CARC 102 Active

CO-102: Major Medical Adjustment

TL;DR

The major medical adjustment is a contractual write-off. Post the adjustment and do not bill the patient for the CO portion.

Action
Review & Decide
Who Pays
Provider
Appeal
Yes
Patient Impact
None
Disclaimer
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute professional billing advice. Always verify information against your payer contracts and current coding guidelines. Consult a certified billing specialist for specific claim issues.

What Does CO-102 Mean?

CO-102 represents the contractual adjustment portion of the major medical benefit calculation. This is the amount the payer reduced from your billed charges based on the plan's major medical fee schedule or benefit structure. You cannot bill the patient for CO-102 — it is a write-off under your provider contract. This may represent the difference between billed charges and the allowed amount under the major medical tier, or it may reflect a benefit limit that has been reached.

CARC 102 surfaces when the payer adjudicates your claim under the major medical benefit tier of the patient's plan and applies an adjustment based on that tier's specific coverage rules. Many insurance plans divide benefits into tiers — basic and major medical — with different deductibles, coinsurance rates, and coverage limits for each. When a service falls under the major medical tier, the financial rules can differ significantly from basic benefits.

This code is particularly relevant for plans that maintain separate deductible and out-of-pocket accumulations for major medical services. A patient might have a fully satisfied basic deductible but still have an unmet major medical deductible, causing charges to be applied differently depending on the benefit category. The payer uses CARC 102 to signal that the adjustment is specifically a major medical benefit calculation, not a standard fee schedule reduction or coverage denial.

From a billing perspective, the first step is always to verify that the service was correctly categorized. Coding errors can cause a service to be adjudicated under the wrong benefit tier — for example, a procedure that should fall under basic benefits might be classified as major medical due to an incorrect CPT code or missing modifier. If the categorization is correct, the adjustment is a legitimate application of the plan's benefit structure, and your response depends on the group code: write off the CO portion and collect the PR portion from the patient.

Common Causes

Cause Frequency
Charges exceed major medical benefit limits The billed services exceed the coverage limits under the major medical portion of the patient's plan, and the payer adjusts the excess amount as a contractual write-off Most Common
Incorrect coding resulting in improper benefit category The procedure or diagnosis codes submitted caused the claim to be adjudicated under the wrong benefit category (e.g., basic vs. major medical), leading to an adjustment Common
Missing prior authorization for major medical services The payer required prior authorization for services falling under the major medical benefit tier, and the authorization was not obtained before services were rendered Common
Service classified under major medical deductible tier The payer's plan structure separates services into basic and major medical tiers, and the billed service falls under the major medical tier which has different coverage rules or higher cost-sharing Common
Maximum benefits reached for major medical category The patient has exhausted their annual or lifetime maximum for services in the major medical benefit category Occasional

How to Resolve

Verify the service was categorized under the correct benefit tier, then post the contractual adjustment and bill the patient for their major medical cost-sharing.

  1. Verify the adjustment calculation Compare the CO-102 adjustment against the plan's major medical fee schedule or benefit limits. Confirm the payer applied the correct rates and limits.
  2. Check for coding misclassification Verify the service was correctly classified under the major medical tier. If a coding error caused misclassification, correct the codes and resubmit.
  3. Post the contractual write-off If the adjustment is correct, record the CO-102 amount as a contractual allowance. Tag it as a major medical adjustment for reporting purposes.
  4. Appeal if the tier assignment is wrong If the service should have been adjudicated under basic benefits rather than major medical, file an appeal with documentation supporting the correct benefit category.

Common RARC Pairings

The RARC code tells you exactly what triggered the CO-102:

RARC Description
N130 Alert: Review plan documents or guidelines to determine service restrictions or coverage details related to this major medical adjustment
N381 Alert: Consult your contractual agreement for restrictions, billing, and payment information related to these major medical charges

How to Prevent CO-102

General Prevention

Also Filed As

The same CARC 102 may appear with different Group Codes:

Related Denial Codes

Sources

  1. https://www.mdclarity.com/denial-code/102
  2. https://portal.ct.gov/-/media/ohs/health-it-advisory-council/apcd-advisory-group/data-submission-guide-workgroup/meeting-materials/6-30-22/carc-codes_final.pdf
  3. https://www.mass.gov/doc/companion-guide-carc-memo-0/download
  4. Codes maintained by X12. Visit x12.org for official definitions.