Radiology Revenue Cycle Metrics
Radiology revenue cycle management requires metrics tailored to the unique operating model of the specialty: high study volumes, variable claim values by modality, component billing complexity, and the separation between the clinical service (interpretation) and the revenue trigger (signed report). The KPIs that matter most measure how efficiently studies convert into signed reports, reports convert into submitted claims, and claims convert into collected revenue.
Study Volume and RVU Productivity
Radiologist productivity is measured in work Relative Value Units (wRVUs) per clinical FTE. The MGMA benchmark for diagnostic radiologists is 8,000 to 12,000 wRVUs per year. Interventional radiologists generate 5,000 to 8,000 wRVUs due to the higher time per procedure. Tracking wRVU productivity per radiologist per month reveals workload distribution across the group and identifies scheduling inefficiencies.
Revenue per wRVU for radiology ranges from $45 to $60 for professional-only billing and $100 to $150 for global billing (including technical component). If revenue per wRVU is below these ranges, investigate payer contract rates and coding accuracy.
Report Turnaround Time
Report turnaround time (TAT) measures the elapsed time from study completion to final signed report. The benchmark is 2 to 4 hours for routine studies and under 1 hour for urgent/stat studies. TAT directly affects billing speed because the professional component is not billable until the report is signed. A group averaging 24-hour TAT loses 1 day of AR on every study compared to a group averaging 4-hour TAT.
Revenue by Modality
Track revenue by modality (X-ray, CT, MRI, ultrasound, mammography, interventional) to understand the revenue contribution of each service line. MRI and CT typically generate 60% to 70% of radiology revenue despite representing 30% to 40% of study volume, because of their higher per-study reimbursement. If one modality is underperforming relative to volume, investigate coding accuracy and payer rates for that modality.
Days in Accounts Receivable
AR days for radiology should be 24 to 32 days for professional-only billing and 28 to 36 days for global billing. Technical component claims sometimes adjudicate slower because of higher dollar amounts and facility fee processing. Track AR separately by component type and by payer to identify specific bottlenecks.
Net Collection Rate
Net collection rate for radiology should be 96% or higher. The primary collection risks are authorization denials on advanced imaging, patient responsibility on high-cost studies (MRI copays can be $100 to $500+), and underpayments on contracted rates. Monthly payer rate reconciliation for the top 15 CPT codes catches underpayments before they age past the appeal window.
Denial Rate by Modality
Track denial rates by modality rather than in aggregate. X-ray denials should be below 2%. CT and MRI denials should be below 5%. If MRI denials exceed 7%, the authorization process has gaps. If X-ray denials exceed 4%, there is likely a systematic coding or eligibility issue. Modality-specific denial tracking targets the highest-impact improvements.