A comprehensive healthcare revenue cycle management guide to reduce denials, increase collections, and optimize every stage of the revenue cycle.
December 3, 2025


Key Takeaways:
• Revenue Cycle Management spans every step from appointment scheduling to final payment for the services rendered in healthcare, and small errors in the front end often snowball into denials and payment delays.
• The biggest RCM challenges today include rising denials, changing payer rules, higher operational costs, staffing shortages, and falling patient collections.
• AI now strengthens each stage of the revenue cycle—coding, billing, eligibility, denial management, prior auths—by reducing manual work and preventing errors.
• CombineHealth’s AI agents (Amy, Marc, Adam, Penny, Rachel) automate coding, billing, follow-ups, and appeals with explainability and payer-specific compliance.
• Organizations using AI-driven RCM tools see faster payments, fewer denials, higher collections, and more predictable cash flow—while reducing administrative burden.
A patient comes in, receives great care, you submit the claim, and reimbursement arrives smoothly—the unicorn moment every revenue cycle professional secretly hopes for!
But, in real life, revenue cycle management (RCM) rarely unfolds perfectly. Missing authorizations, reimbursement delays, unexpected denials, and endless administrative back-and-forth can turn a simple revenue cycle workflow into a daily headache.
This is where smarter RCM workflows become your strongest financial safety net. They ensure every dollar you’ve earned actually comes back into your organization.
Let's step inside the RCM world and discover how AI is changing everything.
Revenue Cycle Management is the step-by-step process that captures every dollar tied to a patient's care. It starts the moment a patient schedules an appointment and ends when you receive the full payment.
Think of RCM as the first domino—even with small inefficiencies and errors, your entire practice feels the impact. Here’s how:
Most hospitals and medical practices operate under tight margins and rely on a steady cash flow. Even small revenue losses from denials, underpayments, or delayed reimbursements can cause financial setbacks.
For example, suppose a hospital submits 1,000 claims a month at an average reimbursement of $160; even a 10% initial denial rate results in $16,000 in delayed payments. That’s money that could support staffing, supplies, or patient services.
Front-end inefficiencies, such as a typo in registration, a missed eligibility check, or an incomplete chart, can increase claim rework. This drains staff time and reduces productivity.
Similarly, a missed prior authorization can lead to claim denial, delay care, and frustrate patients.
.webp)
Patient satisfaction may not seem directly tied to the revenue cycle, but it is. Factors that often shape the patient experience include:
RCM teams juggle a long list of rules from HIPAA, CMS, and various insurance payers. One small misstep can trigger an audit, lead to penalties, or chip away at your reputation.
Take coding, for example. Issues such as upcoding or unbundling—whether intentional or accidental—can result in a post-payment audit. And if auditors find discrepancies, your organization may have to return funds, pay fines, and spend hours cleaning up the issue.
The healthcare revenue cycle is a detailed, multi-step process involving everyone from your front-desk staff to payers.
Let’s walk you through the RCM workflow step by step:
Healthcare RCM can be divided into three stages: the front end, the mid-cycle, and the back end. Let’s look at each stage one by one:

1. Scheduling & Registration
This marks the first step of the revenue cycle and the first patient touchpoint. Staff collects essential patient information, including:
Accurate documentation is crucial, as even a minor typo or missing field can cause eligibility issues and lead to claim rejections.
2. Insurance Verification & Eligibility Checking
Once a patient has registered, the next step is ensuring their insurance actually covers the care they’re about to receive.
During verification, your team confirms:
Errors at this stage often lead to denials, such as:
3. Patient Responsibility & Financial Counseling
In this step, patients learn about their financial responsibility, i.e., their deductibles, copays, and expected out-of-pocket expenses. And today, this conversation carries real weight.
Patient collections have skyrocketed 133% since 2011, and providers often wait more than a month to collect what they’re owed. That makes upfront clarity and transparency essential.
Moreover, the Federal Price Transparency rule now requires providers to share clear, accessible pricing information.
Financial counseling is another vital piece of this stage, especially for patients who may be struggling and requiring financial aid. This step involves helping them understand the costs, exploring payment options, and offering payment plans or financial assistance programs.
Once care is delivered, the focus shifts to clinical documentation and claim preparation.
4. Clinical Documentation
The clinical documentation process starts the moment a patient encounter begins.
The physician documents everything about the encounter: diagnoses, procedures, symptoms, test results, medications, and the care delivered. This documentation becomes the foundation of the medical record and determines what you can bill.

5. Coding & Charge Capture
Once documentation is complete, certified medical coders translate this information into the appropriate medical codes and convert them into charges. This includes:
Coders translate each service into standardized CPT, ICD-10, and HCPCS codes, reflecting the patient’s condition and the complexity of the services provided.
Some of the most common issues at this stage that could lead to denials include:
6. Claim Scrubbing & Submission
After coding, the billing team prepares the claim for submission. But, before a claim is sent to the payer, it goes through a final quality check known as claim scrubbing. This is now widely performed with specialized scrubbing software.
Claim scrubbers review the claim for potential issues such as missing information, documentation gaps, coding errors, or payer-specific rule violations.
If an issue is flagged during the scrubbing process, the claim is held back and routed to the billing team. The billing staff then reviews the edits, corrects coding or documentation errors, adds any missing details or attachments, and follows up with the provider if clarification is needed.
Once corrections are made, the claim is re-scrubbed to ensure accuracy.
The back end covers everything that happens after you’ve submitted the claim to the payer.
7. Payment Posting and Reconciliation
Once the payer responds, the billing team records the payments and adjustments in the practice management or billing system. Payment posting involves:
After payments are posted, the reconciliation process begins. This involves comparing the payment received to the reimbursement your practice expects based on contracted payer rates. Reconciliation helps identify:
8. Patient Billing & Collections
Once insurance payments are processed, any remaining balance becomes the patient’s responsibility. This is where clear communication, transparent billing, and upfront cost estimates at the front end make all the difference.
To improve patient collections and reduce delays, ensure your RCM teams:
9. Denial & Appeal Management
Despite robust front-end and mid-cycle workflows, claim denials are inevitable. However, what separates ordinary RCM from a high-performing one is how quickly and accurately your team responds when a denial hits.
Denial management is the process of reviewing, correcting, and resolving claims denied by the payer. It typically involves:
Appeals are required when the payer denies the claim despite proper documentation or disputes medical necessity. In this case, the provider submits a formal appeal letter along with supporting materials, such as medical records, corrected claim details, progress notes, operative reports, or authorization proof, to justify the claim.
.webp)
10. Financial Reporting
Financial reporting helps you assess the overall health of your revenue cycle.
Key KPIs to monitor your healthcare RCM’s health include:
Once your billing team submits a claim, it enters the payer’s workflow. While you can’t control how payers operate, insight into their processes helps you optimize your RCM.

When the payer receives a claim, they perform an initial review to ensure all required information is complete and accurate. The payer verifies eligibility, benefits, prior authorization requirements, coding validity, and formatting.
If any information is missing, inaccurate, or doesn’t meet payer requirements, the claim is often rejected immediately.
After the initial review, the claim moves into adjudication, which is the payer’s formal evaluation process. During adjudication, the payer:
Once all these factors are reviewed, the payer decides whether to:
For approved claims, the payer issues payment and documents their decision (along with the reasoning behind it) in an Explanation of Benefits (EOB) or Explanation of Payment (EOP), which is sent to the provider and the patient.
However, payment doesn’t always mean the process is complete. Certain claims, especially high-cost, complex, or high-risk cases, may undergo a post-payment review. This is the payer’s way of ensuring the claim was fully compliant with their policies and that the payment was accurate.
During a post-payment review, the payer may:
Revenue cycle management is becoming increasingly complex, and nearly four in ten medical groups now prefer to outsource or automate parts of the process. Let’s look at the top four RCM challenges:
Providers are struggling to stay compliant with constantly evolving payer policies and coding regulations. As a result, claim denials continue to rise, and nearly half of healthcare leaders now view them as the biggest threat to their revenue cycle.
Simply put, the problem isn’t just persistent; it's getting worse, and RCM teams are spending more time than ever fixing errors and managing appeals.
Healthcare operating costs are also rising, and practices are feeling the squeeze. In fact, 90% of medical practices report higher operating expenses compared to 2024, with labor accounting for 56% of the total hospital expenses, according to an AHA report.
Adding to the pressure, reimbursements aren’t keeping up. The same report mentions that inflation jumped 14.1% between 2022 and 2024, but Medicare payment rates increased only by 5.1%. This gap puts enormous pressure on already-tight margins.
Healthcare is facing a serious staffing crisis on both the clinical and administrative sides. And it’s only getting worse. A recent Mercer report projects that by 2028, the U.S. could be short of 100,000 critical healthcare workers and 73,000 nursing assistants.
This workforce crisis is leading to:
Many RCM teams are finding patient collections harder than ever.
Nearly half of U.S. adults struggle to afford care, and rising patient responsibility makes it even more challenging to collect balances.
For RCM teams, this translates to more follow-up calls, higher aging balances, and lower collection rates.
Healthcare RCM is intricate, and the maze shifts with every new payer rule and regulatory update. Optimizing RCM manually is tedious.
That’s where AI and automation come in. Here’s how AI RCM is reshaping the future of RCM:
Front-end errors are one of the biggest drivers of denials, and AI helps eliminate them before they ever reach the payer. AI-powered tools can automate:
For example, Mark, CombineHealth’s AI billing agent, becomes your front-desk teammate, reducing administrative workload while improving financial transparency and creating a smoother patient experience from the very first touchpoint.
Using advanced NLP models, AI interprets clinical documents, extracts structured data, and recommends precise ICD-10, CPT, HCPCS, and E/M codes.
Amy, our AI Medical Coder, reviews encounter notes, assigns the right codes and modifiers, flags documentation gaps, and provides coding rationale in just 2–4 minutes per chart.
With Amy in your team, you achieve:
Managing claims manually can feel like a juggling act, especially when every payer has its own rules. That’s where AI steps in to take the pressure off your team.
Mark, our AI Billing Agent, automatically applies payer-specific rules, prepares clean, claim-ready charges, checks eligibility, reads ERAs/EOBs, posts payments, and flags underpayments—all without slowing your workflow.
With Mark handling the heavy lifting, errors drop, claims go out faster, and first-pass acceptance rates climb. The result? A smoother, more predictable claims process from start to finish.
Denials are rising, yet KFF reports that nearly three-quarters of appealed claims are approved.
Unfortunately, less than 1% of denials are ever appealed, because the process is tedious, time-consuming, and heavily manual. AI resolves this by streamlining and automating the tasks.
For example, Adam, Combine Health’s AI AR & Denial Manager, analyzes denial reasons, navigates payer portals and IVRs, makes AI-driven calls, retrieves real-time statuses, and recommends next steps.
When an appeal is needed, Rachel, our AI Appeals Assistant, drafts payer-specific appeal letters using Amy’s coding rationale and Penny’s policy citations.
Together, they accelerate denial resolution, boost appeal success rates, and prevent avoidable revenue loss.
AI makes compliance effortless by staying on top of every payer rule, coding change, and CMS update.
Penny, our AI policy reviewer, ingests every policy update and flags claims that conflict with current requirements. This proactive compliance layer guarantees every claim meets the latest standards, reduces audit risk, and prevents recoupments.
AI isn’t just your automation partner, it’s also your advanced analytics assistant.
Taylor, our AI Analyst, consolidates your revenue cycle data into real-time dashboards so you can:
With Taylor’s intelligence, you can take swift actions, resolve issues proactively, and drive continuous improvement across your entire revenue cycle.
You pick the right RCM software, and your finances run smoothly; choose the wrong one, and you’re signing up for nonstop headaches. Here’s a list of features that are non-negotiable in any RCM software:
Some of the non-negotiable features in an Effective RCM Software are highlighted in the table below:
Optimizing your RCM is non-negotiable. But you have a choice. You can either do it the hard way, with slow, manual workflows, or the smart way, with intelligent automation and AI guiding every step of the process.
If your goal is to improve financial performance, reduce administrative burden, and future-proof your operations, now is the moment to take action.
Book a demo to explore smarter RCM solutions!
Healthcare Revenue Cycle Management is the process that manages all financial and administrative functions from patient appointment scheduling to final payment collection. It ensures providers get paid accurately and on time.
Common reasons include:
Important RCM KPIs include:
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Suspendisse varius enim in eros elementum tristique. Duis cursus, mi quis viverra ornare, eros dolor interdum nulla, ut commodo diam libero vitae erat. Aenean faucibus nibh et justo cursus id rutrum lorem imperdiet. Nunc ut sem vitae risus tristique posuere.