November 2025: Illinois DDD Announces Dec 12 Wage Attestation Deadline What Providers Must Do Now

In November 2025, the Illinois Division of Developmental Disabilities (DDD) confirmed that all adult day programs, Community Day Services (CDS) providers, supported living agencies, and other waiver providers must complete their FY25 Wage Attestation no later than December 12, 2025.
This attestation verifies whether providers have met Illinois’s mandated Direct Support Professional (DSP) wage requirements tied to state funding.

Failure to submit accurate wage documentation can lead to delayed reimbursements, corrective actions, or a loss of eligibility for specific state-funded rate increases. Because this process reviews multiple months of pay history, agencies depending on spreadsheets or paper-based tracking often struggle to demonstrate real compliance.

 

Illinois DDD requires Wage Attestation by Dec 12, 2025 for FY25. Learn what documentation providers must prepare and how myEZcare simplifies compliance.

 

The Wage Attestation requirement ensures that DSPs are receiving the state-mandated wage floor. Agencies must confirm not just hourly rates, but actual wage distribution, overtime data, and any supplemental pay.
This year’s December 12 deadline is critical because state reviews are tightening, and inaccurate reporting can trigger deeper audits.

Many providers across Illinois have already warned that pulling wage data from disconnected EVV, payroll, and scheduling systems slows the entire submission process — especially when time records don’t align with EVV visit logs.

To illustrate what must match, here is a simple summary table:

 

Requirement What Illinois DDD Reviews
Wage Verification Actual DSP pay for FY25 reporting period
Documentation Accuracy Alignment between payroll, EVV, and scheduling
Funding Eligibility Whether agency qualifies for DSP wage add-ons

With the attestation deadline approaching, agencies must be able to reproduce accurate visit logs, shift data, and DSP hours without discrepancies.

 

Illinois providers often describe three recurring challenges during Wage Attestation: mismatched time records, incomplete EVV logs, and manual payroll reconciliation.
This is where modernizing systems becomes necessary rather than optional.

myEZcare supports agencies by giving them a single system where EVV, shift hours, payroll inputs, and documentation align automatically. Instead of pulling data from multiple outdated platforms, providers work within one consistent source of truth.


The result is clearer audit trails, fewer errors, and peace of mind ahead of December 12.

The upcoming deadline simply reinforces what many providers already know: accurate compliance depends on clean, connected data, not last-minute manual corrections.

 

Agencies that want to avoid corrective actions should begin reviewing their wage, EVV, and scheduling data as early as possible.
The attestation verifies both the wages paid and the integrity of the documentation, so consistency across systems is essential.

Here is a simple transition table to summarize what Illinois DDD expects and what agencies must verify before December 12:

 

DDD Expectation Your Responsibility
Complete FY25 Wage Attestation Submit by December 12, 2025
Accurate DSP Wage Records Ensure payroll matches EVV and shifts
No Documentation Gaps Provide clean, verifiable logs

The tighter Illinois becomes with wage compliance, the more agencies with outdated systems feel the pressure. Using integrated platforms not only eases attestation but also positions agencies for upcoming 2026 audits and new oversight cycles.

Yes. Illinois DDD examines consistency between payroll, EVV visit logs, and actual shift hours. Mismatches can delay approval.

 

Late or incomplete submissions may lead to funding delays, follow-up audits, or temporary ineligibility for DSP wage increases.

 

Agencies frequently use myEZcare to align EVV, schedules, and payroll inputs, which makes Wage Attestation preparation faster and more accurate.

 

CDS providers follow the same verification structure but must ensure their daytime staffing logs align with payroll for FY25.

 

Yes. Industry indicators suggest closer oversight in early 2026, especially for providers with inconsistent documentation.

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