If you visited your doctor in January for a simple blood pressure check or sent a quick question through the patient portal, you might have noticed a new line item on your bill. In 2026, the era of the “courtesy service” is officially dead. Squeezed by the new Medicare “Efficiency Adjustment”—which, according to the American College of Cardiology, slashed reimbursement values by 2.5% effective January 1—medical practices are aggressively implementing “Minimum Floor Pricing.” Medical billing departments have been instructed to capture every minute of revenue, creating a landscape where simply walking through the door (or logging in) triggers a minimum fee. Here are the five new “minimums” you need to watch for on your 2026 statements.
1. The “Nurse Visit” (Level 1) Floor
In the past, if you popped into your doctor’s office just to have a nurse check your blood pressure or weight, it was often done as a courtesy. In 2026, that courtesy has been replaced by CPT Code 99211. With the 2026 Physician Fee Schedule finalizing cuts to standard office visit pay, practices are now billing this “Level 1” evaluation code for any face-to-face clinical staff interaction. While the reimbursement is low (often around $25–$40), the real cost to you is the co-pay. Because 99211 is technically an “office visit,” it triggers your standard $30 or $50 specialist co-pay. That 2-minute blood pressure check could now cost you $50 out of pocket.
2. The “Portal Message” Minimum
The trend of billing for MyChart messages has gone mainstream. While this started in 2024, the American Medical Association’s 2026 CPT Code Set has standardized the use of “Digital E/M” codes (99421-99423). The new rule of thumb is the “5-Minute Threshold.” According to billing guidance from CodingIntel, if your doctor (or their PA) spends more than 5 minutes reading your message and typing a reply, the billing software automatically generates a charge. This minimum charge can range from $15 to $50, depending on your insurance. If you ask a complex question like “Should I change my dosage?”, expect a bill.
3. The Hospital “Facility Floor”
The most expensive minimum charge in 2026 comes from “provider-based billing.” As hospitals continue to buy up private practices, they reclassify standard doctors’ offices as “Hospital Outpatient Departments.” According to the CMS 2026 OPPS Final Rule, while Medicare is attempting to enforce “site-neutral” payments for some drug administrations, facility fees remain applicable for many clinic visits. Once this switch happens, a “Facility Fee” is applied to every visit. This acts as a “cover charge” for using the room. Even if you only see the doctor for 10 minutes, the minimum facility fee might be $150.
4. The “Administrative Retainer”
To offset the 2026 cuts in Medicare reimbursement, many primary care practices are introducing an annual “Administrative Fee” or “Practice Membership Fee.” A recent study highlighted by Johns Hopkins University found that corporate-owned, fee-based practices have grown by 576% in the last five years. This fee—typically $50 to $200 per year—covers “non-covered services” such as refilling prescriptions without a visit or filling out forms. If you refuse to pay it, some practices are de-rostering patients or requiring an in-person appointment for every single request.
5. The “Credit Card Surcharge”
Finally, the cost of paying your bill has gone up. In 2026, a wave of medical groups stopped absorbing the merchant processing fees charged by credit card companies. As reported by Medical Economics, surcharging is legal in most states (though debit cards are exempt). If you pay your $2,000 deductible via Visa or Amex at the front desk, you may see an automatic 3% to 4% “Technology Surcharge” added to the transaction. To avoid this minimum tax on your own money, you must now bring a physical check or set up a direct ACH bank transfer.
How to Avoid the Floor
In 2026, you must treat your medical interactions like legal consultations—the meter is always running. To avoid these minimum charges:
- Bundle Your Questions: Don’t send three separate portal messages; save them for your in-person annual physical, where they are covered.
- Buy a Cuff: Avoid the “Nurse Visit” fee by buying your own blood pressure cuff and emailing the log to your doctor (which is usually cheaper or free).
- Ask “Is this a Hospital Clinic?”: Before booking a new specialist, ask if they charge a “Facility Fee.” If yes, look for an independent community doctor instead.
Have you received a bill for a MyChart message or a “nurse check” this month? Leave a comment below—we’re tracking the rise of 2026 medical junk fees!
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- Hospitals Are Charging “Winter Capacity Fees” in Some Regions
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