Why Your Practice Is Leaving Money on the Table
- brianb605
- Mar 18
- 2 min read

Every day, medical providers across the country accept insurance reimbursements that are far below what they're owed. It happens quietly — buried in EOBs, obscured by complex billing codes, and accepted as "just how it works." But underpayment isn't inevitable. It's recoverable.
At MedRev Financial, we've spent decades fighting on behalf of physicians, surgeons, and hospitals who deserve fair compensation for the care they deliver. Here's what we see consistently:
The Underpayment Problem Is Bigger Than Most Providers Realize
Insurance carriers have sophisticated systems designed to minimize what they pay out. They count on providers being too busy, too under-resourced, or too unfamiliar with the appeals process to push back. The result? Millions of dollars in legitimate reimbursements go uncollected every year.
Common forms of underpayment include:
Claims paid below the Qualifying Payment Amount (QPA)
Denials based on technicalities rather than medical necessity
Systematic reductions applied across entire claim categories
Delays that expire the window for appeal
You Have More Leverage Than You Think
The No Surprises Act (NSA) created a federal arbitration pathway — the Independent Dispute Resolution (IDR) process — specifically designed to give out-of-network providers a fair shot at proper reimbursement. But the process has rules, deadlines, and nuances that require expertise to navigate effectively.
That's where we come in. MedRev Financial identifies eligible claims, negotiates for increased payment, arbitrates underpayments, and handles collections and enforcement — all with no upfront cost to your practice.
What You Should Do Right Now
Don't assume the payment you received is the payment you're entitled to. A simple audit of your out-of-network claims from the past 12 months may reveal significant recovery opportunities.
MedRev Financial represents over 1,200 providers nationwide across all 50 states. If you're ready to stop leaving money on the table, the conversation starts with a single call.




Comments