HIPAA-Compliant Revenue Cycle Management for Specialty Healthcare Providers

How to Know If Your Billing Partner Is Actually Performing 

How to Know If Your Billing Partner Is Actually Performing

Introduction

Most practices don’t fire their billing company; they outgrow them… or realize too late that something’s off.

On paper, everything looks fine. Claims are being submitted. Reports are coming in. Payments are happening. But when you really look closer, cash flow feels tighter, AR keeps growing, and denials don’t seem to go down.

Here’s the truth: activity doesn’t equal performance. Claims going out the door means nothing if the right amount isn’t coming back in. Many medical billing providers in the USA are optimized for the process of submitting claims, sending reports, and closing tickets. But the process without results is just expensive busywork. The real question isn’t whether your billing company is busy. It’s whether your practice is collecting everything it’s entitled to.

In this blog, we’ll break down exactly how to know if your billing partner is actually performing, what numbers matter, and how to spot revenue leaks before they hurt your practice.

Section 1: The Illusion of “Everything Is Fine”

1.1 Why Most Practices Don’t Question Their Billing Partner

Most practice owners trust their billing partner because they don’t have full visibility into the backend. If claims are going out and money is coming in, it feels like things are working.

But without clear benchmarks, it’s easy to miss underperformance.

1.2 The Hidden Cost of Average Performance

Even small inefficiencies can cost thousands every month. A few denied claims here, a delayed submission there, it adds up fast.

Industry insights show that revenue leakage in healthcare can range between 5%–15%, often due to billing inefficiencies.

1.3 Reports vs Reality

Many billing companies send reports that look detailed but don’t answer the real question:
👉 Are you collecting everything you should be?

A report full of numbers is useless if it doesn’t highlight problems or improvements.

Section 2: 

7 Key Metrics That Actually Define Billing Performance

2.1 First Pass Resolution Rate (FPRR)

This tells you how many claims get paid the first time without rework. A strong billing partner keeps this high.

👉 Low FPRR = more rework, delays, and admin effort

2.2 Days in Accounts Receivable (AR Days)

This shows how long it takes to get paid.

  • Healthy range: typically 30–45 days
  • Higher AR days = slower cash flow

2.3 Denial Rate (And Rework Rate)

Denials are normal, but repeated denials are not.

What matters is:

  • How often do claims get denied
  • How quickly they’re fixed and recovered

2.4 Net Collection Rate

This shows how much of your eligible revenue you actually collect.

A high-performing billing partner should consistently keep this above 95%.

2.5 Ageing Report Breakdown

Look at how much money is stuck in:

  • 30 days
  • 60 days
  • 90+ days

If 90+ days keep growing, your billing partner isn’t following up effectively.

2.6 Charge Entry Lag Time

How fast are claims submitted after service?

Even a delay of a few days can slow down payments significantly.

2.7 Underpayment Tracking

Most practices don’t even realize when they’re being underpaid.

Strong medical billing providers actively track and recover underpayments; weak ones don’t.

Section 3: Red Flags That Your Billing Partner Is Underperforming

3.1 You Only Hear From Them Once a Month

No updates, no insights, just reports.

3.2 No Clear Answers Only Data Dumps

If you ask questions and get vague answers, that’s a problem.

3.3 Rising AR Without Explanation

If your outstanding payments keep growing, something is wrong.

3.4 Everything Is “The Payer’s Fault”

Good billing companies fix issues. Bad ones blame insurance.

3.5 No Denial Pattern Analysis

If the same issues keep happening, they’re not learning or improving.

Section 4: Questions You Should Ask Your Billing Company

Ask your billing partner:

  • What is our first-pass resolution rate?
  • How much revenue is stuck in 90+ AR?
  • What % of denials are successfully recovered?
  • How do you track underpayments?
  • What’s your average claim submission time?

If they can’t answer clearly, that’s your answer.

Section 5: Benchmarking What “Good” Looks Like in the US

You don’t need perfect numbers, but you need competitive ones.

Typical expectations:

  • AR Days: ~30–45
  • Clean Claim Rate: 90%+
  • Net Collection Rate: 95%+

Anything consistently below this means opportunity is being missed.

Section 6: Activity vs Performance

There’s a meaningful difference between a billing company that processes your claims and one that actively manages your revenue.

Processing means claims go out, payments come in, and the cycle repeats. It’s reactive; wait for a denial, fix it, and resubmit.

Performance means your billing partner is asking harder questions every month: Why did these claims get denied? Is there a pattern? Are we leaving money on the table through undercoding? Are payer contracts being honored?

Most medical billing providers in the USA operate at the processing level. That’s not enough for a practice trying to grow. Real performance shows up as a rising net collection rate, shrinking AR days, and fewer repeat denials month after month, not just occasionally.

Section 7: How to Audit Your Billing Partner

Step 1: Pull Key Reports

  • AR aging
  • Denial report
  • Collection report

Step 2: Look for Trends

Not just numbers patterns over time.

Step 3: Identify Revenue Gaps

  • Delays
  • Denials
  • Underpayments

Step 4: Get an Expert Review

Sometimes you need an outside perspective to see what’s being missed.

Section 8: When It’s Time to Switch

It’s time to consider switching if:

  • Metrics don’t improve
  • Communication is weak
  • Revenue feels inconsistent
  • Problems repeat every month

Section 9: What a High-Performance Billing Partner Looks Like

A strong billing partner should:

  • Give clear, actionable insights
  • Understand your specialty
  • Reduce denials proactively
  • Communicate regularly
  • Help increase revenue not just maintain it

At Aayur Solutions, we focus on performance, not just process. Our goal is simple: help you collect more, faster, and with less stress.

Conclusion

Most practices don’t realize how much revenue they’re losing until they take a closer look.

If your billing feels “okay” but not great, there’s a good chance there’s hidden leakage.

If any of this sounds familiar, a quick revenue audit can show you exactly where you stand.
👉 Get your free audit →

FAQ

Q1. How do I measure my billing company’s performance?

Start with three numbers: your AR days, your net collection rate, and your denial rate. A strong revenue cycle management partner in the USA should be able to provide these metrics clearly and explain trends over time. If your billing company can’t answer these questions without delay, that itself tells you something.

Q2. What is a good AR days benchmark in the US?

For most specialties, healthy AR days fall between 30 and 45 days. If your practice is consistently above 50 days, payments are being delayed somewhere in the cycle, whether through slow submissions, unworked denials, or poor follow-up.

Q3. What is a high denial rate?

A denial rate consistently above 8–10% is a signal worth investigating. More important than the rate itself is whether denials are trending up and whether the same denial reasons keep repeating month after month. Repeat denials mean the root cause isn’t being fixed.

Q4. How often should billing performance be reviewed?

At minimum, monthly. But practices with higher claim volumes benefit from weekly dashboards that track AR movement, new denials, and collection trends. Monthly reviews catch problems; weekly tracking prevents them.

Q5. Can I audit my billing company without switching?

Absolutely. A performance audit is simply a structured review of your key metrics, AR aging, denial patterns, and collection rates against industry benchmarks. Many practices use audits to identify specific gaps and then work with their existing billing partner to fix them before considering a switch.

Q6. How long does it take to switch billing providers?

Most transitions take between 2 and 4 weeks. A well-managed transition plan ensures open claims are tracked, AR is handed over cleanly, and no revenue falls through the cracks during the changeover.

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