CO-111: Not Covered Unless Provider Accepts Assignment
The claim was denied because assignment was not indicated. Check Box 27 on CMS-1500, verify participation status, and resubmit with assignment accepted. For mandatory assignment services, assignment must always be indicated.
What Does CO-111 Mean?
CO-111 means the provider must write off the denied amount because assignment was not accepted for a service that requires it. This typically happens when the assignment indicator was not checked on the claim form or the provider's participation status does not match the payer's requirements. The patient cannot be billed for this provider-side error.
CARC 111 fires when a payer denies a claim because the provider did not accept assignment for a service that requires it. Assignment means the provider agrees to accept the payer's approved fee schedule amount as payment in full and will not balance bill the patient beyond the allowed coinsurance, copay, or deductible. Certain services — particularly under Medicare — require mandatory assignment regardless of the provider's general participation status.
The most common trigger is Medicare mandatory assignment services. Clinical laboratory services, ambulance services, drugs and biologicals administered by physicians, and services to dual-eligible (Medicare/Medicaid) patients all require assignment under Medicare rules. If the claim does not indicate assignment acceptance, Medicare will deny it with CARC 111 even if the provider is a participating provider. The second major trigger is simply a missing assignment indicator — Box 27 on the CMS-1500 form or the electronic equivalent was not checked, causing the payer to process the claim as non-assigned.
The resolution depends on the Group Code. CO-111 means the provider must absorb the denied amount and correct the claim. PR-111 shifts the financial burden to the patient, typically when the provider is non-participating and the service does not require mandatory assignment. In PR scenarios, the patient pays the full charge because the provider did not agree to accept the payer's allowed amount.
Common Causes
| Cause | Frequency |
|---|---|
| Non-participating provider billed assignment-required service The provider is not a participating provider with the payer and did not accept assignment, but the service requires assignment acceptance for coverage — common with Medicare services that mandate assignment, such as clinical lab services, ambulance services, and drugs administered by physicians | Most Common |
| Provider enrollment or participation status issue The provider's enrollment with the payer has lapsed, was not completed, or the provider is not registered as a participating provider in the payer's system, causing assignment-required services to be denied | Common |
| Missing assignment indicator on the claim The claim form does not have the assignment acceptance box checked (Box 27 on CMS-1500) or the electronic equivalent, causing the payer to process the claim as non-assigned even though the provider intended to accept assignment | Common |
| Service type requires mandatory assignment Certain services under Medicare require mandatory assignment regardless of the provider's general participation status (clinical lab, drugs, ambulance). If the claim does not indicate assignment acceptance for these services, it will be denied | Common |
| Payer-specific assignment requirements not met Commercial payers or Medicaid programs have specific assignment requirements that differ from Medicare, and the provider did not meet the payer's particular requirements for accepting assignment on this service | Occasional |
How to Resolve
Verify the provider's participation status and assignment indicator on the claim, correct any errors, and resubmit with assignment accepted if the service requires it.
- Review the assignment indicator Check whether Box 27 on CMS-1500 (or the electronic equivalent) was properly completed. A missing or unchecked assignment box is the most common cause.
- Verify participation status Confirm the provider is enrolled and participating with the payer. If enrollment lapsed, initiate re-enrollment and ask about retroactive effective dates.
- Identify mandatory assignment requirements Determine if the service requires mandatory assignment under Medicare or the specific payer's rules — clinical lab, ambulance, physician-administered drugs, and dual-eligible services all require assignment.
- Correct and resubmit Add or correct the assignment acceptance indicator and resubmit the claim. For mandatory assignment services, ensure assignment is always indicated regardless of general participation status.
CO-111 indicates the provider did not accept assignment for a service that requires it. The correct resolution is to check the assignment indicator on the claim, verify provider enrollment, and resubmit with the assignment acceptance properly indicated. Appeals are not effective for missing assignment indicators.
Common RARC Pairings
The RARC code tells you exactly what triggered the CO-111:
| RARC | Description |
|---|---|
| N95 | This provider type/provider must accept assignment for this service Accept assignment and resubmit the claim with the assignment indicator checked → |
| MA01 | Alert: If you do not agree with this decision, you may appeal Review whether an appeal or corrected claim resubmission is the appropriate next step → |
How to Prevent CO-111
- Ensure all claims have the assignment acceptance indicator properly completed before submission, especially for Medicare mandatory assignment services
- Maintain current provider enrollment and participation status with all active payers, with renewal reminders set before expiration
- Build claim scrubbing rules that flag claims missing the assignment indicator before submission
- Train billing staff on which services require mandatory assignment under Medicare (lab, ambulance, drugs, dual-eligible)
- Regularly audit provider enrollment records to verify participation status matches billing practices
- Implement default assignment acceptance in billing templates for mandatory assignment service types
General Prevention
- Maintain current provider enrollment and participation status with all active payers, and set up renewal reminders before enrollment lapses
- Ensure all claims have the assignment acceptance indicator properly completed before submission, particularly for Medicare mandatory assignment services
- Train billing staff on which services require mandatory assignment under Medicare and other payers
- Implement claim scrubbing rules that flag claims missing the assignment indicator before submission
- Stay informed about payer policy changes regarding assignment requirements
Also Filed As
The same CARC 111 may appear with different Group Codes:
Related Denial Codes
Sources
- https://www.mdclarity.com/denial-code/111
- https://www.mdclarity.com/denial-code-carcs
- https://med.noridianmedicare.com/web/jeb/topics/claim-submission/denial-resolution
- Codes maintained by X12. Visit x12.org for official definitions.