January 1, 2026 marks the official start of the Joint Commission’s Accreditation 360 — a complete overhaul of how hospital standards are organized and written. The goal isn’t to make accreditation harder; it’s to make it clearer, simpler, and more aligned with the CMS Conditions of Participation (CoPs).
But simplification doesn’t mean “set it and forget it.” Hospitals still need to do some focused prep work to ensure a smooth transition.
As Jim Grana, Field Director at the Joint Commission, explains: “The standards are changing; the survey process is not. If you were survey-ready before, you’ll be ready again — as long as your documentation matches the new format.”
The survey process itself will look familiar — same tracers, same SAFER matrix, same survey complement. What’s changing is how standards are structured and labeled.
It’s a reshuffle, not a rewrite. The codes, expectations, and survey methods remain the same.
The Joint Commission has released a set of pre-publication tools that are open to everyone. The most useful for facilities teams include:
Run a crosswalk exercise inside your own hospital.
If your organization has a shared drive or compliance portal, make sure the new “PE” and “NPG” folders are clearly labeled and populated.
The Survey Process Guide contains updated versions of the surveyor tools you already know — document review, building tour, kitchen tracer, emergency management tool, etc. Use them to perform a mock survey between now and the end of 2025.
Think of it as an open-book test; all the answers are in the Survey Process Guide.
Under NPG, competency and training expectations remain, but they’ll be reviewed more closely. Ensure every facilities role has:
Surveyors will verify that your documentation supports your stated expectations — not prescribe new ones.
Don’t keep Accreditation 360 in the facilities silo. Brief nursing, quality, safety, and leadership teams on what’s changing. Make sure everyone understands that:
This helps reduce anxiety and ensures consistent messaging when surveyors arrive.
Between now and the rollout, new FAQs, interpretations, and examples will continue to appear in Perspectives and EC News. Set aside 15 minutes a month to review updates and adjust your internal references. If possible, attend a Base Camp or Accreditation 360 overview session from the Joint Commission to see how other organizations are preparing.
Preparing for Accreditation 360 isn’t about learning a new system — it’s about making sure your documentation, terminology, and training match the new structure.
Focus on:
Do that, and your 2026 survey will look and feel just like your last successful one — only cleaner, clearer, and more streamlined.
Accreditation 360 isn’t a new game. It’s the same game with a better rulebook.
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