Denial code CO-29 is one of the most financially damaging CARC codes a practice can receive. When a payer returns CO-29, it means your claim arrived after their filing deadline, and in most cases, the revenue is gone permanently. Unlike other denial codes where you can correct and resubmit, CO-29 denials are difficult to overturn unless you can prove the original submission was timely.
Every payer sets their own timely filing limit. Medicare gives you 365 days from the date of service. Many commercial payers allow only 90 days. Some Medicaid programs require submission within 90 days for clean claims and offer limited extensions for resubmissions. Knowing every payer’s deadline and tracking your claims against those deadlines is not optional. It is a core revenue protection function.
What CO-29 Means
CARC code CO-29 reads: “The time limit for filing has expired.” The CO group code designates this as a contractual obligation, meaning the provider absorbs the loss. You cannot bill the patient for services denied under CO-29. The revenue is written off against your practice.
Common RARC codes paired with CO-29 include N522 (“Resubmission not allowed because the claim/service was not originally submitted within the required timeframe”), N362 (“The claim/service was not submitted within the required timeframe for a post-payment review”), and MA04 (“Secondary payment cannot be considered without the identity of or payment information from the primary payer”).
Why Claims Miss Filing Deadlines
The most common cause is claims that stall in the billing workflow. A charge gets entered but rejected by the clearinghouse for a data error. The rejection notice gets missed or deprioritized. By the time someone reviews it, the filing deadline has passed. This is preventable with daily clearinghouse rejection monitoring.
Credentialing delays cause another wave of timely filing problems. A new provider starts seeing patients before their credentialing with certain payers is complete. Claims cannot be submitted until credentialing finalizes. If credentialing takes four to six months and the payer has a 90-day filing window, those early claims are already past the deadline before the provider can bill.
Workers compensation and liability claims often exceed timely filing limits because the billing process waits for a coverage determination. The practice provides services, then spends months determining whether workers comp, auto insurance, or health insurance is the responsible payer. By the time the billing order is established, the health insurance filing deadline may have passed.
Secondary claim delays occur when the primary payer takes months to adjudicate. If the primary payer takes 90 days to process a claim and the secondary payer has a 90-day filing window from the date of service, the deadline for the secondary claim may already be past before you receive the primary EOB. This is where knowing secondary payer COB filing rules (which often measure from the primary EOB date, not the date of service) becomes critical.
Appealing CO-29 Denials
CO-29 appeals succeed only when you can prove timely submission. The strongest evidence is a clearinghouse 999 acknowledgment file showing the payer received the claim within the filing window. The 999 file contains a date/time stamp and a transaction set acknowledgment code that proves receipt.
If you submitted via a payer web portal, a screenshot or download of the submission confirmation with the date stamp serves as proof. For paper claims, certified mail receipts with the date of mailing demonstrate timely submission. Regular mail without a receipt provides no proof of mailing date.
When appealing, include a cover letter that clearly states: the date of service, the original claim submission date, the proof of timely filing (attached), the payer’s filing deadline, and a calculation showing the claim was within the deadline. Payer appeal reviewers handle hundreds of appeals daily. Making the timeline calculation obvious increases your approval rate.
If the original claim was denied for another reason (missing information, coding error) and you need to resubmit a corrected claim after the filing deadline, reference the original timely submission in your corrected claim. Most payer contracts allow corrected claims when the original was submitted on time. Include the original claim number, the denial reason, and the correction you made.
Payer-Specific Filing Deadline Details
Medicare’s 365-day deadline is among the most generous, and it starts from the date of service (or date of discharge for inpatient stays). Medicare allows exceptions for retroactive Medicare entitlement, retroactive disenrollment from a Medicare Advantage plan, and administrative errors by Medicare itself. These exceptions must be well-documented.
UnitedHealthcare filing deadlines vary by plan type. Fully insured plans typically allow 90 days. Self-funded employer plans set their own deadlines, which can range from 90 to 180 days. Always check the specific plan’s filing requirement, as UHC administers plans with different filing windows.
Aetna is strict about 90-day filing for most commercial plans. They start the clock from the date of service, not the date of claim creation. Appeals for timely filing denials must include proof of original submission. Aetna does honor the corrected claim exception when the original was filed on time.
Blue Cross Blue Shield plans vary by state because each state plan operates independently. Filing deadlines range from 90 days (BCBS of Texas) to 365 days (some northeastern plans). Check your provider manual for the specific BCBS plan you are dealing with.
Prevention: The Only Reliable Strategy
Because CO-29 denials are so difficult to overturn, prevention is the primary defense. Build these processes into your billing workflow.
Run a weekly unbilled charges report sorted by days since date of service. Flag any charge that has been unbilled for more than 50% of the shortest payer filing deadline in your mix. If your shortest deadline is 90 days, flag at 45 days. This gives you adequate time to research and resolve whatever is holding the claim.
Monitor clearinghouse rejections daily. Every rejection represents a claim that is not getting closer to payment while the filing clock ticks. Set a 48-hour turnaround standard for resolving clearinghouse rejections. Assign a staff member specifically to rejection management if your volume warrants it.
Track credentialing status and hold charges for providers who are not yet credentialed with specific payers. Set a reminder to submit held claims immediately when credentialing is confirmed. Some payers offer retroactive credentialing that allows billing back to the effective date. Document the credentialing effective date for each payer and provider combination.
Process primary EOBs within five business days of receipt and submit secondary claims immediately. Do not batch secondary claims weekly or monthly. The faster you submit to the secondary payer, the more buffer you have against filing deadline issues.
Set calendar reminders for high-value claims approaching filing deadlines. A single missed deadline on a surgical case can cost thousands of dollars. Treating high-value claims with individual tracking is worth the extra administrative effort.
The Cost of CO-29 Denials
Unlike most denial codes where the revenue can be recovered through correction and resubmission, CO-29 denials often represent permanent revenue loss. The practice cannot bill the payer (deadline passed) and cannot bill the patient (contractual obligation). The only recourse is a successful appeal with proof of timely filing, and that is not always available.
Industry data suggests practices lose 1% to 3% of gross charges to timely filing denials annually. For a practice billing $5 million per year, that is $50,000 to $150,000 in lost revenue. Most of this is preventable with proper workflow controls and claim tracking. The investment in a dedicated claim tracking process pays for itself many times over.