CARC 108 Active

CO-108: Rent/Purchase Guidelines Not Met

TL;DR

Your DME claim violated the payer's rent/purchase rules. Identify the specific guideline issue, correct the coding or documentation, and resubmit. Appeal with full records if you believe all guidelines were actually met.

Action
Verify & Resubmit
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-108 Mean?

CO-108 is a contractual adjustment indicating the provider did not follow the payer's rental or purchase guidelines for the billed DME item. The provider must absorb the denied amount as a write-off until the issue is resolved. Common violations include missing prior authorization, incorrect rent-to-purchase timing, wrong HCPCS modifier for the rental month, or insufficient medical necessity documentation.

CARC 108 fires when a payer determines that the billing for a rented or purchased item — almost always durable medical equipment (DME) — did not comply with the payer's specific rental/purchase guidelines. Every major payer, and Medicare in particular, maintains detailed rules governing how DME items transition from rental to purchase, what documentation is required at each stage, and what modifiers indicate the current billing phase.

Medicare's capped rental program is the most common context for this denial. Under capped rental, certain DME items (wheelchairs, hospital beds, CPAP machines) must be rented for up to 13 months before ownership transfers to the patient. Each month requires a specific modifier, and the billing must reflect the correct point in the rental cycle. Submitting a purchase claim during the rental window, using the wrong month's modifier, or missing the certificate of medical necessity (CMN) will all trigger CARC 108.

The financial outcome depends on the Group Code. CO-108 is the standard assignment, meaning the provider must absorb the denied amount as a contractual write-off until the guideline violation is corrected. PR-108 occurs less frequently and typically involves patient non-compliance with equipment use requirements — such as failing to meet CPAP compliance thresholds — where the patient's plan transfers the denied amount to the patient.

Common Causes

Cause Frequency
Missing prior authorization for DME rental or purchase The provider did not obtain required prior authorization from the payer before renting or selling durable medical equipment to the patient, a common requirement for items like wheelchairs, hospital beds, CPAP machines, and oxygen equipment Most Common
Non-compliance with rent-to-purchase conversion rules The claim was submitted for purchase of equipment that should still be in the rental period, or the rental-to-purchase conversion timeline was not followed per the payer's specific guidelines (e.g., Medicare's 13-month capped rental period for certain DME) Most Common
Inadequate medical necessity documentation The medical records do not adequately demonstrate that the rented or purchased equipment is medically necessary for the patient's diagnosis or treatment, as payers require clear evidence of need through physician orders and supporting clinical documentation Common
Incorrect HCPCS codes for rental vs. purchase The wrong HCPCS code modifier was used — for example, billing with a purchase modifier when the item should be rented, or using the wrong rental modifier for the current month in the rental cycle Common
Billing errors in rental period tracking The claim contains incorrect dates of service, wrong rental month numbers, or other data entry errors that conflict with the payer's records of the equipment rental timeline Common

How to Resolve

Identify which specific rental/purchase guideline was violated, correct the documentation or coding, and resubmit or appeal with proof of compliance.

  1. Identify the guideline violation Review the denial notice and any RARC codes to determine exactly which rental/purchase rule was not met — prior authorization, CMN, rental month timing, or modifier selection.
  2. Verify the rental cycle position Confirm the equipment's current position in the rental-to-purchase timeline and ensure the billing month, modifier (RR, NU, KH, KI, KJ, etc.), and HCPCS code are correct for this billing period.
  3. Gather missing documentation If the CMN was missing or incomplete, obtain a completed certificate from the ordering physician. If prior authorization was not obtained, request retroactive authorization if the payer allows it.
  4. Correct and resubmit or appeal Resubmit with corrected coding and complete documentation. If all guidelines were met, file a formal appeal with the CMN, physician order, delivery records, and proof of timeline compliance.
Appeal Guide

Appeal CO-108 when the provider has documentation proving all rental/purchase guidelines were followed. Include the certificate of medical necessity (CMN), physician order, equipment delivery and setup records, proof of prior authorization, and documentation showing compliance with the rental-to-purchase timeline. Reference the specific payer policy to demonstrate guideline adherence.

Common RARC Pairings

The RARC code tells you exactly what triggered the CO-108:

RARC Description
N386 Rental/purchase guidelines not followed per payer policy Check the 835 Healthcare Policy Identification Segment for specific guideline violation details →
M27 Missing or incomplete certificate of medical necessity Obtain a completed CMN from the ordering physician and resubmit →
N362 Service not covered based on the rent/purchase option Verify the correct rent vs. purchase billing option for the current point in the equipment lifecycle →

How to Prevent CO-108

General Prevention

Also Filed As

The same CARC 108 may appear with different Group Codes:

Related Denial Codes

Sources

  1. https://www.mdclarity.com/denial-code/108
  2. https://droidal.com/blog/medical-billing-denial-codes/
  3. https://practiceperfectss.com/list-of-denial-codes-in-medical-billing/
  4. Codes maintained by X12. Visit x12.org for official definitions.