Step therapy — also called "fail first" — is one of the most frustrating barriers in American healthcare. Your doctor prescribes a specific medication. Your insurer says: try this cheaper drug first. If that doesn't work, we'll consider the one your doctor actually ordered. The problem? The cheap drug may be contraindicated, ineffective for your specific condition, or cause serious side effects. You don't have to accept this passively. Step therapy exceptions exist, and knowing how to request one effectively can save months of unnecessary treatment delays.
What Is Step Therapy?
Step therapy protocols require patients to try and fail on a sequence of treatments — typically from least expensive to most expensive — before the insurer will cover the drug the physician originally prescribed. In practice, this means:
- Your rheumatologist prescribes a biologic for rheumatoid arthritis; your insurer requires you to first try methotrexate
- Your psychiatrist prescribes a specific antidepressant; your insurer requires you to first try two cheaper alternatives
- Your neurologist prescribes a newer MS drug; your insurer requires you to try older first-line therapies
Step therapy is legal and widespread, but it comes with safeguards: the right to request an exception when the step therapy is inappropriate for your specific clinical situation.
Grounds for a Step Therapy Exception
Most state step therapy laws and insurer policies recognize the following grounds for overriding the protocol:
| Exception Ground | What to Document |
|---|---|
| Contraindication | The required step drug is medically contraindicated for you (drug allergy, organ function limitation, drug interaction) |
| Previous failure | You already tried and failed the step-therapy drug — at any point in your history, including with a prior insurer |
| Clinical superiority | Your specific characteristics (genetic markers, comorbidities, disease severity) make the requested drug clinically superior for you |
| Adverse effects | The step-therapy drug is likely to cause serious adverse effects based on your medical history |
| Not standard of care | The step therapy protocol conflicts with current clinical guidelines from recognized specialty organizations |
| Condition instability | Trying the step-therapy drug would put a currently stable patient at risk of significant harm or disease progression |
Step-by-Step: How to Request a Step Therapy Exception
Step 1: Understand What Protocol Is Being Applied
Ask your insurer or pharmacy benefit manager (PBM) to provide the specific step therapy protocol being applied. This tells you exactly what drugs you must "fail" and in what order. This document is critical because your exception request must directly address why the protocol doesn't apply to you.
Step 2: Identify Your Exception Grounds
Review the exception grounds listed above with your physician. Which grounds apply to your situation? Even one strong ground is sufficient. You don't need to prove every criterion — just one that is well-documented.
Step 3: Get Your Physician's Exception Request Letter
The physician's letter is the core of your exception request. It must:
- State the specific exception criterion being invoked (contraindication, previous failure, clinical superiority, etc.)
- Provide specific clinical details supporting that criterion
- Reference clinical guidelines if the protocol conflicts with standard of care
- State that failing on the step-therapy drug would delay appropriate treatment and potentially harm you
- Include your diagnosis (ICD-10 code), the requested medication (brand, generic, dosage), and the drug you are seeking to skip
"Previous failure" with a prior insurer counts
Many patients don't realize that failure on a step-therapy drug with a previous insurance plan qualifies as documented failure. Your physician's notes, pharmacy records, or a letter from a previous treating physician documenting the failed trial and reason for discontinuation all constitute valid evidence. Gather these records before filing your exception request.
Step 4: File the Exception Request Promptly
Submit the exception request to your insurer's prior authorization or appeals department. Include:
- Your physician's exception request letter with supporting clinical documentation
- Any pharmacy records showing previous dispensing and discontinuation of the step-therapy drug
- Lab results or test results if relevant (e.g., genetic testing showing the step drug is ineffective for your genotype)
- Relevant clinical guidelines from specialty organizations (ACR for rheumatology, AAN for neurology, etc.)
Step 5: Request Expedited Review If Necessary
If a delay would seriously harm your health, request expedited review. Under Medicare Part D, expedited exception requests must be decided within 24 hours. Many state laws for commercial insurance also require 24-hour turnaround for urgent requests. State in your request letter that the delay constitutes an urgent medical situation and why.
State Step Therapy Laws
As of 2026, over 30 states have enacted step therapy reform laws that establish explicit exception processes and timelines for commercial insurance. Key provisions in many state laws include:
- Mandatory exception process with defined timelines (typically 72 hours standard, 24 hours urgent)
- Automatic exception when the step drug is contraindicated or previously failed
- Continuation of the previously approved drug without step therapy for established patients
- Prohibition on step therapy for cancer treatment (in many states)
Look up your state's specific laws through your state insurance department. Our state directory can help you locate your state insurance commissioner's office.
If Your Exception Is Denied: Appealing
A denied step therapy exception is itself an adverse benefit determination that you can appeal. Use the same exception grounds but escalate with additional documentation:
- Peer-reviewed literature showing the step-therapy drug is inappropriate for your specific situation
- A second physician's opinion supporting the exception
- Documentation of any adverse effects you experienced if you were required to try the step drug
Use our free appeal letter generator to structure your formal appeal. For additional guidance on what makes appeals succeed, read our appeal success rates guide.
Sources: CMS Medicare Part D step therapy rules · State step therapy laws (National Alliance of State Pharmacy Associations survey) · Specialty society clinical guidelines. Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only. Step therapy rules vary by plan type and state. Last updated: March 2026.