California RCM Specialists

California Medical Billing Services

Expert Revenue Cycle Management for California Healthcare Practices. AI-powered claim validation, Medi-Cal mastery, and Knox-Keene compliance — built for established CA practices processing 500+ claims monthly.

California Expertise

Why California Practices Need Specialized Medical Billing

Medical billing in California operates under regulatory complexity that doesn’t exist in other states. Medi-Cal rules diverge from traditional Medicare workflows. Knox-Keene Act requirements create managed care billing obligations most practices don’t anticipate. Claims are increasingly denied — with initial denial rates hitting 11.8% in 2024 — and California’s unique payer ecosystem makes recovery difficult without local expertise.

The problem isn’t that practices don’t understand billing. It’s that California billing requires knowing rules that national billing companies ignore.

The Hidden Cost of Billing Errors in California Healthcare

Billing errors are endemic. 54% of providers report claim errors are increasing, and 41% face denial rates above 10%. These aren’t administrative inconveniences — they’re revenue killers.
But denial rate is only part of the story. 68% of providers say submitting clean claims is harder than a year ago. Payers are tightening eligibility verification. Medical necessity reviews are accelerating. Prior authorization requirements expand quarterly. Practices managing this alone are drowning.

California's Unique Regulatory Landscape: Knox-Keene, Medi-Cal, and SB 363

California practices operate in a three-layer regulatory environment:

Layer 1: Medi-Cal Managed Care (14.1 Million Enrollees)
14.1 million Californians enrolled in Medi-Cal managed care. Most practices don’t have dedicated Medi-Cal coders. Standard Medicare billing doesn’t work here. Medi-Cal requires:

Source: California Department of Health Care Services (DHCS) Medi-Cal Program Guidelines, 2025

The Knox-Keene Act mandates that health plans operate transparently and comply with California’s Department of Managed Health Care (DMHC) standards. For practices, this means:

Source: California Department of Managed Health Care (DMHC) Knox-Keene Act Standards, 2024-2025

California’s SB 363, enacted in 2024, imposes penalties for improper denials, required external reviews, and mandatory appeals processes. Violations carry steep consequences:

Practices need billing operations that document appeal compliance, track denial reasons, and ensure no claim is written off without exhausting recovery options.

Source: California Legislature SB 363, Chapter 919, 2024

Critical Compliance Note for California Practices

California's regulatory environment is tightening. SB 363 penalties are enforced starting 2025. Medi-Cal audits increased 100% in 2024 for clinical documentation compliance. Practices using generic, national billing vendors are exposed — those vendors don't track California-specific denial rules and appeal requirements. A single improper denial write-off could trigger an audit.

Real Practice Concerns

What California Practices Really Ask About Billing

California practices operate in a three-layer regulatory environment:

Workflow / Scale Questions

"Should I outsource or keep it in-house?" "Can our process scale from 5 to 12 providers?" "How do I transition without losing revenue?"

Performance / Benchmarking

"What's a good denial rate?" "How many days in AR is acceptable?" "What first-pass rate should I expect?" "How do I verify my billing company is actually performing?"

California-Specific

"How do I handle Medi-Cal TAR/SAR requirements?" "What's the real story on SB 363?" "How do I navigate Anthem/Blue Shield in CA?" "Are we compliant with Knox-Keene?"

California-Specific

"How do I handle Medi-Cal TAR/SAR requirements?" "What's the real story on SB 363?" "How do I navigate Anthem/Blue Shield in CA?" "Are we compliant with Knox-Keene?"

Financial

"What's the real ROI of outsourcing?" "How much are we losing to revenue leakage?" "What should outsourced billing cost?" "What's reasonable for specialty coders?"

Every question maps to a pain point that Dastify resolves. The most urgent: practices don’t know if they’re underbilling, losing denials, or exposed to compliance risk. They need benchmarking, not reassurance.

Our Services

Our California Medical Billing Services

Dastify Solutions operates as an extension of your practice’s revenue cycle department, not a vendor handling billing as a commodity. We specialize in California practices processing 500+ claims monthly — established groups with complex payer ecosystems, multi-specialty billing demands, and regulatory obligations that demand local expertise.

End-to-End Revenue Cycle Management

From charge capture to payment posting, we own every step. Your practice focuses on patient care. We maximize revenue recovery through systematic claim management, eligibility verification, and denial prevention.

AI-Powered Claim Scrubbing and Submission

Our proprietary AI validates charges for coding accuracy, payer-specific rules, and clinical documentation completeness before submission. Claims are submitted within 72 hours of service. This speed matters: 69% of providers using AI report reduced denials. We're not guessing — we're validating against real payer algorithms.

Denial Management and Appeals

Denials aren't failures — they're data. We analyze every denial for root cause (coding, eligibility, medical necessity, timing). Nearly 2/3 of denials are recoverable with proper appeals strategy. We appeal systematically, track patterns by payer, and escalate external review for SB 363 compliance.

Credentialing and Payer Enrollment

Credentialing delays kill revenue. We manage the entire enrollment process: application submission, documentation assembly, status tracking, and re-credentialing cycles. Average turnaround in California: 60 days to full enrollment (vs. 90-120 days for practices managing internally).

Patient Billing and Collections

Patient balance responsibility is rising. We manage patient statements, payment plans, and AR aging. Collection rates improve when patients understand what they owe and payment is frictionless.

Analytics, Reporting, and KPI Dashboards

Real-time visibility into claims submitted, claims paid, denial trends, AR aging, net collection rates, and reimbursement by payer/specialty. You see what we see. Board-ready reports provided monthly.

Our Process

How Our Medical Billing Process Works

Transparency in process matters. Here’s exactly how we manage claims from capture to cash:
Charge Capture and Coding Validation

Every charge is captured from your EHR into our system. Our CPC-certified coders validate diagnosis codes for medical necessity alignment, procedure codes for payer-specific conventions, and modifiers for accuracy. We catch undercoding (leaving money on the table) and overcoding (audit exposure) before submission. Up to 12% of claims contain inaccurate codes nationally — our validation reduces this to <2%.

AI-Driven Claim Scrubbing

Our AI engine validates 80+ data points per claim: eligibility verification against payer files, prior authorization requirements, medical necessity rules, coding accuracy against payer fee schedules, and patient responsibility calculations. If a rule violation is detected, the claim is held, the issue is communicated to your practice, and it's corrected before submission.

Submission Within 72 Hours

Clean claims are submitted to payers within 72 hours of service entry. We track submission status and receive electronic notifications when claims hit payer systems. For Medi-Cal, we manage TAR/SAR workflows proactively, requesting authorizations before service when possible.

Real-Time Rejection Monitoring

Rejections (claims payers won't accept) are caught within 24 hours. We correct the issue and re-submit the same day. Rejections delay payment cycles significantly if not addressed immediately. Most vendors don't monitor this actively. We do.

Denial Analysis and Appeals

Denials are categorized by root cause: missing documentation, medical necessity challenges, coding errors, eligibility issues, or payer contract disputes. We appeal systematically, starting with peer-to-peer review for complex denials. For SB 363 compliance, we document every denial and appeal decision.

Payment Posting and Reconciliation

Payments arrive via ERA (Electronic Remittance Advice). We post payments to patient accounts, apply insurance adjustments per contract, flag underpayments, and reconcile to claims submitted. Patient balances are calculated accurately, statements generated, and aged AR reviewed monthly.

Cost Analysis

In-House vs. Outsourced: California Cost Comparison

CFOs ask this question constantly: Is it cheaper to keep billing in-house or outsource? The answer surprises most practice leaders because the total cost of in-house billing is hidden across multiple line items.

The True Cost of In-House Billing in California

Let’s model a 10-provider practice with 2,000 claims monthly (typical primary care group):

Cost FactorIn-House (CA)Notes
Billing Staff (3 FTEs @ $55K-65K base)$165K-$195K/yearBay Area/LA wages are higher. Billing managers can exceed $80K.
Benefits & Payroll Taxes (25-30%)$41K-$59K/yearHealth insurance, payroll tax, workers comp, unemployment
Software/PM System Licenses$12K-$60K/yearDependent on system. eClinicalWorks, Epic modules are expensive.
Clearinghouse & EDI Fees$3K-$8K/yearPer-claim fees and gateway subscriptions
Training & Continuing Education$2K-$5K/yearICD-10, CPT updates, HIPAA training, coding certifications
Turnover & Recruitment$15K-$25K per replacementRecruiting, onboarding, lost productivity during ramp.
Total Annual Cost$238K-$352K/yearOr 6.6% to 9.8% of collections

Hidden Costs Not Included Above: Vacation/sick leave coverage, compliance training, audit preparation, EHR integration updates, appeals software, staff turnover ramp (6-8 weeks at <50% productivity). Real all-in cost approaches 10-12% of collections.

Dastify’s pricing model is transparent: 4-7% of collections (standard for California markets handling 500+ claims monthly). Everything is included:

Cost FactorIn-House (CA)Notes
Billing Staff (3 FTEs @ $55K-65K base)$165K-$195K/yearBay Area/LA wages are higher. Billing managers can exceed $80K.
Benefits & Payroll Taxes (25-30%)$41K-$59K/yearHealth insurance, payroll tax, workers comp, unemployment
Software/PM System Licenses$12K-$60K/yearDependent on system. eClinicalWorks, Epic modules are expensive.
Clearinghouse & EDI Fees$3K-$8K/yearPer-claim fees and gateway subscriptions
Training & Continuing Education$2K-$5K/yearICD-10, CPT updates, HIPAA training, coding certifications
Turnover & Recruitment$15K-$25K per replacementRecruiting, onboarding, lost productivity during ramp.
Total Annual Cost$238K-$352K/yearOr 6.6% to 9.8% of collections

Scenario: 10-provider primary care practice, CA — 2,000 claims monthly = 24,000 annually. Average reimbursement: $150 per claim. Annual collections: $3.6M.

Dastify Outsourced Billing (5.5% pricing)

In-House Billing

$727K

$342K

Total Cost Reduction

In-House

$385K Saved

Annual Net Savings (53%)

Months

Immediate

Breakeven Timeline

Cost Comparison Reality

Outsourcing doesn't save money by cutting corners — it saves money by optimizing denial recovery, reducing coding errors, and eliminating turnover risk. A practice with a 12% denial rate is leaving $432K on the table annually. Moving to 4% denial recovery alone justifies the outsource investment, even before considering staff costs.

Key Decision Factors for Your Practice

Proven Results

California Medical Billing Results & Case Studies

Metrics matter. Here’s how Dastify performs against industry benchmarks across 500+ California practices:

Performance Benchmarks: Dastify vs. Industry Averages

MetricIndustry Average (CA)Dastify ResultsDifference
First-Pass Clean Claim Rate85-88%97.4%+9.4-12.4 percentage points
Denial Rate9-12%≤4%-5 to -8 percentage points
Days in AR40-50 days30-35 days-10 to -15 days
Net Collection Rate92-95%97-99%+2 to +7 percentage points
Client Retention85-90%99%+9-14 percentage points
Revenue Increase (Year 1)N/A30% averageBenchmark-dependent
Source: Dastify Solutions 2024 Performance Data (500+ California practices), compared to MGMA, Experian, and industry benchmarks
Case Study 1: Multi-Specialty Group Reduces AR Days from 52 to 28

Bay Area Multi-Specialty

12-provider group (internal medicine, orthopedics, rheumatology) — $5.2M annual collections

In-house billing team of 4 managed claims across three specialties with minimal specialty-specific expertise. Billing manager announced retirement; replacement took 14 weeks to ramp.

 

Baseline Problems: Days in AR: 52 days (benchmark: 40). Denial rate: 11.2% (primarily orthopedic claims with missing prior auth documentation). First-pass clean rate: 82% — high rejection/rework volume.

 

Dastify Intervention (4-month transition): Implemented AI-powered claim scrubbing with specialty-specific validation for orthopedic prior auth requirements. Assigned orthopedics coding specialist. Deployed standardized prior auth checklist tied to Anthem, Blue Shield, and Medicare workflows.

52 → 28

Days in AR (46% improvement)

11.2% → 3.8%

Denial Rate (66% improvement)

82% → 96.1%

First-Pass Clean Rate

$310K

Projected Cash Flow Improvement

Los Angeles Women's Health

6-provider women's health clinic (OB-GYN, family planning, prenatal care) — $2.1M annual collections

Billing outsourced to regional vendor (non-specialist). Significant undercoding and unrecovered revenue from complex obstetric codes.

 

Baseline Problems: Revenue leakage due to undercoding complex pregnancy-related visits. Denial rate: 9.8%. Charge capture: $1.84M actual vs. $2.1M expected (12% variance). Previous vendor couldn’t justify specialty expertise.

 

Dastify Intervention (60-day comprehensive audit + transition): Conducted charge capture analysis across 3 years of billing. Implemented women’s health specialty coders trained in CPT codes 59000-59899 accuracy. Created medical necessity appeals strategy for pregnancy-related denials.

+$180K

Charge Capture Improvement

9.8% → 3.2%

Denial Rate (67% improvement)

93% → 98%

Net Collection Rate

Month 7

ROI Breakeven

Multi-Specialty

Specialties We Serve Across California

Medical billing isn’t one-size-fits-all. Different specialties have different coding requirements, prior auth workflows, and payer expectations. Our specialty-specific expertise prevents the most common errors:
Laboratory Billing

Lab billing demands mastery of CPT codes 80000-89999, CLIA compliance, and payer-specific panel requirements. We prevent denials from incorrect CPT bundling and undercoding high-complexity tests.

Behavioral Health Billing

Behavioral health is California's fastest-growing specialty — and most problematic for denials. Over 70% of mental health denials are overturned on appeal in CA, suggesting payers are aggressively denying upfront. We manage this with peer-to-peer specialists and SB 363 compliance.

Women's Health / OB-GYN Billing

OB-GYN codes (59000-59899) are complex and frequently undercoded. Pregnancy-related services require careful diagnosis coding for medical necessity. Mismatched codes = denials. We specialize in capturing full value for pregnancy management visits.

Radiology Billing

Radiology has its own coding universe (70000-79999). Prior auth requirements are strict. Payers aggressively deny advanced imaging without documented medical necessity. We manage imaging justification documentation and appeal complex denials.

Internal Medicine & Primary Care

Primary care is high-volume, low-error-margin billing. Office visit codes 99201-99215 require precise documentation alignment. Medi-Cal primary care has unique coding rules. We manage at scale with minimal rework.

Cardiology & Surgical Specialties

Cardiology and surgery generate higher-value claims with greater audit exposure. Documentation accuracy is critical. We manage surgical code complexity, global period rules, and carrier-specific bundling requirements.

Every question maps to a pain point that Dastify resolves. The most urgent: practices don’t know if they’re underbilling, losing denials, or exposed to compliance risk. They need benchmarking, not reassurance.

Compliance

California-Specific Compliance and Payer Expertise

California operates under regulatory constraints that don’t affect other states. A billing company that’s expert in Texas Medicare isn’t equipped to navigate Medi-Cal TAR requirements or Knox-Keene compliance. Dastify’s California expertise covers:
Medi-Cal Billing Mastery: TAR, SAR, and AEVS

14.1 million Californians are enrolled in Medi-Cal managed care.
For practices, this means Medi-Cal claims are high-volume and complex. We manage:

California’s payer ecosystem is dominated by four players — each with different rules:

PayerMarket Share (CA)Dastify Expertise
Anthem Blue Cross (CA)~35% commercialSpecialty-specific prior auth rules (e.g., requires 72-hour advance notice for behavioral health). Fee schedule negotiation experience. Appeals contacts for overturned denials.
Blue Shield of California~25% commercialNetwork-specific billing rules. Different requirements for Blue Shield HMO vs. PPO vs. Covered California plans. Complex eligibility rules.
Medi-Cal (managed care)~35% Medi-CalTAR/SAR mastery across five major Medi-Cal plans (LA Care, Molina, UnitedHealth, Anthem, CareMore). Plan-specific requirements and appeal contacts.
Medicare (FFS & Advantage)~20% CA marketPart B denial patterns. Global period management. Medicare Advantage plan-specific rules. Compliance with HIPAA fee schedule auditing.

Result: We know the rules each payer enforces. We know which denials are winnable and which require different strategies. Generic billing vendors apply the same rules to all payers. That’s why they have higher denial rates.

 

Technology

Technology and EHR Integration

Medical billing doesn’t work without seamless EHR integration. Claims must flow automatically from diagnosis/procedure capture to submission. Manual data entry kills both accuracy and speed.

50+ EHR Integrations

Our proprietary AI validates claims across 80+ data points before submission:

This prevents rejections and denials that would otherwise require rework. Clean claims are submitted faster, paid faster.

Reports are exportable, shareable, and designed for decision-makers. No more asking billing vendors for data — you access it directly.

You see what we see, in real time:

Statewide Coverage

Serving California Healthcare Practices Statewide

California’s medical billing market spans from the Bay Area to San Diego, with dramatically different payer mixes, regulatory environments, and practice types. We serve all California regions with local expertise:

LA's largest healthcare market, dominated by Anthem Blue Cross, Blue Shield, and Medi-Cal. High-volume practices with multi-specialty complexity. We specialize in managing large group billing with specialty-specific expertise.

Bay Area practices face unique workforce challenges (highest billing salaries in CA) and tech-forward expectations. We offer integrated EHR workflows and AI-powered analytics that appeal to sophisticated healthcare systems.

San Diego's market includes military health (VA), border-specific Medicaid rules, and growing telehealth practices. We manage tri-service billing and cross-border compliance.

San Jose’s healthcare market includes growing specialty clinics and private practices. We provide streamlined claims processing, payer coordination, and efficient revenue cycle management for Silicon Valley providers.

Sacramento's state capital location means significant government health programs and state employee plans. We navigate CalPERS, state health plan rules, and public hospital system billing requirements.

Central Valley practices face Medi-Cal volume (agricultural worker populations) and rural healthcare challenges. We support critical access hospitals, federally qualified health centers (FQHCs), and rural practices.

Orange County is Southern California's affluent market (high commercial reimbursement). We manage complex PPO/EPO billing and premium payer negotiations.

Long Beach's large, diverse patient population includes significant Medicaid volume. We manage billing for large community health centers and hospital-affiliated practices.

Oakland practices operate in a diverse urban healthcare market with strong Medi-Cal and commercial payer presence. We manage complex payer mixes, accurate billing workflows, and compliance for multi-provider practices.

Bakersfield healthcare providers handle significant Medi-Cal volume and regional patient referrals. We support local clinics and practices with reliable claims management, denial handling, and consistent revenue cycle performance.

Anaheim practices serve a large and diverse patient population with strong HMO and PPO networks. We manage accurate claims submission, payer compliance, and efficient revenue cycle workflows for clinics and specialty practices.

Statewide Coverage

Beyond major cities, we serve rural and critical access hospitals, independent practices, telehealth operations, and multi-location groups across all 58 California counties.

Statewide Advantage: We understand California’s medical billing ecosystem from coast to coast. We know which payers dominate specific regions, which regulations affect rural practices differently, and how to scale billing across diverse geographic markets.

Get The Answers You Need

Frequently Asked Questions About California Medical Billing

Statewide Advantage: We understand California’s medical billing ecosystem from coast to coast. We know which payers dominate specific regions, which regulations affect rural practices differently, and how to scale billing across diverse geographic markets.

How much does medical billing outsourcing cost in California?

Outsourced medical billing in California typically costs 4-7% of collections, depending on claim volume and complexity. For a 10-provider practice with $3.6M annual collections, expect $144,000-$252,000 annually (all-inclusive: staff, software, clearinghouse, appeals, reporting).

 

Pricing factors include: practice size (higher volume = lower percentage), specialty mix (behavioral health and radiology require specialist coders, costing slightly more), and geographic market (Bay Area and LA command premium pricing due to local salary costs). Dastify’s standard pricing is 5.5% of collections for established California practices processing 500+ claims monthly.

 

Cost transparency: We quote fixed percentages — no hidden per-claim fees, no setup charges, no overage fees. You pay a percentage of what you collect, so your cost scales with your revenue.

Industry benchmarks show denial rates of 9-12% for California practices without advanced RCM support. 41% of providers face denial rates above 10%, indicating this is an industry-wide problem, not an anomaly.

 

By specialty: primary care (8-10%), behavioral health (12-15%), radiology (10-12%), specialty surgical (7-9%). Higher denial rates indicate either coding gaps, payer enrollment issues, or poor documentation practices.

 

What’s acceptable: A denial rate below 5% is considered excellent. Below 4% is world-class. Dastify maintains ≤4% denial rates across our client base, which translates to $250,000+ annual revenue recovery for a typical practice vs. industry average.

 

What drives denials: Root causes are typically 50% medical necessity (diagnosis doesn’t support procedure), 25% eligibility (patient not covered), 25% coding/procedural (wrong code, missing modifier, claim timing).

Prior Authorization: Most specialty referrals and many procedures require Treatment Authorization Request (TAR) approval before service. Commercial doesn’t have this requirement. Missing TAR = automatic denial.

Service Authorization (Post-Service): Emergency and urgent care can be billed without pre-auth, but Medi-Cal must retroactively approve within 15 days. If not approved, claim is denied.

Diagnosis Alignment: Medi-Cal scrutinizes medical necessity more aggressively than commercial. Diagnosis codes must directly support procedure codes. Misalignment = denial.

Plan Variations: Medi-Cal managed care is handled by multiple plans (LA Care, Molina, UnitedHealth, Anthem, CareMore). Each plan has different prior auth rules, fee schedules, and submission requirements. A claim that’s compliant for one plan may be denied by another.

Eligibility Verification: Medi-Cal eligibility changes frequently (quarterly re-determination). You must verify Medi-Cal eligibility at time of service, every time.

Coding Differences: Some CPT codes have different Medi-Cal valuations. Office visits (99213-99215) might have different payment levels under Medi-Cal vs. commercial. You need plan-specific fee schedules.

1. California-Specific Expertise: Can they explain Medi-Cal TAR requirements? Do they understand Knox-Keene compliance? Have they implemented SB 363 appeal tracking? If they describe California billing as “just like any other state,” they’re not equipped.

 

2. Specialty Staffing: Do they use generalist coders for all specialties, or do they employ specialty-certified coders? Behavioral health claims coded by a primary care specialist will be undercoded.

 

3. Performance Transparency: Can they show you first-pass clean rates, denial rates, and days in AR for client cohorts similar to yours? If they won’t share benchmarks, they likely don’t meet them.

 

4. Real-Time Reporting: Do you get real-time visibility into claims status, denial trends, and AR aging? Or do you get monthly reports and must ask for detail?

 

5. EHR Integration: Do they integrate with your EHR, or do they require manual charge entry? Integration eliminates data entry errors and accelerates submission.

 

6. Payer Expertise: Do they have established relationships with Anthem, Blue Shield, Medi-Cal, and Medicare? Vendor relationships accelerate appeals.

 

7. Pricing Transparency: Do they quote fixed percentages or hidden per-claim fees? Fixed-percentage pricing aligns incentives (they benefit when you benefit).

Week 1-2: Onboarding & Data Setup — Credential verification, EHR connection setup, fee schedule import and validation, payer contact database build.

 

Week 2-4: Parallel Processing — New claims submitted through Dastify while old vendor continues prior claims. AR aging analyzed to identify stuck claims. Previous vendor’s claim backlog transferred and re-aged.

 

Week 4-8: Cutover — Old vendor’s final payment and transition closeout. Dastify assumes 100% of new claim volume. Remaining old-vendor claims appealed or written off.

 

Key Risk Mitigation: Parallel processing prevents revenue disruption. You don’t lose income during transition because we’re submitting new claims while managing the prior vendor’s work. Typical practices see zero revenue impact.

 

Hidden Cost Prevention: Some vendors charge transition fees or setup costs. We don’t. Our cost is the percentage — you pay based on results.

1. Payment Timeliness: Plans must pay clean claims within 30 days (commercial) or 45 days (Medi-Cal). Violations are auditable. We track payment timelines and flag plans that pay late consistently — data you can use to renegotiate contracts.

2. Denial Accountability: Denials must include detailed written reason. Plans can’t deny with vague language like “not medically necessary” without explanation. If a denial lacks justification, it violates Knox-Keene and is generally appealable.

3. Credentialing Timelines: Plans must credential providers within 180 days. Delays beyond this are violations.

4. Network Adequacy: Plans must maintain adequate networks. In shortage areas, you have leverage in contract negotiations. Knox-Keene supports your position that the plan has insufficient providers.

Practical Impact: Understanding Knox-Keene puts you in stronger negotiating position with plans. Dastify manages this documentation so you have the data to support contract demands.

The Short Answer: Yes — but with caveats. 69% of providers using AI report reduced denials, according to 2025 industry research.

 

What AI Does Well: Validates coding accuracy against payer fee schedules. Checks eligibility verification against real-time payer feeds. Detects prior auth requirements. Flags impossible scenarios (patient age doesn’t match procedure). Spots claim-level errors (duplicate submissions, incorrect bilateral billing).

 

What AI Can’t Do (Yet): Determine medical necessity (requires clinical review). Interpret payer denial patterns (requires human judgment). Handle exception cases (complex multi-procedure claims). Manage appeals strategy (requires business judgment).

 

 

Dastify’s Approach: We use AI to eliminate “dumb” errors (coding, eligibility, routing) and free humans to handle complex denials and appeals. This is why our denial rate is ≤4% vs. industry average of 9-12%.

What is a good first-pass clean claim rate?

Benchmarks: Excellent: 95%+ (claims accepted on first submission). Good: 90-94%. Average: 85-89% (industry norm). Below Average: <85% (significant rework required).

 

What “Clean Claim” Means: A claim payers accept on first submission without rejection or rework requests. Rejections delay payment 3-7 days. At high volume, rejection delays cost tens of thousands monthly.

 

Dastify Benchmark: We maintain 97.4% first-pass clean rate through pre-submission validation that checks claims against 80+ payer rules before they’re sent.

 

Why It Matters: A 5% improvement in first-pass rate (85% → 90%) eliminates 120 rejections monthly for a 2,000-claim-per-month practice. At 4 days rework per rejection, that’s 480 staff days eliminated annually — equivalent to 2.4 FTEs

Metric 1: Denial Rate — Ask: “What’s our denial rate?” If >10%, underperformance is likely. Industry average: 9-12%; acceptable range: <7%; excellent: <4%.

 

Metric 2: Days in AR — Ask: “How many days elapse between service and payment receipt?” Industry average: 40-50 days; good: 30-35 days; excellent: <30 days.

 

Metric 3: First-Pass Clean Rate — Ask: “What % of claims are accepted without rejection?” Industry average: 85-88%; good: 90%+; excellent: 95%+.

 

Metric 4: Net Collection Rate — Ask: “What % of billed charges do we actually collect?” Industry average: 92-95%; good: 96%+; excellent: 97%+.

 

Qualitative Red Flags: Can’t explain denial root causes. Won’t provide detailed reporting. Staff turnover. Specialty mismatch. No California expertise.

 

Action Plan: If your current vendor is weak on any of these metrics, request an improvement plan with timelines. If they can’t commit to benchmarks, it’s time to transition.

Primary Specialties (Dedicated Coders): Primary Care / Internal Medicine, Behavioral Health / Psychiatry, Women’s Health / OB-GYN, Radiology, Cardiology, Orthopedic Surgery, General Surgery, Laboratory / Pathology.

 

Secondary Specialties (With Specialist Review): Dermatology, Pediatrics, Urology, ENT (Otolaryngology), Ophthalmology, Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation, Podiatry, Dentistry (limited scope).

 

Multi-Specialty Groups: Our expertise is managing practices with multiple specialties under one billing operation. We assign specialty-specific coders to each service line to prevent undercoding or cross-specialty errors.

 

What Makes This Different: Most national billing vendors use generalist coders for all specialties. We use specialty-certified CPCs so orthopedic claims are coded by orthopedic specialists.

Short Answer: Yes — when handled properly.

 

HIPAA Requirements: Business Associate Agreement (BAA) signed before data transfer. Role-based access controls. Encryption in transit and at rest. Audit logs tracking who accessed what data and when. Annual HIPAA compliance assessments.

 

California-Specific Protections: CCPA/CPRA compliance (individual rights to access, delete, opt-out). Breach notification within 48 hours of discovery. Special protections for mental health and substance abuse records. Data retention limits.

 

Data Transition Risk: The highest risk is during transition. We use encrypted transfer, verify checksums, and maintain data backup to prevent loss.

 

Vendor Lock-In Protection: If you decide to change billing vendors, we provide complete data export in standard formats (HL7, CSV) so you’re not locked in. Your data belongs to you.

Enacted in 2024, SB 363 imposes strict standards on health plans’ denial processes and surprise billing practices.

 

What SB 363 Requires: Transparent denial reasons — plans must provide specific, documented reason for every denial. External review access — denied claims can be appealed to independent external review if not resolved within 30 days. Reversal opportunities — plans must make clinical judgment denials reversible. Penalty exposure — plans that improperly deny face $50K first violation, escalating to $1M+ for repeated violations.

 

What This Means for Your Billing: Denial documentation is critical for SB 363 compliance audits. Appeals are worth pursuing (especially mental health and behavioral health denials). Generic write-offs without appeal attempts expose you to risk.

 

Dastify’s SB 363 Compliance: We maintain audit-ready denial documentation, track appeals systematically, and escalate denials that appear improper to external review. Your practice stays compliant.

Get Started

Ready to Transform Your California Medical Billing?
Get a free Revenue Cycle Assessment. Learn where you’re leaving money on the table and how Dastify can recover it.
Best suited for established California practices processing 500+ claims monthly. Assessment typically uncovers $50K-$150K in annual recovery opportunities.

Written by

Stephanie Jason,CPC

Reviewed by

Anum Naveed,CHCA

Last Updated

March 10, 2026