CARC 198 Active

PR-198: Precertification/Authorization Limits Exceeded

TL;DR

The patient has used all their authorized visits or units under their plan. They are responsible for any additional services. Inform them of the balance and offer payment options.

Action
Collect from Patient
Who Pays
Patient
Appeal
No
Patient Impact
Direct Financial
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 PR-198 Mean?

PR-198 means the patient has exhausted their plan's benefit limit for the service type. Unlike CO-198 where the provider missed an authorization step, PR-198 reflects that the plan itself caps coverage (e.g., 20 physical therapy visits per benefit year) and the patient has used their entire allotment. The patient is financially responsible for any additional services beyond the plan cap.

CARC 198 signals that the precertification, authorization, notification, or pre-treatment requirements were exceeded — not missing, but surpassed. An authorization was in place, but the services delivered went beyond its scope. This could mean more visits than approved, more units than authorized, treatment dates outside the authorization window, or medication quantities above the pre-approved amount.

This denial is particularly common in therapy practices (physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy) where initial authorizations cover a limited number of sessions and the patient's condition requires additional treatment. It also appears in behavioral health settings with session caps, DME orders that exceed quantity limits, and surgical cases where intraoperative findings require additional procedures beyond the original authorization scope.

The group code determines who absorbs the financial impact. Under CO, the provider is responsible because the contract required the provider to obtain additional authorization before exceeding the limit. Under PR, the patient is responsible when they have exhausted their plan's benefit limit for that service type (e.g., 20 PT visits per year). The distinction matters because CO means you cannot bill the patient, while PR means you should bill the patient directly.

Common Causes

Cause Frequency
Patient continued treatment beyond authorized visits The patient elected to continue treatment after the authorized number of visits was exhausted, making the additional visits the patient's financial responsibility Most Common
Patient's plan limits exceeded for the service type The patient's insurance plan has a cap on certain service types (e.g., 20 physical therapy visits per year) and the patient has exhausted that allowance Common

How to Resolve

Verify which services exceeded the authorization, request a retroactive extension, and appeal if the extension is denied.

  1. Verify the benefit limit Check the patient's plan documents or run an eligibility inquiry to confirm the annual or per-incident limit for the service type and how many have been used.
  2. Inform the patient of their responsibility Contact the patient to explain that their plan's benefit limit has been reached and that additional services are their financial responsibility.
  3. Generate a patient statement Bill the patient for the services that exceeded their plan limit with a clear explanation of the charges.
  4. Offer payment arrangements For larger balances, offer a structured payment plan and provide any available financial assistance information.
Do Not Appeal This Code

This adjustment is correct per the patient's benefit plan. The amount is the patient's financial responsibility. Collect from the patient rather than appealing.

How to Prevent PR-198

General Prevention

Also Filed As

The same CARC 198 may appear with different Group Codes:

Related Denial Codes

Sources

  1. https://www.mdclarity.com/denial-code/198
  2. https://x12.org/codes/claim-adjustment-reason-codes
  3. https://www.wcb.ny.gov/CMS-1500/WCB-CARC-RARC-codes.pdf
  4. Codes maintained by X12. Visit x12.org for official definitions.