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New Florida Law: Patient Overpayments Must Be Refunded Within 30 Days

Client Alert

Effective January 1, 2026, Florida Senate Bill 1808, will require  health care facility licensees and health care practitioners to refund overpayments made by patients within 30 days after determination that an overpayment was made.  Failure to timely refund overpayments may result in fines or disciplinary actions.

Who does SB 1808 apply to?

The law will apply to health care facility licensees that are licensed by the Florida Agency for Health Care Administration and health care practitioners licensed by the Florida Department of Health. Billing departments, management companies, or group practices that accept payment for services rendered by a practitioner are also required to follow the 30-day refund mandate.

What overpayments are subject to this mandate?

The new law will only apply to overpayments owed to a patient when the provider has submitted charges for reimbursement with (1) a government-sponsored health care program (such as Medicaid or Medicare) or (2) a private health insurer or health maintenance organization for services rendered to a patient. This would exclude instances where a patient overpaid for services that were not billed to any insurer (for example, if the patient self-paid for a procedure not covered by insurance). Additionally, this does not apply to overpayments made by a health insurer or health maintenance organization.

What starts the 30-day clock to issue a refund?

Licensees and practitioners have 30 days to issue a refund from the date they determine that a patient made an overpayment. This places the responsibility to check payment records to determine any overpayments on the licensees and practitioners.

What happens if a refund is not issued within 30 days after overpayment is determined?

For health care facility licensees, failure to timely issue a refund could result in administrative fines. Fines range to up to $500 per violation and each day a refund is late constitutes a separate violation that is subject to an additional fine.

For health care practitioners, failure to timely issue a refund will now be grounds for a disciplinary action with the Florida Department of Health. Health care practitioners may also be subject to discipline if their billing department, management company, or group practice who accepts payment on their behalf fails to issue a timely refund.

Best Practices

To ensure compliance with SB 1808, health care facilities and practitioners should review payment policies and billing practices to assist in identifying any potential overpayments and providing mechanisms for timely issuing refunds as needed.

To learn more about this new law and ensuring compliance, please contact BMD Healthcare Member Amanda Waesch at alwaesch@bmdllc.com.


CMS and Ohio Ramp Up Fraud Enforcement in Home Health and Hospice

CMS and Ohio have launched sweeping new fraud prevention initiatives targeting home health and hospice providers, signaling a period of heightened scrutiny for enrollment, billing, documentation, and EVV compliance. While aimed at combating fraud, these measures also create significant operational and due process risks for compliant agencies, making proactive compliance programs, auditing, and governance more important than ever.

MYTH BUSTER: Can a New Chiropractor Bill Under An Established Chiropractor’s NPI?

Many chiropractic practices mistakenly believe a newly hired chiropractor can bill under an established chiropractor’s NPI while waiting for credentialing approval. In most cases, this is not permitted. Claims should be submitted under the NPI of the chiropractor who actually rendered the service to avoid compliance risks, including potential False Claims Act exposure. This article outlines key billing rules, common exceptions, and practical compliance tips for chiropractic practices.

RNs and APRNs Take Note: Ohio Board of Nursing Mandates a New CE Reporting Period

Ohio’s Board of Nursing has updated the continuing education reporting period for RNs and APRNs. Beginning March 26, 2026, CE credits must be completed between July 1 and June 30 of odd-numbered years, replacing the previous November to October timeframe.

Ohio Med Spas: Peptide Do's and Do Not's

Recent guidance from the Ohio Board of Pharmacy outlines key compliance requirements for med spas using peptides. While some peptide drugs are FDA approved, others are not or cannot be compounded. Med spa operators should ensure they source medications from licensed suppliers, avoid non-approved or “research use only” products, and follow all compounding and storage regulations to maintain compliance and avoid enforcement actions.

Substance Use Disorder Providers: 42 CFR Part 2 Now Enforceable

Updates to 42 CFR Part 2 are now enforceable, bringing significant changes to how substance use disorder (SUD) records are handled. The Final Rule aligns Part 2 more closely with HIPAA, introduces updated penalties, allows a single patient consent for treatment, payment, and operations, and adds new requirements for Notices of Privacy Practices. It also creates a formal definition of SUD counseling notes and imposes strict consent requirements for their use and disclosure. Providers should review and update policies to ensure compliance.