  • The applicant's most recent federal income tax return for 2017, 2018 or 2019 or a written statement explaining why the applicant is exempt from filing a federal income tax return (e.g. a state-owned hospital or health care clinic).
  • If required by Field 15, the applicant's Gross Revenue Worksheet (provided by HHS).

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Phase 3

Overview and Eligibility

How does Phase 3 differ from the previous phases of the General Distribution? (Modified 10/8/2020)

Phase 3 of the General Distribution will take into account documentation of financial impact of COVID-19, as reported by applicants. The payment methodology will ensure a provider has received 2% of annual revenue from patient care either as part of the previous phases of the General Distribution or under a Phase 3 payment. Phase 3 may also take into account a provider's change in operating revenues from patient care, minus their operating expenses from patient care. Phase 3 payment will also take into account funds received and kept under prior General and Targeted Distributions. While HHS has made payments on a rolling basis under the previous general distributions, Phase 3 final payment amounts for applicants who have already received payments equaling 2% of annual patient care revenue will be determined once all applications have been received and reviewed.

Who is eligible for Phase 3 – General Distribution? (Added 10/5/2020)

To be eligible to apply, the applicant must meet all of the following requirements:

  1. Either
    1. Must have either (i) directly billed their state Medicaid/CHIP programs or Medicaid managed care plans for health care-related services during the period of January 1, 2018 to March 31, 2020, or (ii) own (on the application date) an included subsidiary that has either directly billed their state Medicaid/CHIP programs or Medicaid managed care plans for health care-related services during the period of January 1, 2018 to March 31, 2020; or
    2. Must be a dental service provider who, as of March 31, 2020, has either (i) directly billed health insurance companies for oral health care-related services, or (ii) owns (on the application date) an included subsidiary that has directly billed health insurance companies for oral health care-related services; or
    3. Must be a licensed dental service provider who does not accept insurance and has, as of March 31, 2020, either (i) directly billed patients for oral health care-related services, or (ii) who owns (on the application date) an included subsidiary that does not accept insurance and has directly billed patients for oral health care-related services;
    4. Must have billed Medicare fee-for-service during the period of January 1, 2019 and March 31, 2020;
    5. Must be a Medicare Part A provider that experienced a change in ownership that was approved by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid services by August 10, 2020 and billed Medicare fee-for-service during the period of January 1, 2019 to March 31, 2020;
    6. Must be a state-licensed/certified assisted living facility as of March 31, 2020;
    7. Must be a behavioral health provider who, as of March 31, 2020, has either (i) directly billed health insurance companies for health care-related services, or (ii) owns (on the application date) an included subsidiary that has directly billed health insurance companies for health care-related services; or
    8. Must be a behavioral health provider who does not accept insurance and has, as of March 31, 2020, either (i) directly billed patients for health care-related services, or (ii) who owns (on the application date) an included subsidiary that does not accept insurance and has directly billed patients for health care-related services; or
    9. Must have received a Targeted Distribution payment.
  2. Must have either (i) filed a federal income tax return for fiscal years 2017, 2018 or 2019 if in operation before January 1, 2020 or quarterly tax returns for fiscal years 2020 if operations began on or after January 1, 2020 or (ii) be an entity exempt from the requirement to file a federal income tax return and have no beneficial owner that is required to file a federal income tax return. (e.g. a state-owned hospital or health care clinic); and
  3. Must have provided patient care after January 31, 2020; and
  4. Must not have permanently ceased providing patient care directly, or indirectly through included subsidiaries; and
  5. If the applicant is an individual that was providing patient care have gross receipts or sales from providing patient care reported on Form 1040, Schedule C, Line 1, excluding income reported on a W-2 as a (statutory) employee.

Providers who have previously received a payment under Phase 1 or Phase 2 of the General Distribution are eligible to apply for a payment even if they have previously received a disbursement of 2% of annual revenue from patient care. Providers who have not previously received a General Distribution payment, or an amount that is less than 2% of patient care revenue, may also apply for funds if they meet the above eligibility criteria.

What will be the methodology/formula used to calculate provider payment in Phase 3 General Distributions? (Modified 1/28/2021)

Providers will be paid the greater of up to 88 percent of their reported losses (both lost revenue and health care-related expenses attributable to coronavirus incurred during the first half of 2020) or 2 percent of annual revenue from patient care.  Some applicants will not receive an additional payment, either because they experienced no change in revenues or net expenses attributable to COVID-19, or because they have already received funds that equal or exceed reimbursement of 88 percent of reported losses or 2 percent of revenue from patient care.

Certain applicants may not receive these full amounts because HHS determined the revenues and operating expenses from patient care reported on their applications included figures that were not exclusively from patient care (as defined in the instructions), reported figures were not reflected in submitted financial documentation, or reported figures were extreme outliers in comparison to other applicants of the same provider type; instead, HHS capped the amount paid to these provider types based on industry estimates of revenue and operating expenses from patient care.

What is the payment amount that an applicant should expect to receive from Phase 3 of the General Distribution? (Modified 1/28/2021)

If an applicant has not yet received and kept a payment that is approximately 2 percent of annual revenue from patient care as part of either Phase 1 or 2 of the General Distribution, then they will receive at least that amount in Phase 3 payment.  In addition to this amount, providers will be paid up to 88 percent of their reported losses (both lost revenue and health care-related expenses attributable to coronavirus incurred during the first half of 2020) if losses exceeded 2 percent of annual revenue from patient care.  Some applicants may not receive this proportion of the losses reported on their applications, because HHS determined the reported revenues and operating expenses from patient care were not exclusively from patient care (as defined in the instructions) or because reported figures were not reflected in submitted financial documentation.  Additionally, some applicants will not receive an additional payment either because they experienced no change in revenues or net expenses attributable to COVID-19, or because they have already received funds that equal or exceed reimbursement of 88 percent of reported losses.

When will Phase 3 payments be made? (Modified 1/12/2021)

HHS began issuing Phase 3 – General Distribution payments in mid-December, 2020, and will continue making payments through the first months of 2021 to those providers that experienced a change in revenues or net expenses attributable to COVID-19 and that have not already received funds that equal or exceed reimbursement of 88 percent of reported losses, as well as to those that have not yet received and kept a payment that is approximately 2% of annual revenue from patient care as part of either Phase 1 or 2 of the General Distribution.  HHS is continuing to review and validate applications received and will disperse payments in batches as applications are adjudicated.

Are providers that received payments under Phase 3 of the General Distribution limited to using these funds to cover coronavirus-related losses or expenses experienced during the first two quarters of calendar year 2020? (Modified 6/11/2021)

No. The Terms and Conditions require payment recipients to certify that funds will only be used to prevent, prepare for, and respond to coronavirus, and will only reimburse the recipient for health care-related expenses or lost revenues that are attributable to coronavirus. While HHS collected information on the losses and expenses associated with the first two quarters of 2020 for the purposes of making additional General Distribution payments to those providers with demonstrated financial need, the Terms and Conditions do not place limits on which quarters these funds must be applied to cover eligible losses or expenses.

How will Phase 3 payment be calculated for providers that began operations part way through 2019 or in 2020 that do not have complete financial information from 2019 or the first quarter of 2020? (Added 10/5/2020)

HHS will calculate the percentage of change in operating revenues from patient care minus operating expenses from patient care for providers that began operations partway through 2019 or in 2020, and, therefore, do not have data from all of the requested quarters, based on the applicant's financial information that is available and data from the same type of provider as the applicant. Providers that began operation in 2020 will be paid approximately 2% of patient care revenue based on the applicant's reported financial information for those months in 2020 that they were operation.

I am a provider that is newly eligible for Phase 3 of the General Distribution. Should I submit an application as part of Phase 3 or will there be another opportunity to receive a General Distribution payment? (Added 10/5/2020)

Providers that are newly eligible should submit their TIN for validation as soon as practical in order to ensure that they can submit an application before the deadline. HHS has not yet determined whether there will be additional General Distribution phases. Providers should not have the expectation that they will be advantaged by applying for funds from one distribution over another. Providers should apply for a Provider Relief Fund payment in the first distribution in which they are eligible.

What are the reasons that I would not be eligible for a Phase 3 – General Distribution payment? (Modified 10/8/2020)

You must meet the five eligibility requirements for the Phase 3 – General Distribution; must not be currently terminated from participation in Medicare or precluded from receiving payment through Medicare Advantage or Part D; must not be currently excluded from participation in Medicare, Medicaid, and other Federal health care programs; and must not currently have Medicare billing privileges revoked. In addition, your billing TIN must be included in the State-provided list of eligible Medicaid and CHIP providers, the HHS-created list of dental providers, the list of providers who received a General or Targeted Distribution payment, the list of Medicare Part A providers that experienced a change in ownership in 2019 or 2020, or your application must pass additional validation by HHS. If you received payment under previous Targeted Distributions, these funds may be factored into whether you will receive any further payments under Phase 3.

How should an applicant set up a One Healthcare ID (formerly known as Optum ID) if it is applying for Phase 3 – General Distribution payment on behalf of multiple subsidiaries? (Modified 2/19/2021)

If the applicant is a parent entity applying on behalf of multiple subsidiaries and it would like each subsidiary to receive its own payment, the applicant should create a One Healthcare ID account and submit an application for each TIN that should receive its own payment. The applicant should include the unique banking information for each subsidiary's application.

If the applicant is a parent entity applying on behalf of multiple subsidiaries and it would like a single payment for all of the included subsidiaries, the applicant should create one One Healthcare ID account for the parent entity and submit a single application with the filing TIN.

The parent entity should add its TIN as the "Organizational TIN" on their dashboard. If applying on behalf of subsidiaries, the parent entity will have the opportunity to enter multiple subsidiary TINs associated with the parent organization TIN. After adding the "Organizational TIN," the applicant should click "Get Started" once they arrive on the "Practice Detail" page, under the "Group/Individual Information" heading. The applicant can enter up to 1,200 subsidiary TINs into the "List of Subsidiary TINs Associated with This Entity" field. The applicant may paste a list of TINs directly into this field. Next, the applicant should review their information and click "Submit TIN." Once the organization or subsidiary TINs are verified, the applicant will progress to the DocuSign form, where they can submit the applicable tax information that accounts for each TIN included in the application.

Is a health care provider that did not deposit a check from the Phase 1 – General Distribution that was subsequently voided after 90 days, eligible to apply for the Phase 3 – General Distribution? (Added 10/5/2020)

Yes. The health care provider is eligible to apply for a Phase 3 – General Distribution payment if it otherwise meets the eligibility criteria.

In the situation where the Medicaid provider is a management company that bills Medicaid, but the revenues from patient care are ultimately reflected on the property owner's parent company's tax returns (with the management company retaining a portion as a management fee), and the Medicaid provider/management company is not a subsidiary of the property owner or its parent company, which entity should apply for the Medicaid Provider Relief Fund Distribution? (Added 10/5/2020)

The Medicaid provider/management company must apply, because neither the property owner nor its parent company is an eligible healthcare provider. The Medicaid provider/management company must use the funds for eligible healthcare related expenses or lost revenues attributable to coronavirus. However, the Medicaid provider/management company could, for example, purchase PPE from the property owner or its parent company.

Is a health care provider eligible to receive a payment from the Phase 3 – General Distribution even if the provider received funding from the Small Business Administration’s (SBA) Payroll Protection Program or the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) or has received Medicaid HCBS retainer payments? (Modified 3/31/2021)

Yes. If the health care provider otherwise meets the criteria for eligibility, receipt of funds from SBA and FEMA for coronavirus recovery or of Medicaid Home-and Community-Based Services (HCBS) retainer payments, does not preclude a health care provider from being eligible for Phase 3 – General Distribution; however, the health care provider must substantiate that the Provider Relief Fund payments were used for health care related expenses or lost revenue attributable to COVID-19, and those expenses or lost revenue were not reimbursed from other sources or other sources were not obligated to reimburse.

Providers of self-directed Home- and Community-based Services (HCBS), who do not work for provider agencies, often receive payment through a fiscal management service (FMS) organization who bills Medicaid and remits payment to the provider. Will the requirement that a provider either have directly billed their state Medicaid/CHIP programs or Medicaid managed care plans for health care-related services between January 1, 2018, to March 31, 2019 prevent these providers from being eligible for funding from the relief fund? (Added 10/5/2020)

While the self-directed providers are eligible to receive Provider Relief Fund money, payments from the Provider Relief Fund will be made to the filing TIN entity. If the FMS organization is the filing TIN entity, it will need to apply on behalf of the self-directed providers and distribute the funds as appropriate to the providers. If self-directed providers were included in the provider files submitted by CMS from states or are included T-MSIS files, they might be eligible to apply directly for payment. Where a FMS organization receives the Provider Relief Fund payment, it has discretion in allocating the Provider Relief Fund payments among self-directed providers, to support the providers' health care related expenses or lost revenue attributable to COVID-19, so long as the payment is used to prevent, prepare for, or respond to coronavirus and those expenses or lost revenue are not reimbursed from other sources or other sources were not obligated to reimburse them.

Are health care providers that only bill Medicaid or CHIP through a waiver eligible for the Phase 3 – General Distribution? (Added 10/5/2020)

Yes. Health care providers that bill for services in Medicaid or CHIP that are covered under either a waiver or state plan, including disability service providers and other providers of Medicaid-funded HCBS (e.g., day habilitation, HCBS waiver program services), are eligible for the Phase 3 – General Distribution if they otherwise meet the eligibility criteria.

Are health care providers that only bill Medicaid or CHIP through managed care arrangements eligible for the Phase 3 – General Distribution? (Added 10/5/2020)

Yes. Health care providers that bill either fee-for-service or managed care in Medicaid or CHIP are eligible for the Phase 3 – General Distribution if they otherwise meet the other eligibility criteria.

If a health care provider is paid through a certified public expenditure (CPE), will the provider be eligible for the Phase 3 – General Distribution? (Added 10/5/2020)

These payment mechanisms do not impact eligibility for the Provider Relief Fund. Phase 3 – General Distribution payments will be paid to the filing TIN entity based on the entity's percentage of total revenue from patient care and change in operating revenues from patient care, minus their operating expenses from patient care.

Are health care providers that are paid through Organized Healthcare Delivery Systems (OHCDS) and voluntarily assign their direct payment rights to an OHCDS eligible for the Provider Relief Fund Phase 3 – General Distribution? (Added 10/5/2020)

Phase 3 – General Distribution payments will be made to the filing TIN entities. If the OHCDS is the filing TIN entity, the payment will go to that entity, who has the sole discretion about how funds are distributed. The Provider Relief Fund payment recipient has discretion in allocating the Provider Relief funds to support its subsidiaries' health care related expenses or lost revenue attributable to COVID-19, so long as the payment is used to prevent, prepare for, or respond to coronavirus and those expenses or lost revenue are not reimbursed from other sources or other sources were not obligated to reimburse.

Are health care providers who bill for Medicaid or CHIP services through a county behavioral health provider network eligible for the Phase 3 – General Distribution? (Added 10/5/2020)

Yes. Health care providers that bill for Medicaid or CHIP services through a county behavioral health provider network are eligible for the Phase 3 – General Distribution if they otherwise meet the other eligibility criteria.

Tax Identification Number (TIN) Validation Process

When is the deadline to submit an application? (Modified 11/12/2020)

The deadline to start an application by submitting a TIN for validation under Phase 3 – General Distribution is November 6, 2020 at 11:59 PM EST. If the TIN validation is initialized by November 13, 2020 at 11:59 PM EST, the entity will have until November 27, 2020 at 11:59 PM EST to submit an application.

Is there anything different about the TIN validation process for Phase 3 compared to the process for Phase 2? (Added 10/5/2020)

Providers that have received General Distribution payments under Phases 1 and/or 2 will not undergo any further validation. Providers that are newly eligible under Phase 3 will be subject to TIN validation processes similar to those employed under Phase 2.

What if an applicant's TIN is flagged as invalid because it is not on the curated list of eligible providers? (Added 10/5/2020)

If a TIN is not on the curated list of eligible providers, HHS will conduct additional analysis related to the TIN and any active providers associated with the TIN. If the TIN is subsequently marked as valid, the provider will be notified to proceed submitting data into DocuSign. TINs that cannot be validated will not receive funding.

I received an email saying my Taxpayer Identification Number (TIN) was under review. What does that mean? (Added 10/5/2020)

HHS is validating provider eligibility for General Distribution funds by using curated lists generated by state/territory Medicaid and CHIP agencies and third parties for those provider types that do not participate in Medicaid and CHIP. In most instances, HHS will respond within 15 business days; however, this process may take up to several weeks.

Application Process

An organization has the sale of medical supplies, such as durable medical equipment and prescription glasses and contacts, as part of its revenue and expenses. Can these sales be captured in the data submitted as a part of revenue and operating expenses from patient care? (Added 10/28/2020)

No. Any revenue or expenses related to the sale of medical supplies, including durable medical equipment and prescription glasses and contacts, may not be included as part of revenue or expenses from patient care. Only patient care revenues from providing health care, services, and supports, as provided in a medical setting, at home, or in the community may be included.

Does "operating expenses from patient care" include costs that support the delivery of care, such as the health care providers' information technology, finance, and human resources costs? (Added 10/28/2020)

Yes. Applicant may include costs that support the delivery of care, such as the health care providers' information technology, finance, and human resources costs, as part of "operating expenses from patient care" when applying for Phase 3 General Distribution payments.

Does "most recent federal income tax return of 2017, 2018, or 2019" mean filed return? (Added 10/28/2020)

Yes. Applicants must submit the most recently filed tax return along with their application for Phase 3 General Distribution payments. If an applicant has applied for funds in previous General Distributions and filed taxes in the interim, it must use its most recent tax return; the applicant is not required to submit the same return included with previous General Distribution applications.

If a parent entity is applying for the Phase 3 General Distribution on behalf of itself and multiple subsidiaries, and the parent and subsidiaries file a group tax return, should the parent entity submit the joint tax return as part of its application? (Added 10/28/2020)

Yes. Similar to the Phase 2 General Distribution application, in cases where a parent files a group tax return for itself and all/or some of its subsidiaries, the parent entity should submit the group tax return that includes all subsidiaries on behalf of which the parent entity is applying.

Should a parent entity applying on behalf itself and subsidiaries report the proportion of revenues from patient care, along operating revenue and operating expenses for patient care, aggregated across all entities or break out each figure by TIN? (Added 10/28/2020)

The parent entity that is applying on behalf of itself and multiple subsidiaries should break out by TIN revenues and operating expenses for patient and non-patient care when applying for Phase 3 funds on behalf of multiple subsidiaries. The applying entity should ensure that these figures reconcile to ones provided on the submitted tax return.

May a parent entity applying on behalf of multiple subsidiaries that would like each subsidiary to receive its own payment submit as documentation for each individual subsidiary the common group tax return? (Added 10/28/2020)

Yes.  The parent entity that is applying on behalf of multiple subsidiaries may submit the same required financial documentation as part of multiple applications if the documentation includes the requested financial information for each of the subsidiaries.  The parent entity that is applying on behalf of multiple subsidiaries should include a break-out by TIN of the revenues and operating expenses for patient and non-patient care for each of the TINs included in the filed tax return that reconciles to the figures on the return.

How should intercompany rent be treated when reporting "operating expenses from patient care?" (Added 10/28/2020)

Intercompany rent should be included when reporting "operating expenses from patient care" as well as "operating revenue from patient care."

What is "operating revenues from patient care?" (Modified 10/28/2020)

HHS considers "operating revenues from patient care" to be net patient service revenue from the delivery of health care services directly to patients. "Net patient service revenue" is defined as gross charges for patient services delivered, minus contractual adjustments from all third party payors, charity care adjustments, bad debt, and any other discounts or adjustments necessary to arrive at net patient service revenue. For the definition of "revenue" for purposes of reporting and use of funds, please refer to the reporting requirements available at www.hhs.gov/providerrelief.com.

What is "operating expense from patient care?" (Modified 10/28/2020)

HHS considers "operating expenses from patient care" to be the operating expenses incurred as part of the delivery of care, including salaries, benefits, medical supplies, contracted and/or employed physicians, interest, and depreciations. Operating expenses from patient care do not include any non-operating expenses, such as costs incurred on any rental property that is not the site of patient care delivery, as well as contributions made, gains, and/or losses on investments. For the definition of "expenses" for purposes of reporting and use of funds, please refer to the reporting requirements available at www.hhs.gov/providerrelief.com.

An organization has prescription sales as part of its revenue. Can these sales be captured in the data submitted as a part of revenue from patient care? (Added 10/15/2020)

Generally no, prescriptions sale revenue may not be captured as part of revenue from patient care. Only patient care revenues from providing health care, services, and supports, as provided in a medical setting, at home, or in the community may be included. Patient care revenues do include savings obtained by providers through enrollment in the 340B Program.

If I entered my TIN for validation as part of Phase 2 but it was not validated until October 5, 2020 or later, which application will I fill out? (Added 10/5/2020)

Providers that submitted a TIN for validation as part of Phase 2 but had their TIN validated on or after October 5, will fill out a Phase 3 application and be considered for additional payment based on Phase 3 payment methodology in addition to approximately 2% of annual revenue from patient care.

Why am I required to reenter information previously submitted as part of Phase 1 and/or Phase 2? (Added 10/5/2020)

In order for HHS to make payments as part of Phase 3, the Department needs the most recent financial information available.

I have completed my application and submitted it in the portal, but the portal still says "Get Started" as if I have not submitted. Why is this? (Added 10/5/2020)

The portal currently will say "Get Started" until a final determination has been made on provider payment. If and when a payment has been made, you will be able to move on in the portal to attest to the payment.

Am I able to edit or resubmit my Phase 3 – General Distribution application in the Provider Relief Fund Application and Attestation Portal? (Added 10/5/2020)

You can only submit one application. You can edit the data on the application form, until the form is submitted. You cannot edit or resubmit the application form once it is submitted. You should not apply until you have available all of the required information and documentation necessary to submit a complete and accurate application.

If an organization neither files taxes nor has audited financial statements, what financial documents should it submit with its application? (Added 10/5/2020)

If an organization does not have tax filings, nor audited financial statements, it may submit internally-generated financial statements; in the case of entities receiving Federal grants, the most recent four quarters of SF-425 forms; or for eligible federal entities, the most recent annual report submitted to Unified Financial Management System (UFMS).

What should I do if I do not have the federal tax form to submit my information? (Added 10/5/2020)

Upload a statement explaining why the entity is not required to file a federal tax form (note that non-profit entities should submit a Form 990) or is unable to provide the required information. In addition, provide the most recent audited financial statements (or management prepared financial statements) for the TIN entity. If the financial information of a TIN entity is reported as part of a parent organization, it may be necessary to provide consolidating audited financial statements that breakout the revenue and expenses for the TIN entity.

If a health care provider has changed tax status between the most recent tax filing and the current year, which status should the practice use to apply? (Added 10/5/2020)

The health care provider should use the status that was included in the most recent tax filing when applying for Provider Relief Fund payments. For example, if a practice was a C corporation in 2019 and is an S corporation in 2020, it should apply as a C corporation if the provider's most recent tax filing is from 2019.

If a tax-exempt organization receives federal, state, and/or local grant funds, which is reported on line 8 of Form 990, can it include this revenue with the revenue reported in line 9 of the Form 990, in field 10 of the application? (Added 10/5/2020)

No. The applicant may only include patient care revenue in its application for Provider Relief Fund payments, which is found in line 9 of Form 990 for tax-exempt organizations.

Should I set up an electronic payment Automated Clearing House (ACH) account before my application is approved? (Added 10/5/2020)

Yes, in order to most effectively and quickly deliver funds to providers, HHS recommends that applicants sign up for an ACH account at the same time they submit a Provider Relief Fund application. This will prevent delays in issuing payment once an application has been approved.

Why do I need to set up an electronic payment Automated Clearing House (ACH) account? (Added 10/5/2020)

ACH payments are a secure and expeditious way to transfer money. The majority of payments will be made through bank transfer. Organizations with revenue greater than $5,000,000 will be required to set up ACH accounts to allow the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to most effectively and quickly deliver funds to providers, as well as maximize program integrity and fraud avoidance.

What if I am a health care provider that is not required to be licensed by my state/territory? How should I fill out Medical/DOH/License Number field in the Group/Individual Information of the Provider Relief Fund Application and Attestation Portal? (Added 10/5/2020)

If you are a provider that is not required to be licensed by your state but otherwise meets the eligibility criteria for the second phase of the General Distribution, you should enter "not applicable" in the field. The field cannot be left blank.

How can an individual Home- and Community-based Services (HCBS) self-directed provider determine whether they should be applying on their own behalf or relying on the FMS organization to apply for the Phase 2 – General Distribution? (Added 10/5/2020)

In general, if the individual is being paid through an FMS organization, the organization is likely the filing and billing TIN and would be eligible to apply for the Phase 3 – General Distribution. In that situation, the self-directed provider should contact the FMS organization to confirm that the organization is submitting an application on their behalf or whether the provider should submit an application as an individual self-directed provider.

Can FMS organizations' revenue from administrative fees provided by the state Medicaid program be included as "patient care"? (Added 10/5/2020)

Yes. Applicants may include administrative fees provided by the state Medicaid program in the reported revenue, as well as in the percentage of revenue from patient care reported in field 12.

If an applicant health care provider bills for care under a single TIN that provides care across multiple different facilities, can the parent organization report patient revenue for every facility that bills underneath the TIN? (Modified 12/4/2020)

If an applicant health care provider bills for care under a single TIN that provides care across multiple different facilities, the parent organization must report patient revenue and the provider's change in operating revenues from patient care, minus their operating expenses from patient care for every facility that bills underneath the TIN.

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