Medicare's physician payment rate is again slated to drop absent congressional action. But primary care physicians may find financial relief in other policies.
Fam Pract Manag. 2025;32(1):28-34
Author disclosures: no relevant financial relationships.
The new year brings many predictable annual traditions, such as the ball dropping in Times Square and your gym suddenly being overcrowded the first few weeks of January. It also brings new coding and payment changes from Medicare and CPT. While there are positive aspects for primary care, this year's news is much like last year's1 — complicated and part of a much larger story. The 2025 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule (MPFS) again includes a cut to physician payment that is mandated by budget neutrality requirements. At press time, Congress is yet again discussing ways to stave off the cut. This seemingly annual two-step is part of the broader tension between what the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) would like to accomplish — including strengthening primary care — and the statutory and budgetary limits on its abilities to pursue those priorities.
In its public comments on the 2025 MPFS proposed rule,2 the AAFP explicitly noted its “concerns for the long-term sustainability of Medicare and the physicians who make the program possible,” and reiterated those concerns3 when the final rule was released. The AAFP also joined other physician organizations4 to encourage congressional leaders to fix Medicare physician payment in a more lasting way.
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