Home » Rural health care: What will still be standing in 2031?
Home » Rural health care: What will still be standing in 2031?
Rural health care in America is in crisis. Over 46 million rural residents have experienced declining access to care for more than a decade. More than 180 rural hospitals have closed or eliminated inpatient services during this time. These closures underscore a core problem: the communities with the greatest need often depend on the least equipped systems. For health system leaders, the question is no longer whether intervention is needed, but whether the largest rural health investment in a generation will create lasting change or simply delay deeper challenges.
The Rural Health Transformation (RHT) Program, established by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act in July 2025, is administered by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). It allocates $50 billion in grants to states through 2030, representing the largest federal investment in rural health care since 2003. In December 2025, CMS awarded funding to all 50 states, with first-year awards averaging $200 million per state and $10 billion distributed annually through the decade’s end. The program is designed to provide immediate relief to rural hospitals while bolstering facilities with the tools they need to be successful in the long game.
This changes the focus for 2026. The key issue is not the arrival of funding, but how each system uses it and whether these investments will last beyond the grant period. In my experience building virtual and hybrid care models for these settings, the difference between a lasting program and one that fails rarely depends on technology alone.
Rural health systems face three main challenges: workforce shortages, reduced reimbursement, and ongoing access gaps. The Chartis Center for Rural Health reports that about 41% of rural hospitals operate at a loss, with 417 at risk of closure. According to the Kaiser Family Foundation, 96% of rural hospitals receive additional Medicare funding through special payment designations, and 52% are already affiliated with larger health systems.
The fiscal context adds urgency. The legislation creating the RHT Program also reduces federal Medicaid spending in rural areas by an estimated $137 billion over the next decade. For many systems, these grants primarily replace lost revenue rather than provide new investment, limiting opportunities for spending that produces lasting results.
Another important program design feature is that states must submit annual reports to CMS, but funding is not tied to performance, and there is no federal requirement that funds reach rural hospitals or local providers. Half of each year’s allocation is divided equally among states, regardless of need, while the rest is awarded based on rural population, proposed initiatives, and projected impact. This structure does not guarantee results. Systems that treat this funding as a technology purchase, rather than as the basis for a sustainable clinical operating model, risk ending the grant cycle without meaningful progress.
Built correctly, an RHT-funded operating model delivers at three levels:
When a rural hospital closes, nearby facilities must absorb displaced patients, often without sufficient staff or financial resources. For health systems, even a single closure at the market’s edge can reduce margins within six to twelve months.
The patients behind those numbers don’t just face longer drives. Conditions that would have been caught early go unmanaged, and what starts as a gap in access becomes a gap in outcomes.
Chartis research highlights another risk. Outpatient services generate a median of 77 percent of revenue at rural and community hospitals, and 85 percent at critical access hospitals. If specialized providers, including those enabled by Certificate of Need reforms in some states, draw these high-margin outpatient services away from local hospitals, standalone facilities without specialty services face a direct threat to the revenue needed to remain open.
This is where hybrid and virtual care become essential. Technology can enable high-quality care but the change requires clinical operating model redesigns that focus on clinical governance, workflow redesign, training, and performance data needed for sustainable monitoring and improvement.
Health system leaders can choose to manage their rural footprint as a coordinated portfolio, not as independent facilities each seeking separate grants. RHT-funded investments could prove more valuable when paired with:
The test for any RHT-funded initiative is straightforward: if funding ended tomorrow, would the investment still benefit patients? Most grant-funded rural programs have failed this test. The successful ones build clinical infrastructure that sustains the care model independently, using the grant as an accelerant rather than as life support.
It is important to remember the timeline: grants run through 2030. The systems that remain in 2031 will not be those that spent the most, but those that built models designed to outlast the funding. Supporting the rural safety net through rapid funding is important, but planning for long-term sustainability is even more critical.
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