Audiology Revenue Cycle Overview
Audiology practices operate with a dual revenue model that makes revenue cycle management more complex than single-stream specialties. Diagnostic testing generates insurance-reimbursed revenue at relatively modest per-procedure rates, while hearing aid sales and services generate higher-margin revenue that is often patient-pay. Managing both streams requires tracking separate KPIs for each because the payer mix, collection processes, and denial patterns are fundamentally different. A practice that optimizes only the insurance side or only the retail side leaves money on the table.
Revenue Per Visit: Diagnostic Testing
Average revenue per diagnostic visit should be $120 to $180 depending on payer mix and the scope of testing performed. A standard diagnostic evaluation (92557 + 92567 + 92568) generates approximately $102 in procedure charges. Adding ABR ($115) or OAE ($48) when clinically indicated pushes the per-visit revenue higher. Practices averaging below $100 per diagnostic visit are likely undercoding (billing 92552 instead of 92557), missing tympanometry and acoustic reflex charges, or failing to bill objective tests when they are performed.
Track the ratio of 92557 (comprehensive) to 92552 (air only) billing. In a well-run audiology practice, 80% or more of diagnostic evaluations should be billed as 92557 because most evaluations include air, bone, and speech testing. If the majority of claims use 92552, the practice is likely performing comprehensive evaluations but only capturing the air conduction code.
Hearing Aid Revenue
Hearing aid services represent 50% to 70% of total revenue in many audiology practices. Revenue per hearing aid unit sold varies widely, from $1,500 to $3,500 depending on the technology level and pricing model. The revenue cycle for hearing aid sales follows a retail model: the practice purchases devices at wholesale, marks them up, and collects from the patient (with or without insurance hearing aid benefits). Track hearing aid units sold per month, average revenue per unit, cost of goods sold (COGS), and gross margin per device.
The shift toward over-the-counter (OTC) hearing aids has pressured pricing on entry-level devices. Practices maintaining strong hearing aid revenue are differentiating through professional services: comprehensive evaluation, custom fitting, real-ear measurement verification, and ongoing follow-up care. Unbundling the device price from professional service fees allows patients to see the value of the clinical expertise separate from the hardware cost.
Accounts Receivable Benchmarks
Days in accounts receivable (AR) for audiology diagnostic claims should be 30 to 40 days. AR exceeding 45 days indicates submission delays, missing information causing rejections, or inadequate follow-up on unpaid claims. Because audiology procedures reimburse at lower individual amounts than surgical specialties, the cost of working aged AR quickly exceeds the claim value. A 92567 tympanometry claim at $22 is not worth 3 rounds of follow-up calls. Focus denial prevention efforts on avoiding these denials in the first place rather than working them after the fact.
For hearing aid patient balances, the target is collection within 30 days of fitting. Many practices collect the full amount at the time of fitting or use a structured payment plan for higher-value devices. Patient AR on hearing aids should not exceed 15% of hearing aid revenue. If patient hearing aid balances are growing, the practice needs better point-of-sale collection processes or financing options.
Clean Claim Rate
The clean claim rate (percentage of claims accepted on first submission without rejection) should be 95% or higher. Audiology clean claim rates tend to be lower than this benchmark because of the referring physician NPI requirement, CLIA number for specific tests, and the diagnostic vs. screening classification. Each of these elements, when missing, causes front-end rejection before the claim even reaches the payer. Automating these checks at the point of claim submission brings the clean claim rate up to benchmark levels.
Collection Rate
Net collection rate (amount collected divided by allowed amount) should be 95% or above for diagnostic services. For hearing aid services, the collection rate should approach 100% because these are typically patient-pay at the time of service. A combined collection rate below 90% signals problems in one of three areas: excessive write-offs on underpaid diagnostic claims, uncollected patient balances on hearing aid purchases, or high denial rates consuming allowable revenue. Break the collection rate into its diagnostic and hearing aid components to identify which stream needs attention.