Billing for uninsured services
Learn about the suggested rates and fees for services that are not covered by OHIP
Physicians must bill for insured services at the rates set out in the OHIP Schedule of Benefits.
They may not bill any amount in excess of these rates. Physicians may select the rate they bill for uninsured services, unless they are otherwise prohibited from doing so.
Read more below — or get the full details in the Physicians’ guide to uninsured services: 2024 edition — about the rates and fees for uninsured services that physicians may choose to charge.
The OMA provides guidance to physicians on third-party requested services, other uninsured services, suggested fees, relevant policies and interpretation of relevant regulations applying to such services.
Wherever possible, specific issues will be highlighted for members and reference information will be provided for those members wishing to further research the specific issue at hand.
The OMA's suggested rates and fees suggested apply to uninsured services of “average” complexity and are intended to offer assistance in establishing appropriate and practice-specific billing rates.
OMA products and services
OHIP billing
Understanding billing
Annual adjustments to fees
Frequently asked questions
Annual adjustments to OMA suggested fees
Every year, the Uninsured Services Committee calculates the annual adjustment figure that is then applied to the uninsured fees listed in the OMA Physician's Guide to Uninsured Services, the Scale of Grading and Remuneration (see pages 35-36), and the OMA Schedule of Fees. Learn more about the Uninsured Services Committee (member-only content).
The OMA Council approved the methodology to adjust the fees that are modelled after Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, Medical Economic Index (MEI), which is a measure of practice cost inflation that estimates annual changes in physicians' operating costs and earning levels.
The methodology uses a moving average of the last three years’ MEI. One drawback of that methodology is that since forecast data is not available, calculations for the Ontario MEI would always be one year behind, and the moving average might under or overestimate the actual increase. To offset this potential bias, an additional adjustment (the difference between last year’s MEI that should have been applied and what was actually applied) is factored into the moving average as current data becomes available.
Recommended fee increase
For instance, the recommended fee increase for 2023, the formula is:
[Moving Average of 2020, 2021, 2022 MEI] + [2016 Actual MEI - 2016 Applied Fee Increase]
In 2009, OMA council approved the board of directors’ recommendation to create a fee multiplier to convert fees listed in the OHIP Schedule of Benefits into suggested OMA Fees for uninsured services (for example, fees listed in the OMA’s Schedule of Fees) and a methodology to adjust the multiplier in future years.
In recognition of the link between the OMA and OHIP Schedules, a second formula, which simply adds a modifier to account for the global adjustment to the OHIP Schedule of Benefits, was created to address this concern.
Recommended adjustment to the multiplier
For instance, the recommended adjustment for the 2017 multiplier using the following formula:
[Moving Average of 2020, 2021, 2022 MEI] + [2022 Actual MEI - 2022 Applied Fee Increase]
- Global Increase to OHIP Schedule of Benefits