PR-1: Deductible Amount
The deductible amount is the patient's responsibility. Bill the patient directly for the adjusted amount shown on the remittance.
What Does PR-1 Mean?
PR-1 is the standard and most frequent pairing for this adjustment code. The PR group designation explicitly assigns the deductible amount as the patient's direct financial obligation. The payer is confirming that the claim was adjudicated properly and the specified dollar amount should be collected from the patient. You are contractually permitted — and expected — to bill the patient for the full PR-1 adjustment amount.
When CARC 1 appears on a remittance, the payer is telling you that the adjudicated amount has been allocated toward the patient's deductible obligation rather than paid to your practice. The claim itself was not rejected or denied — it was processed normally through the payer's system, and the payer determined that the patient still owes a portion (or all) of their annual deductible. The dollar amount shown on the ERA reflects exactly how much of the billed service falls under the remaining deductible.
This adjustment is overwhelmingly paired with Group Code PR, making it the patient's direct financial responsibility. You will see CARC 1 most frequently in the first quarter of a calendar-year plan, immediately after deductible accumulators reset to zero. Practices with a high volume of patients on high-deductible health plans (HDHPs) should expect a surge of CARC 1 adjustments in January through March. Even outside the reset window, CARC 1 can appear any time a patient switches plans mid-year or has not yet accumulated enough qualifying charges to satisfy their deductible.
While CARC 1 is not appealable under normal circumstances — since the payer adjudicated correctly — there are edge cases worth scrutinizing. If the service should carry zero cost-sharing under ACA preventive care mandates, or if a prior payment was not credited toward the deductible accumulator, the adjustment may be inaccurate. Additionally, watch for RARC N781 accompanying this code, which flags the patient as a Qualified Medicare Beneficiary (QMB) and prohibits you from billing the patient for the deductible amount; that balance must be forwarded to a subsequent payer instead.
Common Causes
| Cause | Frequency |
|---|---|
| Unmet annual deductible The patient's annual deductible has not been fully satisfied, so the payer applies the billed amount toward the remaining deductible balance rather than reimbursing the provider | Most Common |
| High-deductible health plan (HDHP) Patient is enrolled in a high-deductible health plan where the deductible balance is large and remains unmet, causing most or all services early in the plan year to be applied to the deductible | Most Common |
| Plan year reset The patient's plan year has recently reset (typically January 1), returning the deductible accumulator to zero. Services rendered early in the new plan year are applied to the fresh deductible | Common |
| Misunderstood deductible accumulations Confusion about how much of the deductible has already been paid, including misunderstandings about which services have contributed toward the deductible and the total amount accumulated to date | Common |
| Incorrect deductible application by payer Services that should be applied toward the deductible are incorrectly processed due to billing errors or misinterpretation of insurance policy terms, resulting in services not being recognized as contributing to the deductible | Occasional |
| Multiple insurance policies with unpaid primary deductible Patient has multiple insurance policies where the primary plan deductible is unpaid, causing the secondary payer to also apply amounts to the deductible | Occasional |
How to Resolve
Confirm the deductible adjustment is accurate, then transfer the balance to the patient's account and pursue collection.
- Validate the deductible balance Run an eligibility check to confirm the patient's remaining deductible matches the PR-1 adjustment amount. If the numbers align, the adjustment is correct and the patient owes this amount.
- Move the balance to patient A/R Reclassify the adjustment amount from insurance receivables to the patient responsibility ledger. Ensure the charge posts with a PR-1 reason so staff can identify it as a deductible collection item.
- Issue a patient statement with payment options Send a clear statement showing the service date, procedure, and the deductible amount applied. Include payment methods and, for balances exceeding a threshold you define, offer an installment arrangement.
- Follow your patient collections workflow Enter the balance into your standard patient collections cycle — statement cadence, phone follow-up, and eventual escalation if needed. Track separately from denied claims since this is not a payer dispute.
PR-1 is not a denial. The payer correctly applied the charge to the patient's deductible. Collect the amount from the patient instead of appealing.
Common RARC Pairings
The RARC code tells you exactly what triggered the PR-1:
| RARC | Description |
|---|---|
| N781 | Alert: Patient is a Qualified Medicare Beneficiary. Review your records for any wrongfully collected deductible. This amount may be billed to a subsequent payer. Check if patient is QMB — do not collect deductible from QMB patients → |
| N130 | Alert: You may need to review plan documents or guidelines to determine service restrictions or coverage details related to this deductible application. Review plan documents for deductible restrictions or exceptions → |
| N381 | Alert: Consult your contractual agreement for restrictions, billing, and payment information related to these charges. Check contractual agreement for deductible billing rules → |
How to Prevent PR-1
- Run real-time eligibility verification at scheduling and again at check-in to capture the patient's current deductible balance before rendering services
- Collect estimated deductible amounts at the point of service, especially during Q1 when deductible accumulators have recently reset
- Use cost estimation tools to calculate the likely out-of-pocket amount and communicate it to the patient before the visit
- Flag patients enrolled in HDHPs in your scheduling system so front-desk staff can proactively discuss deductible obligations
General Prevention
- Verify patient insurance eligibility and remaining deductible balance before every visit using real-time electronic eligibility verification tools
- Clearly communicate deductible obligations to patients during scheduling and at check-in, including the estimated out-of-pocket amount for the planned service
- Collect deductible payments at the time of service through upfront cost estimates and point-of-service collection policies
- Deploy patient cost estimation software to calculate expected deductible amounts accurately before services are rendered
- Track deductible accumulation across plan years and flag patients whose deductibles have recently reset (especially in January)
- Offer payment plans for patients with high-deductible plans who cannot pay the full deductible amount upfront
- Monitor claim remittances regularly to ensure deductible amounts are being applied correctly by payers
- Train front desk and billing staff on deductible verification workflows and payer-specific deductible policies
Also Filed As
The same CARC 1 may appear with different Group Codes:
Related Denial Codes
Sources
- https://www.mdclarity.com/denial-code/1
- https://etactics.com/blog/denial-codes-in-medical-billing
- https://practiceperfectss.com/list-of-denial-codes-in-medical-billing/
- https://www.aapc.com/blog/48213-use-carc-and-rarc-to-improve-your-revenue-cycle/
- https://med.noridianmedicare.com/web/jfb/topics/ra/qualified-medicare-beneficiary-qmb-program
- Codes maintained by X12. Visit x12.org for official definitions.