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HR 2483 · Signed into Law · 12-01-25

SUPPORT for Patients and Communities Reauthorization Act of 2025

Rep. Guthrie, Brett (R-KY) · 1 cosponsor · 23 pages

What does the HR 2483 do?

HR 2483 is a House bill sponsored by Rep. Brett Guthrie (R-KY). Reauthorizes the opioid prevention, treatment, and recovery programs created by the 2018 SUPPORT Act through fiscal year 2030, mostly at higher funding levels, and adds new provisions covering fetal alcohol spectrum disorder services, cybersecurity for the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline, fentanyl-contamination coordination, at-home drug disposal, and expanded prescriber training.

Did HR 2483 pass? Where it stands

As of July 17, 2026, HR 2483 has been signed into law.

Status: Signed into Law

Latest vote: Senate Passed on September 18, 2025

Outlook: Enacted

Key provisions

  • Reauthorizes the Opioid Response Through 2030
    • Extends dozens of prevention, treatment, and recovery programs from the 2018 SUPPORT Act through fiscal year 2030
    • Most reauthorized programs get funding increases (e.g., overdose prevention rises to $505.58M/year; first-responder training $36M to $57M/year)
    • Allows fentanyl and xylazine test strips under State and Tribal opioid response grants
  • New and Expanded Health Programs
    • Creates a standalone Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder program with $12.5M/year through 2030
    • Adds cybersecurity reporting requirements for the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline plus a GAO study
    • Raises authorizations for recovery, trauma, and treatment-workforce programs (e.g., Building Communities of Recovery $5M to $17M/year)
  • Fentanyl, Disposal, and Prescriber Provisions
    • "Bruce's Law" sets up a federal interagency work group on fentanyl contamination of illegal drugs
    • Directs HHS guidance on at-home drug disposal systems within one year
    • Expands the list of organizations whose courses satisfy controlled-substance prescriber training

Last updated June 15, 2026

Read the full bill text on Congress.gov →