Outsourcing Guide

Outsourcing Behavioral Health Billing: Evaluation Guide

When a behavioral health practice considers outsourcing its billing, the evaluation criteria differ significantly from those for general medical billing partners.

Reviewed by MMBS Billing Review Team Last updated Jun 1, 2026 Published Mar 16, 2026
Outsourcing Behavioral Health Billing: Evaluation Guide
01

Authorization management is the #1 capability to evaluate. Target below 2% auth denial rate.

02

The billing company must understand multi-credential billing rules (LCSW vs. LPC vs. PhD)

03

Behavioral health outsourcing pricing: 6-9% of collections or $5-8 per session

04

Confirm authorization management is included in base price, not charged separately

Overview

Why Behavioral Health Outsourcing Teams Need a Better Workflow

When a behavioral health practice considers outsourcing its billing, the evaluation criteria differ significantly from those for general medical billing partners. The ideal company must understand mental health parity laws, session-based coding nuances, and the authorization workflows unique to behavioral health payers and managed care networks.

This guide helps behavioral health providers assess potential billing partners with confidence. Criteria include experience with behavioral health CPT codes, familiarity with state-specific mental health regulations, telehealth billing capabilities, and proven track records working with major behavioral health insurance networks and employee assistance programs.

Why Behavioral Health Outsourcing Teams Need a Better Workflow
Challenges

Common Behavioral Health Outsourcing Challenges We Solve

Every Behavioral Health Outsourcing team deals with payer delays, coding nuance, and collection leakage.

Authorization management is the #1 capability to evaluate. Target below 2% auth denial rate.

The workflow has to support this issue before claim submission, or it turns into avoidable rework after the payer responds.

The billing company must understand multi-credential billing rules (LCSW vs. LPC vs. PhD)

When this area is inconsistent, denial rate, payment timing, and staff follow-up effort all get worse at the same time.

Behavioral health outsourcing pricing: 6-9% of collections or $5-8 per session

Tight documentation and coding controls here usually improve both reimbursement accuracy and operational speed.

Confirm authorization management is included in base price, not charged separately

This is one of the first places revenue leakage shows up when specialty billing habits are not standardized.

Services

Complete Behavioral Health Outsourcing Resources

Support spans the full revenue cycle.

CPT Codes

Billing Process

Claim Denials

Revenue Cycle

Coding Guide

Behavioral Health Billing Hub

Coverage

Serving Behavioral Health Billing Teams Nationwide

We support independent practices and growing provider organizations.

Behavioral Health private practices

Behavioral Health multisite groups

Behavioral Health billing managers

Behavioral Health owners and operators

Guide

The Complete Guide to Behavioral Health Outsourcing

Quick answer

When a behavioral health practice considers outsourcing its billing, the evaluation criteria differ significantly from those for general medical billing partners. The ideal company must understand mental health parity laws, session-based coding nuances, and the authorization workflows unique to behavioral health payers and managed care networks.

This guide helps behavioral health providers assess potential billing partners with confidence. Criteria include experience with behavioral health CPT codes, familiarity with state-specific mental health regulations, telehealth billing capabilities, and proven track records working with major behavioral health insurance networks and employee assistance programs.

When Behavioral Health Practices Should Consider Outsourcing

Behavioral health billing has unique complexity that many general billing companies are not equipped to handle. Authorization tracking across multiple payers, credential-specific billing rules, session-based time documentation requirements, and telehealth modifier management create a workload that differs significantly from medical or surgical billing. Outsourcing becomes worth evaluating when denial rates exceed 8%, when authorization tracking is consuming excessive administrative time, or when the practice is growing beyond the capacity of its current billing staff.

Criteria 1: Behavioral Health Authorization Management

The most critical capability to evaluate is authorization management. The billing company should have systems to track authorization start and end dates, remaining session counts, and re-authorization submission deadlines for every patient. Ask how they handle the re-authorization process: Do they submit re-authorization requests proactively, or do they wait until the current authorization expires? Proactive submission 2 to 3 weeks before expiration is the standard.

Ask about their authorization denial rate. A billing company experienced in behavioral health should maintain authorization-related denial rates below 2%. If they cannot provide this metric, they may not track it, which is a red flag.

Criteria 2: Provider Credential Knowledge

Behavioral health involves multiple provider types with different billing privileges: psychiatrists, psychologists, LCSWs, LPCs, LMFTs, and provisionally licensed providers. Each payer defines which provider types can bill independently and which require supervisory arrangements. The billing company must understand these distinctions and apply the correct billing rules per provider credential per payer.

Criteria 3: Telehealth Billing Expertise

Behavioral health has the highest telehealth utilization of any specialty. The billing company needs current knowledge of telehealth billing rules, which changed significantly during and after the pandemic. This includes correct modifier application (95, GT), place of service coding (02 vs. 10), and payer-specific telehealth policies that may differ from CMS guidelines.

Criteria 4: Pricing for Behavioral Health

Behavioral health billing outsourcing pricing typically ranges from 6% to 9% of collections. The higher percentage compared to medical specialties (5-7%) reflects the lower per-claim value and the higher administrative burden of authorization management. Per-session pricing ($5 to $8 per claim) is an alternative that may be more economical for practices with high session volumes.

Evaluate whether authorization management is included in the base price or charged separately. Some billing companies charge additional fees for re-authorization submissions, which can add $500 to $1,000 per month for a busy practice.

Red Flags

Avoid billing companies that do not have existing behavioral health clients. The learning curve for behavioral health billing is steep, and your practice should not be their training ground. Also avoid companies that cannot explain the difference between standalone psychotherapy codes and add-on psychotherapy codes, or that are unfamiliar with mental health parity laws that affect how payers cover behavioral health services.

Behavioral Health Billing Outsourcing Pricing

Model Typical Range Best For
Percentage of collections 6-9% Most behavioral health practices
Per-session fee $5-8 per claim High-volume group practices
Flat monthly fee $2,500-5,000/mo Solo or 2-provider practices
In-house (1 FTE) $38-48K salary Practices with 3+ providers

Official sources

Use these checks with payer policy, coding documentation, and remittance data before changing claim workflows.

Common Questions

Behavioral Health Outsourcing FAQ

Answers to the questions practice owners ask most often.

Plan for 4 to 6 weeks due to the authorization transfer process. Beyond standard EHR integration and fee schedule setup, the billing company needs to inventory all active patient authorizations, remaining session counts, and expiration dates. This authorization inventory is unique to behavioral health and adds time to the transition.

Patients should not notice any change in their clinical experience. The billing company handles insurance communication, claim submission, and statement generation. If patients call with billing questions, the outsourced team should answer under your practice name and follow your financial policies. Discuss call handling procedures during the evaluation.

Yes, including generating patient statements, processing credit card payments, and following up on unpaid balances. Behavioral health patient collections require sensitivity because the patient relationship is therapeutic. The billing company should follow your practice policies on balance forgiveness, payment plans, and when to discontinue collection efforts.

The billing company takes over authorization management, including tracking session counts, monitoring expiration dates, and submitting re-authorization requests. You should still have visibility into authorization status through the client portal. Confirm that the billing company provides alerts when patients are approaching session limits so clinical staff can discuss treatment plan adjustments with the patient.

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