Machine Readable Files

As part of the Transparency in Coverage Final Rule set forth by the U.S. Department of the Treasury, the U.S. Department of Labor, and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (referred to collectively as the “Tri-Agencies”), group health plans and health insurance issuers are required to make available to the public negotiated rates for all covered items with in-network providers, and historical payments to and billed charges from, out-of-network providers through machine-readable files (MRFs) posted on an internet website, updated monthly. These files will permit the public to have access to health plan payment information that can be used to understand health plan pricing and the cost for health care services.

The files that are posted will include:

  • Table of Content files(s)
  • In-network provider negotiated rate files
  • Out-of-network provider historic allowed amount files

To support the Transparency in Coverage final rules, Wellsense has published machine-readable files (MRFs) for our Qualified Health Plans in JSON format.

  • Below is a link to our Table of Contents file. This file references the locations from which each appropriate machine readable file can be downloaded.
  • These files will be updated on a monthly basis.
  • Please note these may be very large data files. To download these files, an application designed to handle large data files may be needed.
  • Pricing information may be subject to change between when the file was published and the next monthly update.

For questions, please contact: price_transparency@wellsense.org.


For Members

These are large files that may not be as directly useful for members. Members may want to access their health plan coverage materials instead to learn more about their benefits.

WellSense Employees

These links lead to the machine readable files that are made available in response to the federal Transparency in Coverage Rule and includes negotiated service rates and out-of-network allowed amounts between health plans and healthcare providers. The machine-readable files are formatted to allow researchers, regulators, consumer advocates, and application developers to more easily access and analyze data.