Dental Revenue Cycle Metrics for Medical Billing
A dental practice that adds medical insurance billing to its revenue streams can increase total revenue by 15% to 30% without adding patients. The revenue comes from services already being provided (TMJ evaluations, biopsies, complex extractions, sleep apnea appliances) that were previously billed only to dental insurance or written off entirely. Tracking medical billing-specific revenue cycle metrics identifies how effectively the practice is capturing this crossover revenue and where gaps exist.
Medical Crossover Revenue Per Month
Track total medical insurance revenue separately from dental insurance revenue. A general dental practice should target $3,000 to $8,000 per month per dentist in medical crossover revenue. An oral surgery practice should target $15,000 to $40,000 per month per surgeon. If medical revenue is below these targets, the practice is either not identifying medically billable services during patient encounters or is experiencing high denial rates that prevent collection. Break the metric into revenue by service type (TMJ, oral surgery, sleep apnea, sedation) to identify which categories are underperforming.
Medical Billing Capture Rate
The capture rate measures the percentage of medically billable encounters that actually result in a medical insurance claim submission. Review a sample of 50 patient charts per month and identify encounters where a medical claim could have been submitted. Compare against actual claims submitted. The target capture rate is 90% or higher. Many practices starting medical billing programs have capture rates below 50% because providers are not trained to identify medical billing opportunities during the clinical encounter.
Dual Billing Efficiency
For encounters that generate both dental and medical claims, track the time from encounter to claim submission for each claim type. Dental claims are typically submitted within 24 hours. Medical claims from dental offices often lag 5 to 10 days because the medical billing workflow is less automated. The target is to submit medical claims within 48 hours of the encounter, matching the dental claim submission timeline. Delayed medical claim submission increases the risk of timely filing denials and extends the revenue cycle.
Collection Rate by Payer Type
Track collection rates separately for dental insurance, medical insurance, and patient self-pay. Dental insurance collection rates should be 95% or higher for in-network services. Medical insurance collection rates for dental practices typically range from 60% to 75%, reflecting the higher denial rate. The gap between dental and medical collection rates reveals the financial impact of medical claim denials. If medical collection is below 60%, the practice needs to address either the denial rate or the appeal process, or both.
Patient Responsibility Revenue
Medical insurance claims for dental services often have higher patient cost-sharing than dental claims because patients may not have met their medical deductible. Track patient responsibility amounts for medical claims and the collection rate on those balances. If patients are not paying their medical copays and deductibles for dental services, it may indicate that the practice is not collecting at the time of service or that patients do not understand their medical insurance cost-sharing for dental-origin claims.
Return on Medical Billing Investment
Calculate the ROI of your medical billing program: total medical insurance revenue collected minus the cost of medical billing operations (staff time, clearinghouse fees, credentialing costs, training). A mature medical billing program in a general dental practice should generate $5 to $8 in revenue for every $1 invested in the billing infrastructure. If ROI is below $3 per $1, review whether the practice is billing enough medical claims to justify the overhead or whether the denial rate is eroding the revenue gains.