Under the proposed 2025 Medicare physician payment schedule published today, physicians will face a 2.8% pay cut. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) proposal reinforces the clear need for systemic changes and follows a 1.69% Medicare pay cut in 2024 and a 2% drop in 2023.
“With CMS estimating a fifth consecutive year of Medicare payment reductions—this time by 2.8%—it’s evident that Congress must solve this problem,” said AMA President Bruce A. Scott, MD. “In addition to the cut, CMS predicts that the Medicare Economic Index [MEI]—the measure of practice-cost inflation—will increase by 3.6%. Facing this widening gap between what Medicare pays physicians and the cost of delivering quality care to patients, physicians are urging Congress to pass a reform package that would permanently strengthen Medicare."
The AMA is leading the charge to reform the Medicare payment system, which is the AMA’s top advocacy priority.
Physicians can learn how they can take part in the fight to fix Medicare on behalf of their patients and practices at the AMA's Fix Medicare Now website.
“Physician practices cannot continue to absorb rising costs while their payment rates dwindle,” Dr. Scott said. “The death by a thousand cuts continues. Rural physicians and those treating underserved populations see this CMS warning as another reminder of the painful challenges they face in keeping their practices open and providing care. It’s crucial that we ensure both continue.”
Medicare physician payment effectively declined 29% from 2001 to 2024, even before accounting for the newly proposed cut.
Experts widely acknowledge that chronically inadequate Medicare payment rates will eventually affect older adults’ access to high-quality care.
Among them is the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC), which recognized in its report to Congress earlier this year an unsustainable combination within Medicare physician payment: an inadequate baseline and a lack of an inflation-based update.
Meanwhile, Medicare’s trustees have warned that the physician payment system has failed to keep up with the cost of practicing medicine and that failure could hinder older adults’ access to health care.
“Absent a change in the delivery system or level of update by subsequent legislation, the trustees expect access to Medicare-participating physicians to become a significant issue in the long term,” the trustees said in their most recent report.
The report notes that the Medicare program faces “challenges” as physician payments— not based on underlying economic conditions—don’t keep up with inflation or the cost of practicing medicine.
The trustees predicted that, because of the gap between rising costs and falling payments, the “quality of health care received by Medicare beneficiaries would, under current law, fall over time compared to that received by those with private health insurance.”
Many members of Congress from both parties have seen the need for systemic change, and they introduced the bipartisan Strengthening Medicare for Patients and Providers Act, H.R. 2474. That legislation would give physicians an annual, permanent inflationary payment update in Medicare tied to the Medicare Economic Index.
The AMA supports H.R. 2427 and put forward a proposal to make the Medicare Merit-based Incentive Payment System (MIPS) “more relevant to patients and supports pending legislation to improve the budget-neutrality process to better reflect actual Medicare costs,” Dr. Scott said.
“The consecutive years of Medicare cuts demand a comprehensive legislative solution,” he added. “Previous quick fixes have been insufficient. This situation requires a bold, substantial approach. A Band-Aid goes only so far when the patient is in dire need.”
Interested physicians can learn how to advocate on behalf of their patients and practices for Medicare reform at the AMA's Fix Medicare Now website.