Services and Price Information

Medicare Set-Aside Allocation
For a fee of $3,000, The Center will:

  • review the last two years of medical records;
  • obtain a rated life expectancy;
  • project future Medicare approved and accident related treatment;
  • recommend an appropriate MSA allocation; and
  • submit the allocation to CMS for review, unless instructed otherwise.

Medicare Set-Aside Allocation Review
For a fee of $1,500, The Center will:

  • review the previously created MSA allocation, medical records and life expectancy information;
  • project the cost of future Medicare approved and accident related treatment; and
  • project the cost of future accident related treatment not covered by Medicare.

If you request us to complete a new allocation for the previously reviewed case, the review fee will be applied toward the cost of the new allocation.

Professional Medicare Set-Aside Administration Services
For a one-time set up fee of $2,000; and
an annual administrative fee of $1,000;
The Center will assume responsibility for all transactions of the MSA, including:

  • verification of Medicare approved medical services related to the claimed injury;
  • payment of approved medical care and treatment per the correct fee schedule; and
  • annual accountings of all expenditures and deposits.

MSA Allocation Consultation
For a fee of $250 per hour, The Center will:

  • provide on-site informational MSA training; and
  • attend mediations, settlement conferences and other meetings where our services and information can be of value to you.

Self-Administration Counseling (Post CMS Approval)
For an annual fee of $1,000, The Center will assist, counsel and provide your client information regarding the requirements and responsibilities of self-administering his or her MSA allocation.


Medicare’s Payments While Claim is Open
Medicare insists, without question or doubt, that any payments it makes for medical services in an open claim are to be reimbursed as part of the settlement of the claim. There is no controversy about this issue. If the parties are settling a claim, they must ensure any Medicare payments for medical services related to the injury are reimbursed as part of the settlement. If you fail to do this, Medicare will pursue reimbursement from any and all sources, including the attorneys. 7-23-01 CMS Memorandum.
When a Reasonable Expectation of Medicare Eligibility Exists
A reasonable expectation of receiving Medicare within 30 months of settlement exists when the injured party: 1) has applied for Social Security Disability (SSD); 2) has been denied SSD but has, or plans to, re-file or appeal; 3) is older than 62 years and 6 months and will therefore turn age 65 within 30 months; or 4) has End Stage Renal Disease.