What if I told you that your practice is missing out on revenue because of an outdated fee schedule? Would you know how to fix it? Unfortunately, many practices are losing revenue because of their fee schedule and they don’t know that updating it would improve their bottom line.
When setting a fee schedule, consistency is important so you can get a true idea of what your accounts receivables are at any time. If you have a bevy of legacy fees that are different multiples of Medicare allowables, your AR picture becomes hazy. In addition to consistency, another goal should be minimizing money left on the table by charging above the allowable always.
Know, at minimum, what Medicare allowables are. If you’re charging less than what Medicare allows, you may develop a false sense of prosperity since you’re collecting 100% of what your billing commercial payers, many of whose allowables are higher than Medicare’s.
And, of course, if you’re charging a payer less than the allowable, you have no sure way of knowing how much you should have billed out.
You should make revisiting your fee schedule a regular practice to make sure your billed charge is higher than the allowed amount. If your billed charge is equal to the allowed amount, you’ve billed too little and left money on the table.
If you can review and revise your fee schedule every six months, that’s probably ideal. You shouldn’t go longer than a year, however. Reviewing an allowed vs. paid report should be reviewed on a monthly basis.
Healthcare market dynamics change, your liability insurance rates change, and patient volumes change frequently, and keeping up with where your fee schedule should be is essential to collecting sufficient revenue to stay in business and invest in the agency’s future. If you’re seeing that your payers are regularly allowing 100% of your charges, it’s time to modify your fee schedule. Check what Medicare and private payers are paying compared to your charges.
Perhaps the simplest way to set fee schedules is to use a percentage of what Medicare allows. For example, family practices may charge 150% to 200% of what Medicare allows, and specialists may charge 300% of what Medicare allows. But the percentage you arrive at should be based on your own payer contracts and what other practices in your area are charging.
Another good starting place for most practices is conducting a cost study, either in-house or with the help of a consultant. Ultimately you want a list of services, each of which is assigned a proportion of overhead and margin as well as the base cost.
A few fee schedule best practices include:
Now that you know how to check your fee schedule and update it, make it a habit. You might be surprised at the hidden revenue within your own practice.
We guarantee a 10% increase in your cash flow.