July 30, 2025
When a healthcare provider submits a claim, and the insurance payer processes it, the first thing the provider (and often the patient) receives isn’t always the payment—it’s the EOB, or Explanation of Benefits. If you’ve ever been confused by it, you’re not alone.
Let’s break it down together—what EOB means, what it includes, how to read it, common issues, and how to use it effectively in your revenue cycle.
An Explanation of Benefits (EOB) is a formal summary provided by an insurance payer—such as Medicare, Medicaid, or commercial insurers—to explain how a healthcare claim was processed. While it often arrives around the same time as payments, it’s not a bill. Instead, it details how much the insurer covered, what adjustments were made, any denied charges, and what the patient may owe out-of-pocket.
Think of an EOB as the “receipt + report card” for the medical billing process . It’s a crucial bridge between providers, payers, and patients, ensuring everyone knows what was billed, what was paid, and why.
Here’s what makes the EOB such a vital document for providers and patients:
The EOB breaks down exactly how each CPT or HCPCS code was evaluated and reimbursed:
EOBs are often the first line of defense against denied or underpaid claims. If there’s a coding issue, missing documentation, or authorization error, the EOB will flag it using reason or remark codes like:
Catching these early helps correct and resubmit clean claims faster.
EOBs allow you to audit reimbursement patterns. For example, if your practice is consistently being reimbursed below contract rates for family therapy sessions (CPT 90847), EOBs can help you track this and initiate appeals or payer negotiations.
When submitting an appeal, you need evidence. EOBs serve as that documentation—they show what was paid, what was denied, and why. For practices under payer audits, having organized EOB records is critical.
If CPT code 90846 was denied for missing authorization, the EOB provides the denial reason and a timeline to respond.
EOBs are also sent to patients, showing them what their insurance paid and what they’re responsible for (e.g., deductibles, copays, coinsurance). This can help reduce billing disputes and improve patient trust.
In medical billing, three documents often get confused: the Explanation of Benefits (EOB), the Electronic Remittance Advice (ERA), and the Medical Bill. While they’re all part of the same revenue cycle process, they serve different purposes, are sent to various audiences, and contain varying formats of claim data.
Let’s break each one down:
A paper or digital summary issued by the insurance company (e.g., Aetna, Medicare, UHC) that explains how a claim was processed.
Who receives it: Sent to both the provider and the patient.
The ERA is an electronic version of an EOB, transmitted in a machine-readable format (HIPAA-compliant ANSI 835).
A financial invoice sent directly to the patient after insurance processing.
Document | What It Is | Who Gets It | Format | Primary Purpose |
---|---|---|---|---|
EOB | Summary of how a claim was processed | Provider + Patient | Human-readable | Clarify coverage, patient responsibility, and denials |
ERA (835) | Electronic version of EOB for software use | Provider/Biller | Machine-readable (835) | Auto-post payments, speed up reconciliation |
Medical Bill | Invoice sent to patient after insurer processes claim | Patient only | Patient-friendly | Request payment for balance due |
An Explanation of Benefits (EOB) is more than just a notice—it’s a detailed breakdown of how an insurance payer processed a medical claim. Each EOB includes essential data points that help providers reconcile payments, inform patients of their responsibilities, and identify claim issues like underpayments or denials.
Understanding what’s included in an EOB helps healthcare providers:
Identify payment errors or underpayments
Reconcile accounts with insurance remits
Explain charges to patients
Prepare for audits or appeals
Improve revenue cycle management accuracy
Here’s a closer look at the key components of EOB:
This section shows the name of the patient who received the service. It confirms that the claim is linked to the correct individual’s insurance policy.
Lists the healthcare professional or facility that performed the service, such as a physician, therapist, or specialist. This ensures the correct provider billed the claim.
Displays the specific date(s) when the service was rendered. This is important for verifying appointments and ensuring the service occurred within the coverage period.
These are the billing codes that describe the procedures or services performed. For example:
These codes are critical for accurate billing, reimbursement, and audit trails.
This is the original amount the provider charged for the service. It’s often higher than what insurance will pay due to contracted rates.
Also called the “eligible” or “contracted” amount, this is the maximum the insurer will pay for the service based on their fee schedule. Anything above this amount is typically written off by the provider.
Shows how much the insurance company paid. This is typically the allowed amount minus any patient responsibility, such as deductibles or coinsurance.
This includes any out-of-pocket costs the patient must pay, such as:
Providers must collect this portion, and patients often misunderstand it as a surprise balance unless it’s explained clearly.
These are short codes used by payers to explain why a claim or line item was reduced, denied, or adjusted. For example:
These codes are standardized and usually include brief explanations.
Each EOB includes a unique identifier for the processed claim. This number is essential when following up with the payer, filing appeals, or tracking payments in your billing software.
Reading an Explanation of Benefits (EOB) might seem routine, but overlooking key details can cost your practice in lost revenue, compliance issues, and patient trust. Below are the most frequent mistakes made during EOB reviews—and how to avoid them with practical tips.
Billers often overlook or misinterpret the codes listed in the adjustment or denial columns.
These codes explain why a payment was reduced or denied (e.g., CO-97 – service not paid or considered).
Tip:
Practices accept low payments without verifying if they match the payer’s contracted rate.
Even a slight difference between the allowed amount and your fee schedule across multiple claims can result in thousands of dollars in revenue loss.
Tip:
The patient is billed too much—or too little—because deductible, copay, or coinsurance information was misread.
This leads to patient complaints, delayed collections, or even compliance audits.
Tip:
EOBs are tossed or deleted once payments are posted.
You’ll need EOBs for appeals, audits, secondary billing, and patient disputes.
Tip:
Not every EOB tells the whole story—if your claim is denied, underpaid, or incorrectly processed, it’s time to file an appeal.
Correctly interpreting EOBs and acting quickly can recover lost revenue, reduce AR days, and ensure accurate collections from both patients and payers. Up next, we’ll dive into a real-world EOB breakdown so you can see exactly how each component comes into play.
Understanding and interpreting the Explanation of Benefits (EOB) is non-negotiable in today’s fast-paced medical billing environment. While it’s not a bill, the EOB holds essential insights into how claims are processed, paid, denied, or adjusted by insurers. When reviewed carefully, it helps identify trends in underpayments, coding issues, and denial patterns—ultimately giving you the upper hand in maximizing revenue .
By taking the time to review denial codes, match payments with fee schedules, and retain proper documentation, your practice stays audit-ready, compliant, and financially sound. The EOB is more than a summary—it’s your billing compass, pointing the way toward operational efficiency and clean revenue cycles.
No. An Explanation of Benefits (EOB) is not a bill. It’s a breakdown of how a claim was processed by the insurer, showing what was paid, denied, adjusted, or left for the patient to pay. Patients often receive a separate medical bill from the provider after the EOB is issued.
You should retain EOBs for at least 7 years, especially for Medicare or Medicaid claims. These documents are often required for audits, appeals, secondary billing, or dispute resolution.
Both contain the same information but are delivered differently for administrative purposes.
Yes. If the EOB indicates a denial, partial payment, or incorrect adjustment, you can file an appeal. Be sure to:
Denial and adjustment reason codes are short alphanumeric codes (like CO-45, PR-1) that explain why a claim or service was not paid in full. Use your clearinghouse, payer portal, or the official CARC/RARC code lists to interpret them accurately.
Yes. The EOB helps patients understand what the insurer paid and what amount (if any) they owe the provider. Encourage patients to review their EOBs before paying a medical bill to avoid confusion or overpayment.