The same spending bill that repealed the Cadillac tax, the
medical devices excise tax and the health insurance providers fee reinstated
the annual Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) fees for the
2020-2029 fiscal years.
As a result, specified health insurance policies and applicable
self-insured health plans must continue to pay these fees through 2029.
What Are the PCORI Fees?
The PCORI fees were created to help patients, clinicians, payers
and the public make informed health decisions by advancing comparative
effectiveness research. Fees paid by health insurance issuers and sponsors of
self-insured health plans fund the institute’s research, in part.
Who Must Pay the PCORI Fees?
The entity responsible for paying the PCORI fees depends on
whether the plan is insured or self-insured.
· For
insured health plans, the issuer of the health insurance policy is required to
pay the fees.
· For
self-insured health plans, the fees are to be paid by the plan sponsor.
What’s Next?
PCORI fees are reported and paid annually using IRS Form 720
(Quarterly Federal Excise Tax Return). These fees are due by July 31 of the
year following the last day of the plan year. This means that, for plan years
ending in 2019, the PCORI fees are due by July 31, 2020.
Source: Zywave, 2020.
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