Most home care operators track what they can see: census, hours worked, caregiver retention, referral volume. Billing accuracy rarely makes the dashboard — and that blind spot is quietly costing agencies tens of thousands of dollars every month.
In our work with home care agencies across the country, billing errors are consistently the single largest source of avoidable revenue loss. And unlike a caregiver who quits or a referral that dries up, billing leakage is invisible — it doesn’t announce itself. It just disappears.
Billing accuracy measures the percentage of billable services that are submitted correctly and paid in full at the expected rate. A “billing error” can mean several different things:
Each of these categories produces a different financial and compliance outcome. Most agencies don’t systematically track any of them — they track what got paid, not what should have been paid.
Here’s a model for a mid-size agency billing $800,000 per month:
| Error Type | Typical Rate | Monthly Revenue Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Missing visits (unbilled) | 1–3% of visits | $8,000 – $24,000 |
| Authorization denials (unworked) | 2–5% of claims | $16,000 – $40,000 |
| Underpayment by payer (unpursued) | 1–2% of gross billing | $8,000 – $16,000 |
| Wrong rate / service code | 0.5–1% of claims | $4,000 – $8,000 |
Conservative total: $36,000 – $88,000 per month in preventable revenue loss.
Annualized, that’s $432,000 – $1,056,000. For an agency doing $800K/month, that represents 4.5–11% of gross revenue flowing out through a door nobody is watching.
It’s tempting to attribute billing errors to individual performance — the biller who missed a claim, the scheduler who didn’t verify authorization. In reality, the root cause is almost always a system gap: a point in the billing workflow where information is supposed to transfer but doesn’t.
The most common gaps we see:
Gap 1: EMR to billing system Most agencies use one system for scheduling and EVV, and a separate system for billing. If the integration between them is manual or unreliable, visits fall through — documented but never billed.
Gap 2: Authorization tracking Authorization management is often informal — a spreadsheet, or worse, memory. When a payer changes authorization dates or units and nobody updates the record, claims get denied.
Gap 3: Payer contract rates Many agencies have contracts with 5–12+ payers. Rate tables change. When the billing system doesn’t reflect current contract rates, claims are systematically underbilled for months without anyone noticing.
Gap 4: Denial management workflow Most agencies have a process for submitting claims. Far fewer have a disciplined, documented process for tracking, appealing, and resolving denials within payer-specific timelines. Unworked denials age out — and the revenue ages out with them.
A well-run billing function produces three measurable outcomes consistently:
These aren’t aspirational benchmarks. They’re achievable with the right systems and processes — and they represent the difference between an agency that is financially healthy and one that is quietly bleeding.
At Care Financial, billing accuracy is a core operational discipline — not a back-office afterthought. Every client engagement begins with a Financial Health Audit: a systematic review of your billing workflow, payer contracts, authorization management, EVV reconciliation, and denial pipeline.
The audit typically identifies $30,000–$150,000 in recoverable or preventable annual revenue loss — before we change anything. That’s the baseline we improve from.
If you’re not systematically measuring your billing accuracy, the question isn’t whether you have a billing problem. It’s how large it is.