The CMS “Site Visit” Survival Guide: How to Pass the Unannounced Audit in 2026

It usually happens on a Tuesday morning at 10:30 AM.

A person with a clipboard walks into your DME lobby. They don’t have an appointment. They simply say: “I am here for a CMS Site Verification.”

In 2026, this is not a routine check-up. It is a “Purge Mechanism.”

CMS is actively looking to remove “shell companies” and “ghost locations” from the program before the Competitive Bidding window opens. If you fail this visit, your PTAN is revoked within 10 days, rendering you ineligible to bid.

You cannot “get ready” when they arrive. You must be ready now.

Auditors have a checklist. If you miss these basics, the audit is over in 5 minutes.

  • The Rule: You must be open and staffed during your posted hours of operation.
  • The Trap: Your posted hours say “Mon-Fri 9:00 – 5:00.” The auditor arrives at 12:30 PM. The door is locked because your staff is at lunch.
  • The Verdict: FAIL. “Provider not operational.”
  • The Fix: If you close for lunch, your sign must say “Closed 12:00 – 1:00.” If the sign says open, the door must be unlocked.
  • The Rule: You must have a physical location with a private entrance.
  • The Trap: You operate out of a Regus, WeWork, or shared suite where the receptionist works for the building, not you.
  • The Verdict: FAIL. You do not have “exclusive use” of the space.
  • The Rule: You must maintain a “reasonable” amount of inventory on-site (unless you are strictly M/O).
  • The Trap: The auditor asks to see your stock. You point to a laptop and say, “We drop ship everything.”
  • The Verdict: FAIL (for Retailers). You must have at least some sample display inventory if you claim to serve walk-ins.

Once you pass the physical check, the auditor will ask for specific binders. If you can’t produce them in 15 minutes, they mark it as “Unavailable.”

  1. Liability Insurance Certificate: Must list CMS as a certificate holder.
  2. Complaint Log: A physical log of patient complaints (even if it’s empty, you need the log).
  3. Instruction Logs: Proof that you instructed patients on how to use the device.
  4. Surety Bond Copy: The actual bond document.

The auditor will interview the person at the front desk.

  • The Question: “Who is the Authorized Official?” “Where are the patient records kept?”
  • The Danger: If you have a temp or a new hire who says, “I don’t know, I just answer the phones,” you risk a deficiency citation.
  • The Fix: Train every employee on the “Site Visit Script.” They should know exactly where the Red Binder is.
Diagram of DME facility signage and door hour compliance for CMS site visits

We Pre-Audit Your Locations

You can’t afford to be surprised. Wonder Worth Solutions offers a “Mock Site Inspection” service.

  • Virtual Walkthrough: We have you walk through your facility on FaceTime.
  • Signage Check: We verify your door hours match your PECOS profile exactly.
  • Binder Build: We send you the digital templates to build your “Red Binder” so it is ready on the desk.

Is your front door audit-ready?

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