CARC 203 Active

CO-203: Discontinued or Reduced Service

TL;DR

The claim does not properly reflect a discontinued or reduced service. Add modifier 52 or 53, adjust the charges, and resubmit. You cannot bill the patient for the denied amount.

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-203 Mean?

CO-203 indicates the payer is denying or adjusting payment because the service was discontinued or reduced and the claim does not properly reflect this. The provider must correct the claim — typically by adding the appropriate modifier and adjusting charges — and resubmit. The provider cannot bill the patient for the denied amount under CO. This is the most common group code for CARC 203.

CARC 203 fires when a payer determines that a service was either discontinued partway through or reduced from the original plan, and the claim does not properly reflect this change. The payer is saying that the billed amount does not align with what was actually delivered — either the provider billed for a full service when only a partial service was rendered, or the claim lacks the modifiers needed to indicate the reduced scope.

This denial is common in surgical settings where a procedure is started but discontinued due to patient complications, adverse reactions, or intraoperative findings that change the surgical plan. It also appears in therapy settings where a planned session is cut short, diagnostic procedures that are aborted midway, and infusion services that are interrupted. In each case, the payer expects the claim to reflect the actual service delivered, not the originally planned service.

The key to resolving CARC 203 is proper modifier usage. Modifier 52 (Reduced Services) signals that a service was partially completed by the physician's choice, while modifier 53 (Discontinued Procedure) indicates the procedure was terminated due to patient safety concerns after anesthesia was administered. Without these modifiers, the payer cannot properly adjudicate the claim and will deny it. Some payers also require adjusted charges that reflect the reduced scope rather than the full procedure fee.

Common Causes

Cause Frequency
Service discontinued before full course of treatment completed The provider billed for a full course of treatment or a complete service, but the treatment was actually discontinued midway through due to patient request, adverse reaction, or clinical decision Most Common
Service reduced from originally planned scope The actual service delivered was less extensive than what was billed — for example, a planned multi-step procedure was reduced to fewer steps based on intraoperative findings Most Common
Incomplete documentation of service modification The clinical documentation does not adequately explain why the service was discontinued or reduced, leaving the payer unable to validate the charges billed Common
Incorrect coding for reduced or discontinued procedure The claim was submitted without appropriate modifiers (such as modifier 52 for reduced services or modifier 53 for discontinued procedures) to indicate the service was not completed as originally planned Common
Failure to obtain prior authorization for modified service The original authorization covered the full service, but the modified or reduced service required a separate authorization or notification that was not obtained Occasional
Payer policy does not cover partial services The payer's reimbursement policy does not allow payment for services that are discontinued or reduced below a minimum threshold Occasional

How to Resolve

Verify that the claim accurately reflects the service delivered, apply appropriate modifiers, adjust charges if needed, and resubmit.

  1. Identify the missing modifier Review the claim to determine if modifier 52 (Reduced Services) or modifier 53 (Discontinued Procedure) should have been applied based on the clinical circumstances.
  2. Verify the billed charges Confirm whether the charges reflect the actual service delivered. If full charges were billed for a partial service, adjust to an appropriate amount that reflects the work performed.
  3. Correct and resubmit Resubmit the claim with the correct modifier and adjusted charges. Attach the operative or procedure report documenting the reason for discontinuation or reduction.
  4. Appeal if still denied If the corrected claim is rejected, file an appeal explaining the clinical rationale for the partial service and the appropriateness of the charges billed.

Common RARC Pairings

The RARC code tells you exactly what triggered the CO-203:

RARC Description
M20 Missing or incomplete/invalid HCPCS modifier. Used when the claim lacks modifiers 52 or 53 for reduced or discontinued services.
N381 Alert: Consult your contractual agreement for restrictions, billing, and payment information.

How to Prevent CO-203

General Prevention

Also Filed As

The same CARC 203 may appear with different Group Codes:

Related Denial Codes

Sources

  1. https://www.mdclarity.com/denial-code/203
  2. https://x12.org/codes/claim-adjustment-reason-codes
  3. https://medicaid-documents.dhhs.utah.gov/Documents/pdfs/ClaimDenialCodes.pdf
  4. Codes maintained by X12. Visit x12.org for official definitions.