Skip to content
FonteumThe Graph

By use case

Exclusion & monitoring (self-serve)Free roster screen — no accountExclusion & sanctions screeningCredentialing & provider-data enrichmentAudit evidence & defensible programsProvider data for AI / RAGM&A & network diligence

By buyer

Compliance & riskDevelopers & AI teams

By industry

HealthcareProviders & facilitiesFederal contractingSAM · USASpending · FAPIIS

The capability layer

APIREST + bulk accessMCP serverCallable by AI agentsFHIR R4 APIBulk exportAttestation & audit packReconciliationSource-vs-source diffsEntity graphSnapshotsPoint-in-time, bitemporal

The differentiator

Coverage & sourcesThe catalogFreshnessMethodologyCare CompareFacility qualityBrowse all datasets →
Research

The dev on-ramp

DocsAPI referenceMCP — connect your agentOne-paste installFHIR sandboxLive API surfaceQuickstartStatusChangelogSDKs & integrations
Pricing
Sign inFree roster screen →Get a signed certificate →

Solutions

Exclusion & monitoring (self-serve)Exclusion & sanctions screeningCredentialing & provider-data enrichmentAudit evidence & defensible programsProvider data for AI / RAGM&A & network diligenceCompliance & riskDevelopers & AI teamsHealthcareFederal contracting

Platform

APIMCP serverFHIR R4 APIBulk exportAttestation & audit packReconciliationEntity graphSnapshots

Data

Coverage & sourcesFreshnessMethodologyCare CompareBrowse all datasets →
Research

Developers

DocsAPI referenceMCP — connect your agentFHIR sandboxQuickstartStatusChangelogSDKs & integrations
Pricing
Sign inFree roster screen →Get a signed certificate →

Fonteum · Learn · Updated 2026-06-21

What Is an Inpatient Rehabilitation Facility?

  1. Home
  2. /Learn
  3. /Inpatient Rehabilitation Facility

An inpatient rehabilitation facility (IRF) delivers intensive, physician-supervised therapy — about three hours a day — for people recovering from a stroke, injury, or major surgery. It is a hospital level of rehab, not a nursing home. CMS certifies 1,221 IRFs across 52 states and territories.

Source: CMS Care Compare · Public DomainUpdated 2026-06-21

What an IRF is

An IRF is either a free-standing rehabilitation hospital or a distinct rehab unit within an acute-care hospital. What sets it apart is intensity: an interdisciplinary team — physiatry, physical, occupational, and speech therapy, and rehabilitation nursing — works with the patient on an aggressive schedule, with a rehabilitation physician overseeing care throughout the stay. The model is built for rapid, measurable functional recovery.

Who it is for

IRF care suits people who need and can tolerate intensive therapy and have a realistic chance of meaningful improvement. Typical admissions follow a stroke, a spinal cord or traumatic brain injury, major multiple trauma, an amputation, or certain complex orthopedic surgeries. The requirement to participate in roughly three hours of therapy a day is the practical line between IRF-appropriate and lower-intensity post-acute care.

IRF vs skilled nursing

Inpatient rehab facility
  • Hospital-level, ~3 hours therapy/day
  • Daily rehabilitation-physician oversight
  • Short, intensive stays
  • 1,221 certified facilities
Skilled nursing facility
  • Lower, flexible therapy intensity
  • Longer nursing-focused stays
  • Broad post-acute and long-term care
  • 14,699 certified facilities

The choice usually comes down to how much therapy a person can tolerate and how much nursing care they need around it. Many recover in a SNF; those who need hospital-level rehab go to an IRF.

What Medicare covers

Medicare Part A covers a medically necessary IRF stay similarly to an acute-hospital stay, subject to the inpatient deductible and any coinsurance. Coverage hinges on meeting the IRF criteria — the intensity of therapy needed and the expectation of improvement — documented by the rehabilitation team. Because it is a hospital-level benefit, it is distinct from the skilled nursing-facility benefit.

How CMS measures IRFs

IRFs do not carry a single five-star rating. Instead, CMS publishes individual quality measures — functional outcomes, complication and readmission indicators, and reporting compliance — on Care Compare. Reading those measures, rather than a headline score, is the honest way to compare facilities, and each value can be traced to its CMS source.

By the numbers

1,221
Medicare-certified inpatient rehab facilities
CMS Care Compare · 2026-05-07
52
States and territories with an IRF
CMS Care Compare · 2026-05-07
14,699
Nursing homes, for scale
CMS Care Compare · 2026-05-07
317
Long-term acute-care hospitals, for scale
CMS Care Compare · 2026-05-07

Compare IRFs

Browse certified inpatient rehab facilities and their quality measures — each field traced to its CMS source and snapshot date.

Browse IRF data →

Frequently asked questions

What is an inpatient rehabilitation facility?
An inpatient rehabilitation facility (IRF) is a Medicare-certified hospital or hospital unit that delivers intensive, physician-supervised rehabilitation — typically about three hours of therapy a day — for people recovering from a stroke, injury, or major surgery. CMS lists 1,221 certified IRFs across 52 states and territories.
How is an IRF different from a skilled nursing facility?
An IRF provides hospital-level rehabilitation at a high intensity — multiple therapy disciplines, daily physician oversight, and 24-hour rehabilitation nursing. A skilled nursing facility offers a lower, more flexible therapy intensity alongside longer-term nursing care. There are far fewer IRFs (1,221) than nursing homes (14,699) because the IRF level of care is reserved for people who can tolerate and benefit from intensive therapy.
Who qualifies for an IRF?
IRF care is for people who need and can participate in intensive rehabilitation — generally the ability to tolerate around three hours of therapy a day, a need for at least two therapy disciplines, close physician supervision, and a reasonable expectation of meaningful functional improvement. Common reasons include stroke, spinal cord or brain injury, major multiple trauma, and certain joint replacements.
Does Medicare cover inpatient rehabilitation?
Yes. Medicare Part A covers a medically necessary IRF stay much like an acute-hospital stay, subject to the inpatient deductible and any applicable coinsurance. Coverage depends on meeting the IRF criteria — the intensity of therapy required and the expectation of improvement — documented by the rehabilitation team.
How long is a typical IRF stay?
IRF stays are usually measured in days to a few weeks, much shorter than a long-term nursing-home stay, because the goal is concentrated functional recovery before the person returns home or steps down to a lower level of care. The exact length depends on the condition, progress, and the rehabilitation plan.
How do I compare inpatient rehabilitation facilities?
Certified IRFs report quality measures on CMS Care Compare, and Fonteum mirrors those records with the source and snapshot date on each field. You can compare facilities on the published measures and confirm each one's certification status against the federal source rather than relying on marketing.

Related

  • What is a long-term acute-care hospital? — the other hospital-level post-acute setting.
  • What is a skilled nursing facility (SNF)? — the lower-intensity post-acute option.
  • Home health vs. skilled nursing — recovering at home versus in a facility.
  • What Medicare certification means — how an IRF becomes a certified Medicare provider.
  • Inpatient rehab facility data — per-facility CMS quality measures with provenance.
  • The CMS Five-Star Quality Rating — which settings carry a star, and which do not.
Reviewed by Jennifer Montecillo, MD, medical reviewer. Non-practicing medical reviewer. Review covered the description of the IRF level of care, the comparison to skilled nursing, and the scope of the CMS facility data. Does not constitute legal, clinical, or compliance advice.
FonteumResearch Bureau. “What Is an Inpatient Rehabilitation Facility (IRF)?” 2026-06-21. Source: CMS Care Compare (U.S. Government Works). Available at https://fonteum.com/learn/inpatient-rehabilitation-facility.

On this page

  • What an IRF is
  • Who it is for
  • IRF vs skilled nursing
  • What Medicare covers
  • How CMS measures IRFs
  • By the numbers
  • FAQ

The substrate, by the numbers

9.2Mgraph entitiesProviders, organizations, owners, and facilities
15.7Mlinked identifiersNPIs, CCNs, LEIs and more, resolved to entities
5Mgraph edgesSource-attested relationships between entities
44federal source familiesDistinct CMS, OIG, HRSA, FDA and peer datasets
35dataset pagesCitable, downloadable /data catalog pages
70reproducible studiesEach shipping the SQL behind its figures

Built on the authoritative federal record

The primary sources, named on every page.

These are the federal agencies whose public datasets Fonteum ingests and attributes — the issuing authorities, not customers or partners. Every figure on the site links back to one of them.

  • CMS
  • HHS-OIG
  • HRSA
  • FDA
  • NLM
  • NUCC
  • Census
  • BLS
  • BEA

See the full source registry, with license and refresh cadence for each →

Reproducible by design

Every figure traces to its federal source.

14-tuple provenance

Every rendered fact ties to a source URL, dataset ID, snapshot date, row key, and SHA-256 — the full chain-of-custody record.

Reproducible SQL

Each study ships the exact query behind its figures, run against the cited federal snapshot. Re-run it yourself.

Daily count checks

Published counts are checked against the upstream federal datasets on a daily cadence, with drift logged.

Named medical review

Reviewed by Jennifer Montecillo, MD, medical reviewer. Non-practicing medical reviewer.

Read the full provenance and attestation methodology →

Two doors

Use the free API and open data

Query providers, facilities, sanctions, and quality scores — each field carrying its federal source. Self-serve, no call to start.

Explore the API →Browse the data catalog →

Talk to us

Managed pilots, enterprise terms, and audit-ready, signed attestation packages for compliance, risk, and research teams.

Talk to us →
Fonteum
Platform
Platform overviewAPIMCP serverFHIR R4 APIBulk exportAttestation & audit packReconciliationEntity graphSnapshots
Solutions
All solutionsExclusion & sanctions screeningCredentialing & enrichmentAudit evidenceProvider data for AI / RAGM&A & network diligenceCompliance & riskDevelopers & AI teams
Data & sources
Coverage & sourcesBrowse all datasetsState Medicaid exclusionsFreshnessMethodologyCare CompareSanctionsOwnershipStaffingDeficienciesSpecial Focus Facilities
Federal contracting
OverviewAwards during active exclusionFederal debarment scorecardProcurement questionsContractor lookup8(a) certification guide
Developers
Developer hubDocsAPI referenceQuickstartStatusChangelogSDKs & integrationsWebhooks
Research & guides
Research hubGuidesHealthcare provider dataExclusion & sanctions screeningProvider credentialing dataHealthcare data for AIHospital margin gapProvider access gapsGlossaryComparisonsCitationsWhy Fonteum
Company
AboutPressCustomersPricingContactEditorial policyCorrections
Trust & legal
TrustTrust markQualitySecurityPrivacy policyTerms of serviceAPI & MCP termsMedical disclaimer

Reviewed by Jennifer Montecillo, MD, medical reviewer. Non-practicing medical reviewer.

© 2026 Fonteum LLC. All rights reserved.

·hello@fonteum.com

The U.S. healthcare graph AI can cite — every fact carries its source.

Every fact Fonteum serves carries a signed, re-checkable trust mark — source, as-of date, and an Ed25519 signature travel with the data. Re-check any fact at fonteum.com/verify · the trust-mark standard (W3C Verifiable Credentials 2.0, C2PA-aligned).
Request access→