CARC 286 Active

CO-286: Appeal Time Limits Not Met

TL;DR

You missed the appeal deadline. This is a hard denial. Check for extenuating circumstances for a reconsideration request, but expect to write it off. Fix your denial tracking process.

Action
Review & Decide
Who Pays
Provider
Appeal
No
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-286 Mean?

CO-286 is a hard denial — the provider missed the appeal deadline, the case is closed, and the provider cannot bill the patient. Most payers will not reconsider unless the provider can demonstrate extenuating circumstances that caused the delay. The financial loss falls entirely on the provider.

CARC 286 is one of the most punishing denial codes in medical billing: the appeal time limit has passed, and the payer is permanently closing the case. Unlike CARC 285 (appeal procedures not followed), CARC 286 means the window for any appeal has closed entirely. Industry data suggests approximately 35% of claim denials involve untimely submissions, making this a systemic revenue cycle problem.

The appeal deadlines vary significantly by payer, typically ranging from 60 to 180 days from the initial denial notice. Medicare generally allows 120 days, while commercial payers set their own timelines that can be as short as 60 days. Missing these deadlines is almost always an internal workflow problem — denials not tracked, appeals prepared but not submitted, team miscommunication, or simply not knowing the specific payer's deadline.

The harsh reality is that most payers will not overturn a CARC 286 denial. The only potential recourse is submitting a reconsideration request citing extenuating circumstances — such as a system outage, the payer's delayed notification of the original denial, or a natural disaster. But success rates are very low. Prevention is the only reliable strategy: implement denial tracking systems with automated deadline alerts and clear accountability for appeal processing.

Common Causes

Cause Frequency
Appeal submitted after the payer's deadline The provider filed the appeal after the payer's specified time limit, which typically ranges from 60 to 180 days depending on the payer and whether it is a commercial or government plan Most Common
Inadequate denial management workflow The practice lacks a systematic denial tracking process, causing appeals to be overlooked or not prioritized until after the deadline passes Common
Internal miscommunication The appeal was prepared on time but was lost, misplaced, or never submitted due to communication breakdowns between billing staff Common
Unawareness of payer-specific deadlines The provider was not aware of the specific appeal time limit for the payer, which varies from plan to plan and can be as short as 60 days Common

How to Resolve

Verify the deadline has actually passed, check for extenuating circumstances that might support a reconsideration request, and if no recourse exists, write off the amount and improve your denial tracking.

  1. Confirm the deadline Verify the appeal deadline with the payer to ensure it has actually passed.
  2. Document extenuating circumstances If the delay was caused by system errors, payer notification delays, or other documented reasons, gather evidence.
  3. Submit reconsideration request If extenuating circumstances exist, submit a request for reconsideration with supporting documentation. Note: success rates are low.
  4. Write off if no recourse If no reconsideration is available, write off the amount and document the financial impact.
  5. Fix your workflow Use this denial as a catalyst to implement or improve denial tracking with automated deadline alerts.
Do Not Appeal This Code

CO-286 indicates the appeal deadline has passed, making this a hard denial. Standard appeals will be rejected. The only option is a reconsideration request citing extenuating circumstances (system outage, delayed denial notice, etc.), but success is rare. Focus on prevention through better denial tracking systems.

How to Prevent CO-286

General Prevention

Related Denial Codes

Sources

  1. https://medibillmd.com/blog/co-286-denial-code/
  2. https://www.mdclarity.com/denial-code/286
  3. https://x12.org/codes/claim-adjustment-reason-codes
  4. Codes maintained by X12. Visit x12.org for official definitions.