CARC 119 Active

CO-119: Benefit Maximum Reached

TL;DR

The benefit maximum is a contractual write-off. Verify the accumulator, check for alternative benefit categories, and write off if the cap is correctly applied.

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-119 Mean?

CO-119 means the benefit maximum is a contractual limitation and the provider cannot bill the patient for the denied amount. The excess charges must be written off unless you can demonstrate the benefit was not actually exhausted. This pairing indicates the payer considers the denial a function of plan design, not patient responsibility. Appeal only if you believe the accumulator is incorrect or the service qualifies under a different benefit category.

CARC 119 fires when the payer determines that the patient has already used the maximum allowed benefit for a specific service within the coverage period. This is one of the most straightforward coverage-limit denials — the patient's plan sets a dollar cap, visit limit, or unit maximum, and that threshold has been reached. Any additional claims for the same service type are denied until the benefit resets.

The code appears most often in therapy services (physical, occupational, speech), mental health visits, and other services where plans commonly impose annual limits. For Medicare beneficiaries, the therapy cap has specific rules — the KX modifier can extend coverage beyond the cap when medical necessity is documented, making it critical to know whether the claim involves Medicare or a commercial plan.

The group code assignment determines your next move. CO-119 means the provider writes off the amount — the benefit cap is a contractual limitation and the excess cannot be billed to the patient. PR-119 shifts the responsibility to the patient — the plan has exhausted its coverage and the patient owes the remaining balance. Before taking either action, always verify the benefit accumulator with the payer. Accumulator errors are not uncommon, and a claim that appears to exceed the maximum may actually have available benefits if prior utilization was tracked incorrectly.

Common Causes

Cause Frequency
Annual or per-occurrence dollar maximum exhausted The patient's insurance plan has a maximum dollar amount for specific services within a coverage period, and that limit has been reached. All subsequent claims for those services are denied as the contractual benefit has been fully utilized. Most Common
Visit or unit frequency limit reached The plan limits the number of visits, units, or occurrences for a procedure within a time period, and the patient has already used the maximum allowed number. Most Common
Patient already utilized maximum with another provider The patient has received the same or similar services from a different provider, consuming the benefit maximum before the current claim was submitted. Common
Payer processing error in benefit accumulation The payer's system incorrectly tracked the patient's benefit utilization, applying the maximum prematurely due to a processing or accumulator error. Occasional

How to Resolve

Confirm the benefit maximum is genuinely exhausted, then either write off (CO) or bill the patient (PR) depending on the group code.

  1. Verify the benefit accumulator is accurate Contact the payer to confirm the patient's benefit utilization matches their records. Check for paid claims after this service date that may indicate an accumulator error.
  2. Check for alternative benefit categories or KX modifier Determine if the service can be reclassified under a separate benefit with its own limits. For Medicare, apply the KX modifier with supporting medical necessity documentation.
  3. Request reprocessing if the cap was applied in error If your verification reveals the maximum was not actually reached, submit a reprocessing request with documentation of the correct benefit utilization.
  4. Write off if the cap is correctly applied If the benefit maximum is genuinely exhausted and no alternative category applies, post the adjustment as a contractual write-off.

Common RARC Pairings

The RARC code tells you exactly what triggered the CO-119:

RARC Description
N362 Alert: The number of days or units exceeds the number covered/allowed by the plan for this time period Verify patient's remaining benefit utilization →
N130 Alert: You may need to review plan documents to determine service restrictions or coverage details Check plan documents for benefit maximums →

How to Prevent CO-119

General Prevention

Also Filed As

The same CARC 119 may appear with different Group Codes:

Related Denial Codes

Sources

  1. https://www.mdclarity.com/denial-code/119
  2. https://www.rcmguide.com/co-119-denial-code-benefit-maximum-for-this-time-period-or-occurrence-has-been-reached-or-exhausted/
  3. https://www.patientstudio.com/denial-code-co-119
  4. Codes maintained by X12. Visit x12.org for official definitions.