One denial is a claim. Ten denials in a week from the same payer for the same reason is a pattern. Twenty in a month is a system failure that won’t fix itself with another resubmission.
Most practices react to the first. Most ignore the last until it shows up as a collections problem — and by then, months of the same root cause have already compounded into real dollars.
Here’s how to tell the difference — and what to do when the number starts moving the wrong direction.
The Difference Between a Denial and a Denial Trend
A denial is a single claim a payer has rejected with a reason code. Most are fixable. A denial trend is the same reason code appearing repeatedly across multiple claims over multiple weeks. The code tells you the symptom. The trend tells you there’s a root cause that hasn’t been identified.
Individual denials get worked claim by claim. Trends require a root cause audit — going back to where the error enters the billing workflow and fixing it at the source.
The Five Most Common Root Causes
1. Credentialing or Enrollment Gaps
A payer that hasn’t completed credentialing for a provider will deny every claim from that provider until resolved. Resubmitting the claim accomplishes nothing. These require an enrollment fix, not a claim fix.
2. COB Errors That Compound
A single wrong sequencing on a patient’s primary and secondary insurance generates a denial every time that patient is seen — until someone corrects it in the system. In practices with a high percentage of dual-coverage patients, unresolved COB errors create a denial pattern that grows with every visit.
3. Modifier Errors by Specialty
Each specialty has its version. In internal medicine, the most common is missing Modifier 25 on E/M codes billed same-day as a procedure. In physical therapy it’s the 8-Minute Rule. In mental health it’s time-based CPT codes billed at the wrong unit count. These generate consistent, repeating denial patterns until someone traces them to the charge entry workflow.
4. Prior Auth Expirations
The auth was obtained. The service was rendered. The auth expired before the claim was submitted. This is a calendar problem disguised as a denial problem. Fix: a tracking system that flags auth expiration dates before services are rendered, not after.
5. Timely Filing Trends
If claims are aging to the point where timely filing windows close, something upstream is broken. Timely filing denials don’t fix themselves. They compound.
The internal medicine practice we took over had been living with a COB denial pattern for months. Their remote biller — working three accounts simultaneously — had been resubmitting COB denials without making the payer calls required to resolve them.
When we mapped the denial codes across 90 days of activity in Office Ally, the COB pattern was immediately visible. Twenty-three claims. Same denial code. Different patients, same root cause: primary and secondary insurance sequencing hadn’t been updated when patients changed plans.
Twenty-three payer calls over two weeks resolved all of them. The practice had been resubmitting those claims for months. Not one call had been made.
That’s the difference between working a denial and resolving it.
What a Real Denial Management Workflow Looks Like
Denials get worked at first touch — not queued for later, not batched weekly — worked the same day or next business day they arrive. Trends get reported weekly. Root causes get fixed at the source, not just on the denied claims.
The Benchmark
| Denial Scenario | Wrong Response | Right Response |
|---|---|---|
| COB denial | Resubmit with same insurance info | Make payer call, update COB in system |
| Modifier missing | Resubmit same code, no modifier | Fix at charge entry for all affected claims |
| Credentialing denial | Resubmit with different info | Call enrollment team, resolve credentialing gap |
| Timely filing approaching | Add to follow-up queue | Escalate immediately regardless of amount |
| Same code, 10+ claims | Work claim by claim | Root cause audit, fix at source |
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a normal denial rate for a medical practice?
The industry average hit 11.8% in 2024, up from 10.2% the year prior. Best-in-class practices maintain denial rates under 5%. If yours is above 5% and not being actively worked down, revenue is leaking through a gap that resubmissions alone won’t close.
How long do I have to appeal a denied claim?
Commercial payers typically allow 30 to 180 days. Medicare allows 120 days from the remittance date. Medicaid timelines vary by state. Missing the window means the claim is permanently unrecoverable.
What’s the difference between a denial and a rejection?
A rejection happens before the claim reaches the payer — the clearinghouse bounces it. Rejections don’t appear in your AR aging report, making them invisible. A denial happens after the payer reviews the claim. Both need to be worked. Only one shows up without looking for it.
If your denial rate is moving in the wrong direction, the 4-week free pilot shows you what the root causes are. No contracts. No obligation.
Book a free 15-minute call at drbillerz.com
Sumit Nair | Founder, Dr. Billerz
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- Why Upwork Doesn’t Work for Medical Billing — HIPAA gaps and accountability problems with freelancer billing
- How Much Does a Medical Biller Cost? — full 2026 cost breakdown with real numbers