DOMAIN / REGULATORY

Regulatory and compliance

Licensing, rules, and reporting requirements that decide who can operate, found, verified, and productized with every fact pinned to its government source.

What lives here

Federal Register rules and comment windows, the Code of Federal Regulations and state analogues, professional licensure rules, conditions of participation, reporting obligations, and effective dates.

What it is

Regulatory and compliance is the domain that decides who can operate and on what terms. Federal agencies publish proposed rules in the Federal Register, take public comment through the rulemaking process, and codify final rules in the Code of Federal Regulations. Alongside that, professional licensure, conditions of participation, and reporting obligations set the floor for who can practice, who can bill, and who can sell into a market.

The data is hard because it is both deep and moving. A single rule change can open or close a market, shift a deadline, or rewrite a reporting obligation, and it can happen at the federal level or in any state. The authoritative text is spread across the Federal Register, the Code of Federal Regulations, and state registers, each updated on its own schedule. There is no one program that captures it, so VerisGov maps the rules, licensure requirements, and effective dates and pins each to its source.

What VerisGov surfaces

  • Proposed and final rules published in the Federal Register, with comment windows
  • Codified regulations in the Code of Federal Regulations and their state analogues
  • Professional licensure and certification rules that decide who can operate
  • Conditions of participation and compliance requirements tied to programs
  • Reporting obligations and the data systems that enforce them
  • Effective dates and the rule changes that move them

The space

Regulatory and compliance is not one program but the rule layer under all of them. VerisGov tracks proposed and final rules, licensure and certification requirements, conditions of participation, and reporting obligations across federal and state sources, so a provider, vendor, or advisor can see what governs a market and when it changes. When a single rule set or licensure regime warrants a dedicated map, the same engine builds a navigator for it.

Proven in production

VerisGov already runs a dedicated navigator for a federal health program, with per-state detail pinned to its government source. The same method maps a rule set or licensure regime state by state. See the RHTP Navigator as a working example of a fully built program navigator.

How VerisGov covers it

FIND

Locate rules, licensure requirements, and reporting obligations across the Federal Register, the CFR, and state registers.

VERIFY

Pin every rule and requirement to its primary source so a compliance position holds up under review.

PRODUCTIZE

Turn the verified corpus into a navigator, dashboard, report, dataset, or build. See what you can build.

Answers

Frequently asked questions

What government data lives in the regulatory and compliance domain?

This domain is the rule layer under all the others: proposed and final rules with comment windows, codified regulations and their state analogues, professional licensure and certification rules, conditions of participation, and reporting obligations. It decides who can operate, who can bill, and who can sell into a market.

Which agencies and primary sources does VerisGov use for regulatory data?

Federal coverage anchors to the Federal Register for proposed and final rules, the eCFR for the codified Code of Federal Regulations, and regulations.gov for the rulemaking and comment process. State registers add the state analogues, and every rule and effective date is pinned to its authoritative source.

How current is the regulatory and compliance intelligence?

The rule layer is both deep and moving: a single change can open or close a market, shift a deadline, or rewrite a reporting obligation at the federal or state level. The corpus tracks rules, licensure requirements, and effective dates as the authoritative text updates across the Federal Register, the eCFR, and state registers.

How does VerisGov verify and productize regulatory data?

VerisGov finds the rules, licensure requirements, and effective dates across federal and state sources, verifies each against its primary source, then productizes the corpus into a navigator, dashboard, report, or dataset. The RHTP Navigator at rhtpnavigator.com is a working example of the same source-pinned, state-by-state approach.

Point the engine at regulatory and compliance.