General Practice Revenue Cycle Overview
General practice revenue cycle management is a volume business. Individual claim values are among the lowest in medicine ($80 to $150 per encounter average), but the visit volume per physician is among the highest (20 to 30 patients per day). This means that revenue cycle efficiency directly translates to profitability. A 2% improvement in collection rate for a general practitioner seeing 25 patients per day at $100 average reimbursement equals $12,500 in additional annual revenue. Multiply that across a 5-physician practice and the impact is $62,500 per year from a small percentage improvement.
Visits Per Day and Revenue Per Encounter
Track visits per provider per day as the primary volume metric. The benchmark for a full-time general practitioner is 20 to 28 patient encounters per day. Below 18 visits per day, the practice is underperforming unless the physician has a heavy procedural or CCM workload that compensates. Above 30 visits per day raises quality and documentation concerns. Revenue per encounter should be $90 to $130 for the blended average across all visit types (E/M, preventive, procedures). If revenue per encounter falls below $85, audit the E/M code distribution for undercoding.
E/M Code Distribution Analysis
The E/M code distribution reveals coding accuracy and potential revenue opportunities. The expected distribution for a general practice is: 99211 (5% to 8%), 99212 (8% to 12%), 99213 (35% to 45%), 99214 (25% to 35%), 99215 (5% to 10%). A practice where 99213 exceeds 50% is likely undercoding. A practice where 99215 exceeds 15% faces audit risk. Compare each physician distribution to the practice average and to MGMA benchmarks. Physicians with significantly different distributions from peers need either education on coding guidelines or documentation review to ensure their notes support the codes selected.
Preventive Care and Wellness Visit Revenue
Preventive visits and Annual Wellness Visits (AWVs) represent a dedicated revenue stream for general practice. For Medicare patients, the AWV (G0438/G0439) reimburses approximately $170 to $180 and is covered with no patient cost-sharing. For commercial patients, preventive visits (99391-99397) reimburse $100 to $200 depending on age and payer. Track AWV completion rate for the Medicare patient panel. A practice should complete AWVs for 60% to 80% of its Medicare patients annually. At $170 per AWV and 500 Medicare patients, achieving 70% completion generates $59,500 in AWV revenue alone.
Days in Accounts Receivable
General practice AR should be at or below 28 days for commercial payers and 35 days for Medicare/Medicaid. The high claim volume and relatively low per-claim value make aged AR especially costly in general practice. Claims beyond 60 days should represent less than 10% of total AR. If the over-60-day bucket exceeds 15%, investigate the payer mix (Medicaid claims typically pay slower), denial rework timeliness, and patient balance collection processes. A dedicated AR follow-up staff member should work claims by age, starting with the oldest and highest-value claims each week.
Patient Responsibility Collection
Patient out-of-pocket responsibility has increased steadily as high-deductible health plans have become more common. In general practice, patient responsibility now represents 20% to 30% of total revenue for many practices. Track the patient collection rate (patient payments collected divided by patient balances owed). The benchmark is 60% to 70% of patient balances collected. Practices below 50% are leaving significant revenue uncollected. Strategies to improve patient collections include: copay collection at check-in, credit card on file programs, online bill pay options, and payment plan offerings with automatic monthly charges.
Ancillary Revenue Opportunities
General practices can supplement E/M revenue with ancillary services. In-office lab testing (CLIA-waived tests like glucose, strep, flu, urinalysis) generates $10 to $30 per test with minimal overhead. Chronic care management (99490/99491) adds $42 to $100 per patient per month for eligible patients. Remote patient monitoring (99453-99458) generates $50 to $150 per patient per month for patients with qualifying chronic conditions. Behavioral health integration (99484) adds revenue for practices that employ behavioral health specialists. Track ancillary revenue as a percentage of total revenue and target 15% to 25% from non-E/M services.