CARC 164 Active

CO-164: Attachment/Documentation Not Received Timely

TL;DR

Documentation arrived after the payer's deadline. Submit immediately with an explanation, and appeal with proof of extenuating circumstances if the payer refuses.

Action
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-164 Mean?

CO-164 is the primary pairing for this code. The payer is treating the late documentation as a contractual issue — the provider's obligation to submit supporting materials within the specified deadline was not met, and the claim is denied as a result. Under CO, this is a provider write-off and you cannot bill the patient. Your primary recourse is to submit the documentation immediately with an explanation and, if rejected, appeal with evidence of extenuating circumstances or proof of prior timely submission attempts.

When CARC 164 appears on a remittance, the payer is telling you that the required supporting documentation referenced on the claim — medical records, operative notes, test results, authorization letters, or other attachments — was not received within the payer's specified time limit. The payer may have eventually received the documents, but they arrived after the window for acceptance had closed.

CARC 164 is distinct from CARC 163, which indicates documentation was never received at all. With CARC 164, the payer is specifically flagging a deadline violation. Most payers set documentation submission deadlines ranging from 30 to 90 days from the date of the initial request or claim submission. Some payers enforce these deadlines strictly, while others may allow exceptions for demonstrated good cause.

The root causes are typically operational: internal workflow bottlenecks that delayed the gathering of records, unawareness of the specific payer's deadline, failed or delayed electronic or fax transmissions, or documentation requests that were missed entirely and discovered only after the deadline passed. In many practices, CARC 164 denials are preventable with better tracking systems and internal deadline management. The financial impact is significant because these denials often represent fully approvable claims that simply missed an administrative deadline.

Common Causes

Cause Frequency
Documentation submitted after payer's deadline The required attachments were sent to the payer but arrived after the specified time limit for documentation submission, which varies by payer but is typically 30-90 days from the initial request or claim submission Most Common
Internal workflow delays The provider's internal processes for gathering, reviewing, and submitting documentation took too long, causing the submission to exceed the payer's deadline Most Common
Transmission delays or failures The documentation was sent within the timeframe but experienced transmission delays (slow mail, fax failures, electronic system outages) that caused it to arrive after the deadline Common
Unawareness of payer-specific time limits The provider was not aware of the specific payer's documentation submission deadline and did not prioritize the attachment submission accordingly Common
Incomplete initial submission requiring follow-up The initial documentation was incomplete or insufficient, and by the time the provider gathered the additional required materials and resubmitted, the time limit had passed Occasional
Failure to track documentation requests The payer's request for documentation was missed, filed incorrectly, or not assigned to the appropriate staff, resulting in no response within the required timeframe Occasional

How to Resolve

Submit the documentation immediately, explain the delay, and appeal if extenuating circumstances prevented timely delivery.

  1. Verify the deadline and submission timeline Confirm the payer's documentation deadline and compare against your records of when materials were sent. Determine if you are within any grace period.
  2. Submit documentation with explanation Send the required materials immediately with a cover letter explaining the delay. Reference the claim number and include all required attachments.
  3. Appeal with evidence if rejected If the payer does not accept the late documentation, file a formal appeal citing extenuating circumstances and including any proof of prior submission attempts.
  4. Request a deadline exception Contact the payer's provider relations team to request a formal exception to the documentation deadline based on documented good cause.

Common RARC Pairings

The RARC code tells you exactly what triggered the CO-164:

RARC Description
N479 Alert: Refer to your provider manual or payer website for additional claim submission requirements including documentation deadlines.
N381 Alert: Consult your contractual agreement for restrictions, billing, and payment information related to documentation submission timelines.

How to Prevent CO-164

General Prevention

Also Filed As

The same CARC 164 may appear with different Group Codes:

Related Denial Codes

Sources

  1. https://www.mdclarity.com/denial-code/164
  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://ambci.org/medical-billing-and-coding-certification-blog/guide-to-claim-adjustment-reason-codes-carcs
  4. Codes maintained by X12. Visit x12.org for official definitions.