Minnesota’s sweeping Medicaid provider revalidation effort is causing growing uncertainty for patients and care providers as the Department of Human Services reviews thousands of health care organizations under a federal compliance mandate.
The DHS initiative, known as “Minnesota Revalidate 2026,” requires roughly 5,500 high-risk Medicaid providers to undergo re-credentialing, document verification, and in some cases site inspections before continuing to bill the state program.
So far, recent updates indicate about 1,000 providers have been approved, while another roughly 1,000 have been disenrolled or removed from the program. Thousands more remain under review or pending documentation, according to DHS-related reporting and provider updates.
The agency says the process is designed to strengthen program integrity and ensure providers meet federal Medicaid standards. Providers may be removed for failing to respond to notices, missing required documentation, or not completing revalidation steps within deadlines.
But the rollout is already having ripple effects across Minnesota’s health care system.
Patients served by home care agencies, mental health clinics, and community-based providers are among those most affected. In some cases, appointments are being delayed or disrupted as providers wait for approval or transition out of the program.
Health care advocates warn that while the effort is intended to prevent fraud and improve accountability, the speed and scale of the process risk unintended consequences for continuity of care, particularly for vulnerable populations who rely on long-term services.
DHS has said providers were given multiple notices and opportunities to submit materials, and that disenrollment does not necessarily indicate fraud, but rather non-compliance with administrative requirements.
The revalidation process is expected to continue through 2026, with additional updates as more providers are reviewed and final determinations are made.












