CARC 184 Active

OA-184: Ordering/Prescribing Provider Not Eligible

TL;DR

The ordering provider issue is under investigation. Contact the payer for clarification on next steps.

Action
Review & Decide
Who Pays
Depends
Appeal
Yes
Patient Impact
Indirect
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 OA-184 Mean?

OA-184 is uncommon and appears when the ordering provider eligibility issue does not clearly fit under the provider's contractual obligation. This may occur when the payer needs additional time to verify the provider's credentials or when the adjustment involves coordination between multiple entities.

CARC 184 appears on your remittance when the payer determines that the prescribing or ordering provider is not authorized to order the service that was billed. This is closely related to CARC 183 (referring provider not authorized) but applies specifically to the provider who wrote the order or prescription rather than the one who made the referral.

The most common trigger is a credential or enrollment gap. The ordering provider's medical license may have expired, their DEA registration may be inactive, or they may not be enrolled with the payer's network. This is especially common with DME orders, lab orders, and imaging orders where Medicare and other payers have strict requirements about who can order specific services. Another frequent cause is scope-of-practice violations — the ordering provider's specialty or license type does not authorize them to order the specific service billed.

Data entry errors account for a significant portion of these denials as well. If the ordering provider's NPI is entered incorrectly on the claim, or if the payer's records contain outdated information about the provider's credentials, the claim will be rejected even though the order itself was valid. The distinction matters for resolution: a genuine credential issue requires obtaining a new order from an eligible provider, while a data entry issue simply requires correcting the claim and resubmitting.

How to Resolve

Verify the ordering provider's credentials and enrollment status, correct any claim errors, and resubmit with valid ordering provider information.

  1. Contact the payer Request details on why the OA designation was used and what documentation the payer needs to resolve the ordering provider eligibility question.
  2. Provide supporting documentation Submit the ordering provider's current credentials, enrollment verification, and any other requested documentation to resolve the adjustment.

How to Prevent OA-184

Also Filed As

The same CARC 184 may appear with different Group Codes:

Related Denial Codes

Sources

  1. https://www.mdclarity.com/denial-code/184
  2. https://textexpander.com/blog/denial-codes-medical-billing-guide
  3. Codes maintained by X12. Visit x12.org for official definitions.