Co-pay enrollments have plateaued, while therapy starts continue to lag, signaling a critical shift for manufacturers. Accumulators and maximizers have transitioned from being edge-case policies to becoming structural features in the payer landscape, effectively redirecting or diluting the impact of every co-pay dollar. The previous cycle of increasing spending for greater support is no longer viable. What remains is the need for operational command over patient support activation within the provider’s workflow. Success now relies on closing every workflow gap, at the moments of discovery, enrollment, and PA-pending, by leveraging the EHR as the focal point. Brand teams must focus on orchestrating these points in sequence to deliver real value, rather than merely increasing their budgets.
Co-pay accumulator and maximizer programs have redrawn the lines on manufacturer-funded assistance. Instead of reliably converting co-pay support into therapy starts, manufacturers increasingly watch as support is intercepted or sapped before fulfillment. Accumulators prevent co-pay contributions from counting toward deductibles or out-of-pocket limits. Maximizers flatten the patient benefit, distributing value thinly across an entire plan year. With these programs scaling, traditional tactics—raising spend, broadening eligibility—no longer bring proportional results. The imperative is now operational: closing the activation gap at three critical breakpoints—discovery, enrollment friction, PA-pending—where support fails to land. Seventy percent of patients walk away from costly prescriptions at the counter (IQVIA, 2023), while most practices juggle multiple payer portals to track these cases (MGMA, 2026). The measure of success has shifted from budget volume to the precision of closing workflow gaps inside the EHR.
Two decades ago, manufacturer co-pay support flowed directly to patients. Bring a savings card to the pharmacy, receive a price reduction, and every dollar moved the fill needle. The ground has changed.
Accumulator programs block manufacturer assistance from applying to deductibles or max out-of-pocket calculations. Even after a $1,500 specialty offset, plan logic quietly erases that credit, often without warning to the patient or provider (MGMA, 2025).
Maximizer programs take it further: the PBM pegs patient cost to the max the manufacturer is willing to pay per year, spreading out the support and diluting any real out-of-pocket relief.
Fragmented portals amplify this: 61% of practices navigate at least seven payer portals each week for PA and eligibility (MGMA, 2026), often crashing into new accumulator or maximizer rules at each step. The result is fragmented, intercepted, or neutralized support.
For manufacturers, every missed connection at discovery, enrollment, or while a PA is pending siphons dollars before patients ever realize value. As co-pay support loses its effect, fixing the sequence and integration of activation, not just increasing spend, is key to moving therapy starts.
Co-pay programs used to chart a straight line from support activation to therapy fill. Now, three realities block this path:
Tactical fallout:
Manufacturers who attempt repurposed versions of the old playbook, without confronting these operational choke points, see diminishing returns.
“Activation gap” isn’t one crack in the system, it is three distinct workflow breaks:
The path forward is surgical: integrate discovery at prescribing, synchronize PA within the same session, and automate or simplify enrollment so confirmation can be achieved while the patient’s file is open. Anything less concedes value to accumulator and maximizer logic.
The “activation gap” isn’t about slow adoption, but about three structural workflow cracks where support fails to connect: (1) missed in-EHR discovery, (2) PA-pending limbo, and (3) enrollment drop-off. This is the category’s new vocabulary and should guide every operational strategy.
Brand teams have tried to fight back with defense, but each play is now blunted by new plan structures:
Meanwhile, plan rules change each year. Accumulators and maximizers morph to outpace manufacturer adaptations. Direct control over the sequence and timing of activation—strictly within the EHR and at the point of care—remains the last viable lever for improving therapy starts.
Operational constraints only grow:
The contrarian stance: defense will only keep up for so long. The operational advantage is now about locking every breakpoint inside one connected workflow.
“Timing” is not a vague stat. Three known workflow gaps erode co-pay value:
Addressing each specifically—naming and targeting each gap—establishes the new operational benchmark.
Today’s vendor market divides along one line:
Legacy products were built for a simpler market where card surfacing meant conversion. Now, PBM programs break the path midstream. Closing every workflow gap, inside the EHR and in real time, is the only way to guarantee co-pay value actually reaches therapy starts.
Surescripts automation can be substantial for some meds—18 seconds median approval time, 34% fully automated—but the specialties, and thus the brands with the most at stake, stay mired in manual, fragmented work (Surescripts, 2025).
A true countermeasure to accumulator and maximizer erosion is a closed-loop workflow anchored in the EHR:
The thread is integration. Any break—at discovery, PA, or enrollment—creates room for PBM policies to divert or neutralize dollars before value is realized.
The category remains fragmented. Point solutions work in silos: card platforms may hit discovery, ePA tools can address PA, but most miss real-time workflow and activation confirmation. Branded hubs start after payer logic is in play. Consumer coupon portals exist entirely outside clinical visibility.
co-pay.com is the connective layer: bringing co-pay discovery, RTBC, ePA, AI-enabled onboarding, activation, and analytics into one EHR-anchored sequence. The value is not in a feature, but in real-time closure of discovery, workflow, and enrollment gaps—ensuring co-pay support lands ahead of manipulative plan designs.
The lever isn’t vanished, but it has narrowed. Manufacturers cannot reclaim lost ground with bigger budgets, more portals, or advocacy alone. The new operational frontier is the closure of activation gaps: making sure support is discovered, enrolled, and confirmed within a single, EHR-driven workflow. This is not incremental process improvement—the companies that rewire their workflow here, connecting all three breakpoints, will shape the next standard for the category. Competing on budget is over; competing on workflow precision is what comes next.
A co-pay accumulator program is a health plan or PBM policy that prevents manufacturer coupons or co-pay assistance from counting toward a patient’s deductible or out-of-pocket maximum. Even if a patient uses a manufacturer’s savings card, the value applied does not contribute to their plan threshold, which can leave patients facing unexpectedly high costs when their manufacturer support expires or runs out (MGMA, 2025).
A maximizer program effectively spreads the value of manufacturer co-pay support over the entire plan year. The PBM sets the patient's monthly co-pay to the maximum amount covered by the manufacturer, so the patient rarely benefits from true cost relief. For manufacturers, this means a higher spend with diluted impact on patient access or adherence, limiting the traditional ROI of co-pay programs (MGMA, 2026).
These programs reduce the effectiveness of co-pay assistance, driving up abandonment rates and distorting measurement of pull-through and activation. They also add administrative burden: more prior authorizations, more portal logins, longer approval times, and increased staff time per patient (MGMA, 2025; MGMA, 2026).
Because accumulators and maximizers often intercept manufacturer support after the prescribing moment, activation timing—surfacing, enrolling, and activating support inside the EHR—offers the only window where manufacturers can reliably ensure patients access benefits before PBM logic intervenes. Once the patient leaves the clinic, the opportunity window narrows or closes (IQVIA, 2023).
Three breakpoints persist: surfacing discovery in workflow (so support is not missed), triggering and completing prior authorization before pharmacy transmission, and eliminating the form and portal burden that drives enrollment drop-off. Each of these improves the chances that co-pay support translates to a real therapy start (MGMA, 2025).
There has been progress, particularly for in-scope medications. Surescripts reports a 34% automated PA approval rate and median approval time of 18 seconds (Surescripts, 2025). But specialty brands still face significant manual work, as MGMA data shows three or more staff typically involved in PA processing and over 35 minutes per request for many practices (MGMA, 2025).
Portal sprawl introduces administrative friction, increases the risk of enrollment breakdown, and makes it harder for staff to ensure co-pay benefits are delivered before accumulators or maximizers distort them. MGMA noted that 61% of practices juggle seven or more payer portals weekly, with eligibility and prior auth as the main drivers (MGMA, 2026).
Brands should prioritize patient-level analytics. Connect discovery, RTBC at prescribing, PA completion, enrollment, activation, and therapy start as a closed chain. Measuring spend at the card-delivery or enrollment level is insufficient; only confirmed fills post-activation in workflow truly reflect ROI (IQVIA, 2023).
The effectiveness varies by therapy and plan design. Specialty drugs with high OOP costs are especially susceptible to accumulator and maximizer programs, making workflow-timed activation and PA synchronization even more important. Without this alignment, co-pay dollars often fail to translate to patient benefit or therapy initiation (MGMA, 2025; IQVIA, 2023).
Re-examine where co-pay value lands in your workflow. Map your current support chain and identify whether discovery, enrollment, or PA steps are outside the real-time prescribing process. Focus on re-sequencing all three stages to happen at the point of prescription, giving the support a chance to land before accumulators or maximizers can extract it.
The lever is shrinking, but it isn’t gone. Closing the activation gap—across discovery, workflow, and enrollment—is now what determines if co-pay support becomes actual patient value.