PPO Glossary: Key Terms and Definitions
Understanding the terminology embedded in a Preferred Provider Organization plan is essential for making informed enrollment, utilization, and appeals decisions. This glossary covers the core vocabulary found in PPO plan documents, Explanations of Benefits, and federal regulatory filings. Terms are drawn from definitions used by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), and the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC). Familiarity with these definitions shapes how enrollees interpret cost-sharing obligations, network rules, and coverage boundaries.
Definition and scope
A PPO glossary serves as a reference for the specialized vocabulary governing how Preferred Provider Organization plans operate, how costs are calculated, and how enrollees exercise their coverage rights. The scope extends from basic structural terms — premium, deductible, copay — to more complex regulatory concepts such as prior authorization, balance billing, and network adequacy standards.
The following terms appear throughout plan Summary of Benefits and Coverage (SBC) documents, which insurers are required to produce under 45 CFR §147.200 as implemented through the Affordable Care Act. The SBC standardizes how insurers disclose cost-sharing figures, coverage limitations, and excluded services.
Core structural terms:
- Premium — The fixed monthly amount paid to maintain coverage, regardless of whether services are used. Premiums are distinct from all other cost-sharing components. For detailed premium benchmarks, see PPO Premium Costs.
- Deductible — The dollar amount an enrollee must pay out of pocket for covered services before the plan begins paying its share. A family PPO deductible and an individual deductible within the same plan operate under either an aggregate or embedded structure. The mechanical difference between these two structures is explained at PPO Deductible Explained.
- Copay (Copayment) — A fixed dollar amount paid at the time of service, such as $30 for a primary care visit. Copays may or may not count toward the deductible depending on plan design.
- Coinsurance — A percentage of the allowed amount an enrollee pays after the deductible is met, such as 20% for in-network specialist visits. The distinction between copay and coinsurance mechanics is detailed at PPO Copay vs. Coinsurance.
- Out-of-Pocket Maximum — The statutory ceiling on enrollee cost-sharing for essential health benefits in a plan year. For 2024, CMS set the self-only out-of-pocket maximum at $9,450 (CMS Out-of-Pocket Limit Guidance). Once this threshold is reached, the plan covers 100% of in-network covered services for the remainder of the plan year. See PPO Out-of-Pocket Maximum for a full breakdown.
How it works
PPO cost-sharing terms interact in a defined sequence that governs the financial flow of every claim. Understanding this sequence clarifies what each term means in practice.
The standard cost-sharing sequence:
- Service rendered — The enrollee receives a covered service from an in-network or out-of-network provider.
- Allowed amount determined — The insurer applies its contracted rate (in-network) or usual-and-customary rate (out-of-network) to establish the allowed amount.
- Deductible applied — If the annual deductible has not been met, the enrollee pays the allowed amount up to the remaining deductible balance.
- Copay or coinsurance applied — After the deductible is satisfied, the enrollee pays either a fixed copay or a coinsurance percentage on subsequent covered services.
- Out-of-pocket maximum tracked — Qualifying payments accumulate toward the annual ceiling; once reached, the plan absorbs 100% of covered in-network costs.
Network-specific terms:
- In-Network Provider — A physician, hospital, or facility that has contracted with the insurer to accept negotiated rates. In-network services trigger lower cost-sharing tiers. Network composition and adequacy standards are governed at the state level and by CMS for marketplace plans under 45 CFR §156.230. See PPO Network Explained.
- Out-of-Network Provider — A provider without a contract with the insurer. PPOs cover out-of-network services at a reduced benefit level, unlike HMOs, which typically exclude out-of-network care entirely except in emergencies. The comparative structure is examined at PPO vs. HMO. For the specific coverage mechanics, see PPO Out-of-Network Coverage.
- Allowed Amount (Eligible Expense) — The maximum the insurer will pay for a specific service. For out-of-network providers, charges above the allowed amount become the enrollee's responsibility as balance billing. Federal surprise billing protections under the No Surprises Act (Public Law 116-260, effective January 1, 2022) limit balance billing in defined emergency and certain non-emergency scenarios. See PPO Surprise Billing Protections and PPO Balance Billing.
- Preferred Provider — Within some PPO tiered structures, a subset of in-network providers designated as "preferred" receive lower cost-sharing than standard in-network providers. This tiering mechanism is covered at PPO Tiered Networks.
Claims and administrative terms:
- Prior Authorization (Preauthorization) — Insurer approval required before certain services, procedures, or medications are covered. Denial of prior authorization is one of the most common triggers for the PPO Appeal Process. Full coverage of what requires preauthorization is at PPO Prior Authorization.
- Explanation of Benefits (EOB) — The post-claim document the insurer sends the enrollee itemizing billed charges, allowed amounts, plan payments, and enrollee responsibility. The EOB is not a bill. Its components are explained at PPO Explanation of Benefits.
- Formulary — The insurer's tiered list of covered prescription drugs. Formulary placement directly determines the copay or coinsurance rate applied to each drug. See PPO Prescription Drug Coverage.
- Network Adequacy — The regulatory standard requiring that a plan's provider network include sufficient providers to deliver covered services within defined time and distance parameters. CMS and state insurance departments enforce network adequacy requirements. More detail is at PPO Network Adequacy.
Common scenarios
Glossary terms become operationally significant in specific coverage situations:
Scenario 1 — Specialist visit under a PPO:
An enrollee with a $1,500 individual deductible and 20% in-network coinsurance visits an in-network cardiologist billing $400. If $900 of the deductible remains, the enrollee pays $400, reducing the remaining deductible to $500. No coinsurance applies yet. PPOs do not require a referral to access specialists, distinguishing them structurally from HMOs and POS plans. The referral rule is confirmed at PPO Referral Requirements, and direct specialist access mechanics are at PPO Specialist Access.
Scenario 2 — Emergency care at an out-of-network facility:
An enrollee receives emergency surgery at a non-participating hospital. Under the No Surprises Act (Public Law 116-260), the enrollee's cost-sharing is calculated as if the care were in-network for emergency services, and the hospital cannot balance-bill beyond that amount. Cost-sharing still applies at the in-network rate. See PPO Emergency Care Coverage.
Scenario 3 — Open enrollment term selection:
An enrollee comparing plans during open enrollment must understand that premiums, deductibles, and out-of-pocket maximums are plan-year figures that reset on January 1 for calendar-year plans. Switching plans mid-year resets the deductible. The enrollment mechanics are detailed at PPO Open Enrollment.
Decision boundaries
Certain glossary terms define hard legal and contractual thresholds that distinguish covered from non-covered obligations:
In-network vs. out-of-network cost-sharing is not a matter of insurer discretion — it is set in the plan document filed with state regulators or CMS. A plan cannot retroactively reclassify a provider as out-of-network after services are rendered if the provider was listed as in-network at the time of the visit.
The out-of-pocket maximum applies only to essential health benefits as defined under 42 U.S.C. §18022. Premiums, balance-billed amounts from out-of-network providers, and non-covered services do not count toward the statutory ceiling.
Prior authorization denials versus claim denials are procedurally distinct. A prior authorization denial precedes service delivery; a claim denial follows it. Each triggers separate appeal timelines under the plan and, for marketplace and employer plans, under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) at 29 CFR §2560.503-1. The full [PPO Appeal Process](/ppo
The law belongs to the people. Georgia v. Public.Resource.Org, 590 U.S. (2020)