Learn about the MVP Reporting Option

Why switch to MVPs now?

Here’s what you get:

1. Quality measures that actually make sense

MVPs focus on your specialty and the patients you see every day. No more reporting on stuff that has nothing to do with your practice.

2. Way less paperwork

Traditional MIPS has too many confusing options. MVPs keep it simple with fewer measures that actually connect to each other.

3. Better feedback about your performance

You’ll be compared to doctors who treat similar patients, not everyone. Finally get useful feedback that helps you improve where it matters.

4. Be already prepared for unforeseen situations

We’re going to phase out old MIPS eventually. Start learning MVPs now while you can still use your backup plan if something goes wrong.

5. Less reporting across all CMS programs

We’re working to make MVP reporting count for other CMS requirements too. Get prepared early and you might save time on multiple programs later.

What Are My Participation Options for Reporting MVPs?

You have four ways to report: Individual, Group, Subgroup, APM Entity

Individual

Register a single clinician to report an MVP. You can register to report an MVP as an individual in addition to reporting an MVP as part of a group or subgroup.

Examples:

Group

Register to report one MVP as a group, on behalf of all the clinicians in your practice. You can register as a group in addition to registering individual clinicians or a subset of clinicians to report a different MVP.

Examples:

Subgroup

Register a subset of the clinicians within your practice to report one MVP as a subgroup. This works well for multispecialty groups to allow for reporting of more than one MVP based on what makes sense clinically. Subgroup participation will be required for multispecialty practices starting in the 2026 performance year.

Examples:

APM Entity

Register as an APM Entity to report an MVP.

Examples: