You open your accounts receivable aging report and see $250,000 in the 90+ day bucket. These claims were billed months ago. They’re technically still collectible. So why does that number matter so much? 

Because by the time a claim reaches 90 days, you’ve often missed your best opportunities to resolve it efficiently. The payers who were responsive at 30 days may not remember the claim at 90. The documentation that was easy to locate in week two is buried by month three. And those timely filing deadlines? Some of them have already passed. 

The most expensive billing problems are often the ones that age quietly in the background while your team focuses on newer work. Let’s talk about why earlier intervention matters and what that can look like in practice. 

Why Claims Age Faster Than You Think 

Claims don’t age because billing teams forget about them. They age because small issues go unnoticed until they become bigger problems. 

Here’s the pattern we see playing out over and over again: A claim gets submitted with a minor coding error and is denied at 15 days. Your team doesn’t catch the denial notification for another week. By the time someone investigates, corrects the code, and resubmits, the claim is at 35 days. If that resubmission has another issue (maybe a missing modifier this time), you’re suddenly at 60 days before anyone realizes the claim still hasn’t paid. 

Reworking a denied claim costs providers an average of $25 and can get as high as $118, and that doesn’t even factor in the revenue delay. When this pattern repeats across dozens of claims, aging AR stops being just a collections issue and starts being a workflow issue. 

The other common driver for aging AR? Lack of structured follow-up. Without a system that triggers action at specific intervals, claims can slip from 30 to 60 to 90 days without a single touchpoint. No one calls the payer. No portal check happens. The claim just sits there, aging. 

What Changes at Each Stage 

The aging buckets on your AR report aren’t arbitrary. They represent meaningful shifts in how hard claims are to collect and how much effort is required to resolve them. 

In the 0 to 30 day range, most claims are still in normal processing timeframes. Many payers process claims within 30 days, so accounts in this bucket are either pending or recently paid. Best-in-class billing operations maintain around 65% or more of total AR here. 

Once claims hit 31 to 60 days, intervention becomes more valuable. A claim sitting at 45 days isn’t necessarily denied. It might be pending additional review, stuck in a payer queue, or waiting on documentation your team didn’t realize was requested. A quick portal check or phone call at this stage often reveals the issue and gives you time to resolve it. 

By 61 to 90 days, you’re working against timely filing deadlines. Many commercial payers enforce 90-day filing windows, and some are shorter. At this point, anything in this bucket deserves high-priority attention. 

Industry research shows that collectability drops significantly as claims age, which is why the HFMA recommends keeping AR over 90 days below 10% of total receivables. After 90 days, collectability drops significantly. These claims are expensive to work, difficult to resolve, and increasingly at risk of timing out completely. 

What Works: Building Earlier Touchpoints 

The solution to growing AR is not working harder on old claims but instead focusing on catching issues earlier, when they’re still manageable. 

High-performing revenue cycle teams implement structured follow-up at 30 and 60 days, when claims are still fresh and payers are responsive. One effective approach is a regular review cadence: checking claims at 7 days to confirm payer receipt, 17 days to check processing status, and 30 days to escalate if payment hasn’t been received. This rhythm keeps claims in active status rather than passive waiting. 

Segmenting your AR by aging bucket also helps your team prioritize. Claims in the 61 to 90 day range typically need more attention than those in the 0 to 30 day range, and anything approaching a filing deadline should be flagged immediately. 

Clean claim submission matters just as much as follow-up. The more claims you can get paid on first submission, the fewer end up aging. Real-time eligibility verification, pre-submission claim scrubbing, and accurate coding all reduce denials, which directly reduces the volume of claims that need rework. 

Weekly AR aging reviews can make a big difference too. When leadership reviews aging reports weekly instead of monthly, problems surface faster and teams can course-correct before small issues become patterns. 

Why This Matters More for FQHCs 

Federally Qualified Health Centers often face additional pressure around AR aging. Many FQHCs operate on thin margins (on average around 2.9%), which means even modest delays in collections can create operational strain. 

The payer mix at most FQHCs includes high percentages of Medicaid, Medicare, and uninsured patients. Each requires different follow-up approaches and different timely filing rules. Medicaid managed care plans, in particular, often have shorter filing windows than traditional Medicaid, and missing those deadlines means losing revenue your health center has already earned. 

Grant funding cycles also make cash flow management more complex. Section 330 grants provide critical support, but they don’t replace the need for strong patient service revenue. When AR ages and cash flow tightens, health centers may find themselves unable to cover operational expenses between grant disbursements, even when their overall financial position looks stable on paper. 

For FQHC leadership, monitoring AR aging isn’t just about collections performance. It’s about organizational sustainability. Best practice for health center liquidity is a minimum of 90 days cash on hand, and high AR aging directly impacts your ability to maintain that cushion. 

Moving Forward 

Reducing aging AR doesn’t require a complete overhaul – just consistent habits applied at the right intervals. 

Start by reviewing your current AR aging distribution. If more than 20% of your total AR is sitting in buckets older than 60 days, earlier intervention could help. Look at what’s causing claims to age. Are denials going unnoticed? Is follow-up happening too late? Are coding errors creating rework cycles that add weeks to resolution time? 

Then build a follow-up rhythm that fits your team’s capacity. If you can’t implement a detailed cadence immediately, that’s okay! Start simple and add more touchpoints as your team adjusts. Consistency matters more than complexity. 

The 90-day mark isn’t when AR work begins. It’s where AR work becomes exponentially harder. By shifting your focus to earlier intervention, you can protect revenue before it becomes at risk, reduce the cost of collections, and build a revenue cycle that works proactively. 

If your organization needs support building more effective follow-up workflows or strengthening your revenue cycle processes, our team at Practice Management would love to talk. 

image

Title

As we near the end of the year, many of the healthcare organizations we work with are beginning to look forward and plan for 2024. Part of this planning is updating, or even creating, a strategic plan. Strategic planning can be defined as “a process used by organizations to identify their goals, the str
Continue Readiing
image

Title

As we near the end of the year, many of the healthcare organizations we work with are beginning to look forward and plan for 2024. Part of this planning is updating, or even creating, a strategic plan. Strategic planning can be defined as “a process used by organizations to identify their goals, the str
Continue Readiing

Your Revenue Is Aging While You Wait 

You open your accounts receivable aging report and see $250,000 in the 90+ day bucket. These claims were billed months ago. They’re technically still collectible. So why does that number matter so much? 

Because by the time a claim reaches 90 days, you’ve often missed your best opportunities to resolve it efficiently. The payers who were responsive at 30 days may not remember the claim at 90. The documentation that was easy to locate in week two is buried by month three. And those timely filing deadlines? Some of them have already passed. 

The most expensive billing problems are often the ones that age quietly in the background while your team focuses on newer work. Let’s talk about why earlier intervention matters and what that can look like in practice. 

Why Claims Age Faster Than You Think 

Claims don’t age because billing teams forget about them. They age because small issues go unnoticed until they become bigger problems. 

Here’s the pattern we see playing out over and over again: A claim gets submitted with a minor coding error and is denied at 15 days. Your team doesn’t catch the denial notification for another week. By the time someone investigates, corrects the code, and resubmits, the claim is at 35 days. If that resubmission has another issue (maybe a missing modifier this time), you’re suddenly at 60 days before anyone realizes the claim still hasn’t paid. 

Reworking a denied claim costs providers an average of $25 and can get as high as $118, and that doesn’t even factor in the revenue delay. When this pattern repeats across dozens of claims, aging AR stops being just a collections issue and starts being a workflow issue. 

The other common driver for aging AR? Lack of structured follow-up. Without a system that triggers action at specific intervals, claims can slip from 30 to 60 to 90 days without a single touchpoint. No one calls the payer. No portal check happens. The claim just sits there, aging. 

What Changes at Each Stage 

The aging buckets on your AR report aren’t arbitrary. They represent meaningful shifts in how hard claims are to collect and how much effort is required to resolve them. 

In the 0 to 30 day range, most claims are still in normal processing timeframes. Many payers process claims within 30 days, so accounts in this bucket are either pending or recently paid. Best-in-class billing operations maintain around 65% or more of total AR here. 

Once claims hit 31 to 60 days, intervention becomes more valuable. A claim sitting at 45 days isn’t necessarily denied. It might be pending additional review, stuck in a payer queue, or waiting on documentation your team didn’t realize was requested. A quick portal check or phone call at this stage often reveals the issue and gives you time to resolve it. 

By 61 to 90 days, you’re working against timely filing deadlines. Many commercial payers enforce 90-day filing windows, and some are shorter. At this point, anything in this bucket deserves high-priority attention. 

Industry research shows that collectability drops significantly as claims age, which is why the HFMA recommends keeping AR over 90 days below 10% of total receivables. After 90 days, collectability drops significantly. These claims are expensive to work, difficult to resolve, and increasingly at risk of timing out completely. 

What Works: Building Earlier Touchpoints 

The solution to growing AR is not working harder on old claims but instead focusing on catching issues earlier, when they’re still manageable. 

High-performing revenue cycle teams implement structured follow-up at 30 and 60 days, when claims are still fresh and payers are responsive. One effective approach is a regular review cadence: checking claims at 7 days to confirm payer receipt, 17 days to check processing status, and 30 days to escalate if payment hasn’t been received. This rhythm keeps claims in active status rather than passive waiting. 

Segmenting your AR by aging bucket also helps your team prioritize. Claims in the 61 to 90 day range typically need more attention than those in the 0 to 30 day range, and anything approaching a filing deadline should be flagged immediately. 

Clean claim submission matters just as much as follow-up. The more claims you can get paid on first submission, the fewer end up aging. Real-time eligibility verification, pre-submission claim scrubbing, and accurate coding all reduce denials, which directly reduces the volume of claims that need rework. 

Weekly AR aging reviews can make a big difference too. When leadership reviews aging reports weekly instead of monthly, problems surface faster and teams can course-correct before small issues become patterns. 

Why This Matters More for FQHCs 

Federally Qualified Health Centers often face additional pressure around AR aging. Many FQHCs operate on thin margins (on average around 2.9%), which means even modest delays in collections can create operational strain. 

The payer mix at most FQHCs includes high percentages of Medicaid, Medicare, and uninsured patients. Each requires different follow-up approaches and different timely filing rules. Medicaid managed care plans, in particular, often have shorter filing windows than traditional Medicaid, and missing those deadlines means losing revenue your health center has already earned. 

Grant funding cycles also make cash flow management more complex. Section 330 grants provide critical support, but they don’t replace the need for strong patient service revenue. When AR ages and cash flow tightens, health centers may find themselves unable to cover operational expenses between grant disbursements, even when their overall financial position looks stable on paper. 

For FQHC leadership, monitoring AR aging isn’t just about collections performance. It’s about organizational sustainability. Best practice for health center liquidity is a minimum of 90 days cash on hand, and high AR aging directly impacts your ability to maintain that cushion. 

Moving Forward 

Reducing aging AR doesn’t require a complete overhaul – just consistent habits applied at the right intervals. 

Start by reviewing your current AR aging distribution. If more than 20% of your total AR is sitting in buckets older than 60 days, earlier intervention could help. Look at what’s causing claims to age. Are denials going unnoticed? Is follow-up happening too late? Are coding errors creating rework cycles that add weeks to resolution time? 

Then build a follow-up rhythm that fits your team’s capacity. If you can’t implement a detailed cadence immediately, that’s okay! Start simple and add more touchpoints as your team adjusts. Consistency matters more than complexity. 

The 90-day mark isn’t when AR work begins. It’s where AR work becomes exponentially harder. By shifting your focus to earlier intervention, you can protect revenue before it becomes at risk, reduce the cost of collections, and build a revenue cycle that works proactively. 

If your organization needs support building more effective follow-up workflows or strengthening your revenue cycle processes, our team at Practice Management would love to talk. 

image

Title

As we near the end of the year, many of the healthcare organizations we work with are beginning to look forward and plan for 2024. Part of this planning is updating, or even creating, a strategic plan. Strategic planning can be defined as “a process used by organizations to identify their goals, the str
Continue Readiing
image

Title

As we near the end of the year, many of the healthcare organizations we work with are beginning to look forward and plan for 2024. Part of this planning is updating, or even creating, a strategic plan. Strategic planning can be defined as “a process used by organizations to identify their goals, the str
Continue Readiing

Monthly EHR Reports That Protect Revenue 

Your EHR system contains the data you need to catch revenue leaks before they become financial problems. But most healthcare organizations only pull reports sporadically, review them reactively, and miss the patterns that signal where revenue is slipping through the cracks. 

Monthly reporting rhythms create accountability, reveal trends, and give leadership the visibility needed to make informed decisions. Let’s dive into some of the monthly reports great RCM teams should be running regularly, and why that data matters! 

Why Monthly Matters 

According to MGMA data, charge capture failures cost the average multi-provider practice between 1% and 5% of potential revenue. For a practice generating $3 million annually, that’s $30,000 to $150,000 in services rendered but never billed. 

These failures accumulate gradually, and without regular reporting, small gaps compound into significant revenue loss before anyone notices. Monthly reviews help you create a baseline for your organization – after all, you can’t spot trends if you’re only looking at data occasionally. 

Quick disclaimer: We won’t be listing all the specific reports for all the popular EHRs – software is constantly updating, and different specialties prefer different systems. Instead, we will describe the reports, the data they contain, and offer some of the most commonly used report names. Once you know what kind of data you’re looking for, finding (or building) that report in your own system becomes possible! Looking for custom reporting? Check out our billing department assessment services. 

The Core Reports Every Organization Needs 

Charge Reconciliation Report 

This report compares your schedule or appointment log to charges posted. Ideally, charges should be reconciled daily, or at least weekly, but a monthly review of your reconciliation patterns is an absolute must.  Look for departments or providers who consistently show gaps between appointments and posted charges. 

Most EHR systems can generate this by comparing scheduling data to billing data. Look for report names like “charge capture review,” “encounter reconciliation,” or “schedule vs. charges.” 

Aging Accounts Receivable Report 

This shows how long claims have been waiting for payment, broken down by time periods. Anything between a 30 and 45 day average in AR means claims are moving. More than 90 days is a red flag

Pull this monthly and look at trends. Is your 90+ day bucket growing? Are specific payers consistently in older buckets? Breaking down AR aging by payer, provider, or service type helps you understand where your team is struggling the most and allows you to focus follow-up efforts where they’ll have the biggest impact. 

Denial Report by Reason 

This categorizes claim denials by payer-provided reason: missing information, authorization required, timely filing, coding errors, eligibility issues. 

The value in this report is pattern recognition. Repeated denials for “missing prior authorization” signal a workflow problem. “Coding errors” for a particular CPT code indicate a training need. Review these reasons monthly and focus on your top three denial reasons by volume or dollar amount. Armed with this knowledge, your training will be laser-focused on the issues that are impacting your revenue right now. 

Clean Claim Rate Report 

Industry benchmark for this stat is above 96% which means 96% or more of your claims should be paid on first submission without edits or appeals. 

If you notice a declining clean claim rate, it could indicate one or more upstream problems: registration data accuracy, coding quality, or charge entry completeness. If your rate drops below benchmark (or is not quite at the national benchmark yet), remember this statistic doesn’t live in a vacuum! Pull your denial report to identify what’s causing rejections. When you start examining how your reports work together, you begin to paint a full picture of your revenue cycle management. 

Days Not Final Coded (DNFC) and Days Not Final Billed (DNFB) Report 

Ideally, coding should happen withing a few days of service and billing should follow immediately. The DNFC and DNFB reports show you which accounts are sitting in limbo – services have been provided but coding has not been finalized, or coding is done but billing is stalled. 

High DNFC indicates coding backlogs and high DNFB points to billing bottlenecks. Reviewing these reports monthly helps you keep your revenue cycle moving. 

How to Use These Reports Effectively 

Set Baselines First 

If you have never pulled a report before, your first few months establish your baseline. Don’t expect perfection right away – your goal is understanding where you are today so you can measure whether your future changes are working. 

Focus on Trends 

One month of elevated denials might be a fluke. Three consecutive months is a trend demanding attention. Monthly reporting reveals patterns invisible in quarterly reviews. 

Assign Ownership and Close the Loop 

Someone needs to own each report. Charge reconciliation might belong to your billing manager. AR aging to your collections lead. Giving each report and its follow up some clear ownership builds in accountability which means your reports regularly get reviewed and improvements get implemented. 

When you’re reviewing your data, make sure to share findings with teams who can fix them. If denial reports show eligibility issues, that’s a registration training need not a provider training issue. Monthly cross-functional check-ins keep everyone aligned, and communication channels opened. 

When to Bring in Outside Support 

Many healthcare organizations find that building consistent reporting rhythms and knowing what to do with the data is a consistent struggle. It’s not that the reports don’t exist; it’s that internal teams either don’t have time to analyze them thoughtfully or don’t have the expertise to interpret what story the numbers are telling. 

This is where outsourcing revenue cycle management services can provide value that goes beyond just processing claims. When you work with an expert RCM team, they’re pulling these reports regularly, spotting patterns across your organization, and bringing their insights about what’s normal versus what indicates a problem worth investigating directly to your leadership. 

An experienced RCM company can help you understand which metrics to prioritize for your specific payer mix, specialty, and patient population. They can benchmark your performance against similar organizations and identify opportunities you might not see when you’re focused on daily operations. If that sounds like something your organization needs (even if it’s just for one of your programs or services) we’d love to connect! 

Building the Habit 

Start simple. Pick three reports from this list and commit to reviewing them on the same day each month. First Monday of the month, last Friday, whatever works for your schedule – as long as it is consistent. 

Block 30 minutes on your calendar, pull the reports, note any significant changes from last month, and identify one action item to address. Don’t try to fix everything at once. Focus on the highest-impact opportunity each month and start there. 

As the rhythm becomes routine, you can expand to additional reports or deeper analysis. Your goal with great reporting is to build visibility. When you know where your revenue leaks are, you can plug them. By monitoring trends consistently, your team can address small problems before they become big financial losses. 

Your EHR might already have most of these reports built in, and learning how to run them and read them regularly arms you with the knowledge you need to protect your revenue. Monthly reporting turns your data into actionable intelligence that keeps your revenue cycle healthy and your organization financially stable.