(Bloomberg) — The price tag for healthcare.gov, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act website, is approaching $1 billion even as key features remain incomplete, congressional auditors said.

The budget to get the site ready for the next round of enrollments, starting in November, jumped to $840 million as of March, according to the Government Accountability Office. That's a $163 million increase since December.

Accenture Plc, the company that took over building the site that failed at its introduction this past October, is expected to be paid $175 million as of June, an $84 million increase from the estimate in January when it signed a contract. The data are part of testimony for a congressional hearing tomorrow in the Republican-led House. The GAO places blame for the rising price on poor planning and supervision of contractors who built the website for the federal health exchange.

If the management doesn't improve "significant risks remain that upcoming open enrollment periods could encounter challenges," William Woods, the GAO's director of acquisition and sourcing management, is scheduled to testify according to prepared remarks released by the Energy and Commerce Committee.

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