Reference-Based Pricing, Explained for Independents

Why RBP plans have the cheapest premium of the bunch and what the tradeoff is.

Reference-Based Pricing (RBP) is the least familiar plan type on a working owner menu, but it's frequently the cheapest monthly premium available. It's worth understanding before writing it off.

How RBP actually works

A traditional PPO negotiates a discount off the hospital's list price and calls it a day. Hospitals set the list price. RBP flips that: the plan pays a fixed multiple of what Medicare would pay for the same service. Medicare rates are public and relatively stable, which means the plan knows what it's paying up front.

That transparency is why RBP premiums come in lower. The plan isn't paying a mystery discount off an arbitrary sticker price. It's paying a known, reasonable rate.

The tradeoff to be aware of

Some hospitals will balance-bill you for the difference between their list price and what the plan paid. Most PSM of TN plans include legal defense and negotiation if a balance bill shows up, but it's a thing you should know can happen.

For healthy people who mostly use urgent care, telehealth, and prescriptions, RBP is often a great deal. For someone planning a major surgery next year, it's worth a conversation before picking it.

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