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Hospice Regulatory 2025 Updates: Year-End Overview

This article was originally published by Much Shelist, P.C. Read it on the Much website.

Fenton Jurkowitz has closed its operations. Benjamin Fenton, Nick Jurkowitz, Henry Fenton, Herbert Weinberg, Nishka Khanna, and Anne Schneider are now attorneys at Much. As we enter this exciting chapter, we thank our clients and friends for their support. Our attorneys continue to represent health care companies in matters ranging from complex litigation and compliance to license defense and transactions, now with the full-service capabilities of the Much platform.

As 2025 comes to an end, many hospice regulatory changes from the start of the fiscal year are now in effect and actively shaping daily operations. Providers nationwide have spent the year changing workflows, training staff, and improving infrastructure, needed to remain compliant.

In the past year, our firm has worked closely with hospice organizations. We helped them deal with new federal requirements, compliance challenges, and risks from recent CMS updates. Understanding how these regulations function in practice is critical to minimizing liability while maintaining high-quality, patient-centered care.

2025 Hospice Regulatory Updates

Payment and Reimbursement Changes

For Fiscal Year 2025, CMS raised hospice base payment rates by 2.9%. This change added about $790 million in extra payments across the industry. The finalized annual hospice cap amount of $34,465.34 per beneficiary has heightened scrutiny around billing practices, aggregate cap calculations, and documentation supporting hospice eligibility.

Additionally, CMS’s adoption of the updated Office of Management and Budget (OMB) geographic wage index delineations has altered reimbursement calculations for many providers. These changes underscore the importance of verifying payroll classifications, cost reporting accuracy, and staffing models to avoid reimbursement disputes or audit exposure.

HOPE Assessment Tool

Our firm has noticed more attention on documentation integrity. This is because HOPE data is now an important quality and oversight measure.

From a compliance perspective, incomplete or inconsistent HOPE documentation may create vulnerabilities during CMS surveys, audits, or payment reviews. Providers must make sure that clinical staff are well-trained. They also need to ensure that electronic health record systems capture data accurately and on time.

CAHPS Survey Modernization and Patient Rights

Starting in 2025, CMS will allow electronic distribution of the CAHPS Hospice Survey. This change offers new flexibility. However, it also raises concerns about privacy, consent, and data security. 

Hospice providers should ensure that electronic survey processes comply with HIPAA requirements and clearly communicate patient and family rights regarding participation.

Conditions of Participation and Enforcement Trends

Throughout 2025, CMS has continued to enforce revised Hospice Conditions of Participation, with particular attention to:

  • Hospice eligibility determinations
  • Physician certifications and recertifications
  • Interdisciplinary care planning
  • Quality reporting accuracy

Our experience representing hospice providers suggests that regulators remain focused on program integrity and fraud prevention. Deficiencies in documentation, staffing compliance, or care coordination may result in corrective action plans, payment denials, or increased oversight.

Legal Guidance Moving Beyond 2025

As hospice providers move beyond the initial implementation phase of the 2025 regulatory changes, the focus should shift toward risk mitigation, operational consistency, and defensible compliance practices. Proactive internal audits, targeted staff training, and regular policy reviews can significantly reduce regulatory exposure.

A strong legal and compliance plan helps hospice organizations adjust to changing rules. This way, they can continue their mission of providing caring end-of-life support.

Experienced legal advisors can help providers by explaining the rules and assisting with surveys or audits. This support helps providers stay compliant in a complex hospice environment.

Consult California Hospice Healthcare Attorneys

Because of the complexities and variations associated with hospice care, it is often difficult to keep track of regulations. A good hospice healthcare lawyer will carefully review your organization and help ensure that all regulations and compliance requirements are met.

As one of the nation’s leading healthcare firms, Fenton Jurkowitz Law Group regularly develops preventative and proactive legal strategies for any transactional, litigation, compliance, and regulatory defense needs. 

If you are a practitioner or director of a hospice organization in need of legal guidance, speak with one of our California healthcare attorneys today.