Denial code CO-50 is a broad category that covers any service the payer determines is not a benefit under the patient’s plan. The reasons range from explicit plan exclusions (cosmetic surgery, experimental treatments) to medical necessity failures (the payer does not agree the service was needed) to frequency and age limitations (the patient exceeded the allowed number of services per year).
CO-50 denials require different responses depending on the underlying reason. A true plan exclusion where the benefit simply does not exist in the patient’s coverage is not appealable. A medical necessity denial where the payer disagrees with clinical judgment is very much appealable and worth pursuing with proper documentation. Knowing which type of CO-50 you are dealing with determines your next step.
What CO-50 Communicates
CARC code CO-50 reads: “These are non-covered services because this is not deemed a ‘medical necessity’ by the payer.” Despite the medical necessity language in the official description, payers use CO-50 broadly for any non-covered service determination. The RARC code provides the specific reason.
Common RARC pairings include M59 (“Missing/incomplete/invalid charge or coverage information”), N95 (“This provider type/provider specialty may not bill this service”), N386 (“This decision was based on a National Coverage Determination”), and N569 (“Adjustment based on plan provisions/plan benefit exclusion”). Each RARC points to a different root cause and a different resolution strategy.
Types of CO-50 Denials
Plan exclusions are the most straightforward. The patient’s benefit plan does not cover the service. Common exclusions include cosmetic procedures, infertility treatments (in some states), dental services under medical plans, hearing aids (plan-dependent), weight loss surgery (older plans), and experimental or investigational treatments. These exclusions are written into the plan document and are not overturnable through appeal. The billing question is whether you can bill the patient directly.
Medical necessity denials are the most common and most appealable type of CO-50. The payer reviewed the claim (often through automated edits or retrospective utilization review) and determined that the service was not medically necessary for the diagnosis submitted. This does not mean the service was clinically wrong. It means the documentation or coding did not meet the payer’s coverage criteria.
Frequency and age limitations deny services that exceed the plan’s allowed frequency (e.g., one screening colonoscopy every 10 years, two physical therapy evaluations per episode) or fall outside age parameters (e.g., screening mammography starting at age 40). These are partially appealable if you can demonstrate medical necessity for exceeding the standard frequency.
Provider type restrictions deny services when the billing provider’s specialty does not match the payer’s requirements for the service. For example, some payers require that allergy testing be billed by allergists, not primary care physicians. RARC N95 typically accompanies this type of CO-50 denial.
The ABN Requirement for Medicare
For Medicare patients, the Advance Beneficiary Notice of Noncoverage (ABN) is your tool for protecting both the practice and the patient when you expect a CO-50 denial. An ABN must be presented to the patient before the service is provided. The patient signs the form acknowledging that Medicare may not cover the service and agreeing to pay out of pocket if Medicare denies.
Without a signed ABN, the practice absorbs the CO-50 denial and cannot bill the patient. With a signed ABN, you can bill the patient for the denied service. The ABN must be specific: it must list the service, the expected cost, and the reason you believe Medicare may deny coverage. Generic or blanket ABNs are not valid.
Bill Medicare claims with a signed ABN using the GA modifier (waiver of liability on file). This tells Medicare you have an ABN and want them to process the claim for a formal determination. If Medicare denies with CO-50, you can then bill the patient. If Medicare pays despite your expectation of denial, the patient owes nothing beyond their normal cost-sharing.
Appealing Medical Necessity CO-50 Denials
Medical necessity appeals require clinical documentation that demonstrates why the service was appropriate for the specific patient. Generic letters or form appeals have low success rates. Payer medical directors review these appeals and expect detailed, patient-specific clinical reasoning.
Your appeal package should include the treating physician’s letter explaining the clinical rationale, the relevant office notes and exam findings, lab results and imaging reports that support the diagnosis and treatment choice, published clinical guidelines (from medical societies like AMA, ACR, or ACS) that support the service for the patient’s condition, and any prior treatment history showing that less intensive options were tried and failed.
For National Coverage Determination (NCD) or Local Coverage Determination (LCD) denials on Medicare claims, your appeal needs to specifically address the coverage criteria outlined in the relevant NCD or LCD. Cite the determination by number and explain how the patient meets each criterion. Medicare Administrative Contractors review NCD/LCD appeals against specific checklists, so addressing each criterion directly improves your success rate.
If the Level 1 appeal (reconsideration) is denied, you can escalate to Level 2 (independent review). For Medicare, Level 2 goes to a Qualified Independent Contractor (QIC). For commercial payers, Level 2 is usually an external review by an Independent Review Organization (IRO). External reviews often have higher overturn rates than internal reviews because the reviewer is independent of the payer.
Prevention Through Benefit Verification
The most effective way to reduce CO-50 denials is to verify coverage before the service is provided. A real-time eligibility check that returns benefit details (not just active/inactive status) tells you whether the specific service is covered under the patient’s plan, what frequency or age limitations apply, whether prior authorization is required, and what the patient’s cost-sharing will be.
For services that commonly trigger CO-50 denials, build an additional verification step into your scheduling workflow. When a patient schedules imaging, surgery, DME, or any elective procedure, verify the specific service against their plan benefits before the appointment. If the service is not covered, inform the patient before they arrive so they can make an informed decision about proceeding as self-pay.
Prior authorization, even when not required by the payer, serves as a coverage confirmation. If the payer approves a prior auth for a service, they have confirmed it meets their coverage criteria and medical necessity standards. This does not guarantee payment (payers can still deny post-service), but it significantly reduces CO-50 risk and gives you strong appeal leverage if the payer reverses their position after the fact.
Financial Impact and Patient Communication
CO-50 denials create difficult patient conversations. The patient received a service they expected their insurance to cover, and now they may face an unexpected bill. How you communicate this affects patient satisfaction and retention.
When a service is denied as non-covered and you have the right to bill the patient (signed ABN or non-participating arrangement), contact the patient before sending the bill. Explain the denial reason, what steps you took to appeal (if applicable), and the remaining balance. Patients are more understanding when they feel the practice advocated on their behalf before asking for payment.
For practices with high CO-50 volumes in specific service categories, consider creating patient education materials that explain common non-covered services and insurance limitations. Setting expectations before the appointment prevents surprise bills and preserves the patient-provider relationship.