CARC 192 Active

OA-192: Non-Standard COB Adjustment Code

TL;DR

This is an informational COB adjustment from the primary payer. Use the adjustment details to correctly bill the secondary payer.

Action
Verify & Resubmit
Who Pays
Depends
Appeal
No
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-192 Mean?

OA-192 is the most common pairing and makes sense — the adjustment is classified as 'Other Adjustment' because it does not fit into standard contractual obligation or patient responsibility categories. The OA designation indicates that this is an informational COB adjustment, not a provider write-off or patient balance. The provider should use this information to correctly bill the secondary payer.

CARC 192 appears on your remittance when a payer uses a non-standard adjustment to communicate Coordination of Benefits information, typically in 837 transactions between payers. This code is specifically designed for situations where the primary payer made an adjustment that cannot be mapped to an existing standard CARC code for deductible, coinsurance, or co-payment — essentially a catch-all for COB adjustments that do not fit the normal categories.

This code behaves differently from most CARC codes because it is fundamentally informational rather than actionable. The primary payer is telling you (or the secondary payer) about an adjustment, but the adjustment itself may not represent a denial or a problem to fix. In practice, you will most commonly see CARC 192 when processing secondary claims — the primary payer's ERA includes this code to convey adjustment amounts that the secondary payer needs to know about for proper benefit coordination.

The key challenge with CARC 192 is interpretation. Because it is a non-standard catch-all, the specific meaning varies by payer. One payer may use it for a premium surcharge adjustment while another uses it for a plan-specific limitation that has no standard code equivalent. The ERA's accompanying RARC codes and any additional notes from the payer are critical for understanding what the adjustment actually represents and how to bill the secondary payer correctly.

Common Causes

Cause Frequency
Non-standard COB adjustment with no matching CARC code The primary payer made an adjustment that does not map to any existing standard CARC code for deductible, coinsurance, or co-payment, requiring the use of this catch-all code to communicate the adjustment to the secondary payer Most Common
Coordination of Benefits processing between multiple payers Multiple insurance coverage situations where the primary payer's adjustment needs to be communicated to the secondary payer in the 837 transaction, but the adjustment type does not fit standard categories Most Common
System integration or data mapping issues The payer's system cannot map the internal adjustment code to a standard CARC code, defaulting to code 192 as a non-standard placeholder Common
Legacy or paper remittance processing Adjustments originated from manual or legacy system processing where standard code mapping was not performed correctly Occasional

How to Resolve

Review the primary payer's EOB for COB adjustment details, determine the correct secondary billing amount, and submit the secondary claim with accurate COB information.

  1. Interpret the COB adjustment Review the ERA, RARC codes, and payer correspondence to understand what the non-standard adjustment represents. Determine how it affects the secondary billing calculation.
  2. Bill the secondary payer Submit the secondary claim with the primary payer's EOB, correctly reflecting the payment, allowed amount, and all adjustments including the code 192 amount.
  3. Reconcile payments After both payers have processed, reconcile the total payments received against the billed amount and determine any remaining patient responsibility.
Do Not Appeal This Code

This adjustment is typically correct as processed. Review the specific circumstances before taking further action.

Common RARC Pairings

The RARC code tells you exactly what triggered the OA-192:

RARC Description
N130 Alert: Review plan documents or guidelines for COB adjustment details
N381 Alert: Consult the primary payer's EOB for coordination of benefits information

How to Prevent OA-192

General Prevention

Also Filed As

The same CARC 192 may appear with different Group Codes:

Related Denial Codes

Sources

  1. https://www.mdclarity.com/denial-code/192
  2. https://denialcode.com/
  3. Codes maintained by X12. Visit x12.org for official definitions.