CARC B1 Active

CO-B1: Non-Covered Visits

TL;DR

The non-covered visit is a contractual write-off. The provider absorbs the cost and cannot bill the patient.

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-B1 Mean?

CO-B1 indicates the non-covered visit is a contractual write-off. Under your participation agreement with the payer, you agreed to certain coverage limitations, and this service falls outside the covered benefits. You must absorb the cost — the patient cannot be billed for the amount. This pairing is common when an in-network provider renders a service that the contract excludes from coverage, or when a coverage determination removes the service from the plan's benefit structure.

When CARC B1 appears on a remittance, the payer is telling you that the specific visit or service billed is not a covered benefit under the patient's insurance plan. This is a broad coverage denial that can apply to many service types — office visits, therapy sessions, specialty consultations, or any encounter that falls outside the plan's benefit structure.

The group code paired with B1 is critical for determining your next action. CO-B1 means the non-covered visit is a contractual obligation where the provider absorbs the cost — typically seen when the provider is in-network and the contract limits what can be billed for non-covered services. PR-B1 means the non-covered visit is the patient's financial responsibility — the patient knew or should have known the service was not covered, and the provider can bill the patient for the full amount.

B1 denials can stem from straightforward plan exclusions (the plan simply does not cover that type of visit) or from more nuanced issues like exceeded benefit limits, missing prior authorization, or incorrect coding that made a covered service appear non-covered. Before accepting the denial, it is worth verifying that the correct procedure code was used and that the service does not fall under a covered benefit category. A simple code correction can sometimes convert a B1 denial into a paid claim.

Common Causes

Cause Frequency
Service not covered under the plan The specific visit type or service category is explicitly excluded from coverage under the patient's insurance plan — for example, certain wellness visits, alternative therapy sessions, or cosmetic consultations Most Common
Exceeded benefit limits The patient has reached the maximum number of covered visits for this service type within the benefit period (e.g., maximum physical therapy visits, mental health sessions, or chiropractic visits per year) Most Common
Missing prior authorization The visit required prior authorization from the payer and the provider did not obtain it before rendering the service Common
Out-of-network provider The visit was rendered by a provider not contracted with the patient's insurance network, and the plan does not cover out-of-network visits or has limited out-of-network benefits Common
Lack of medical necessity The payer determined that the visit was not medically necessary based on the diagnosis codes submitted or the clinical documentation provided Common
Incorrect procedure or visit type code The wrong CPT or visit type code was billed, causing the payer to classify the visit as non-covered when a different code might have been covered Occasional

How to Resolve

Verify whether the service is genuinely non-covered or if a coding or authorization issue caused the denial, then take action based on the group code.

  1. Verify the non-coverage determination Review your payer contract and the patient's benefit summary to confirm the service is genuinely excluded. If the service should be covered, appeal with supporting evidence.
  2. Check coding accuracy Verify the procedure code is correct. If a different code would accurately represent the service and is a covered benefit, correct and resubmit.
  3. Post the contractual write-off If the denial is correct, post the CO-B1 adjustment as a contractual write-off. Do not bill the patient for this amount.
  4. Flag for contract review If CO-B1 denials for a specific service type are recurring, document the revenue impact and raise the issue during contract renegotiation.

Common RARC Pairings

The RARC code tells you exactly what triggered the CO-B1:

RARC Description
N130 Alert: You may need to review plan documents or guidelines to determine coverage restrictions for this service.
N386 This decision was based on the submitted/requested information.

How to Prevent CO-B1

General Prevention

Also Filed As

The same CARC B1 may appear with different Group Codes:

Related Denial Codes

Sources

  1. https://www.mdclarity.com/denial-code/b1
  2. https://x12.org/codes/claim-adjustment-reason-codes
  3. Codes maintained by X12. Visit x12.org for official definitions.