Why Diagnostic Radiology Billing Is Outsourced
Diagnostic radiology generates the highest claim volume per provider of any medical specialty. A 10-radiologist group produces 15,000 to 25,000 professional component claims per month. Managing this volume requires specialized billing infrastructure: automated coding from PACS and RIS integration, high-throughput claim submission, systematic denial management at scale, and payer-specific knowledge about radiology bundling edits and MPPR rules. Many radiology groups outsource billing because the investment in technology and specialized staff is difficult to justify in-house for all but the largest practices.
Essential Vendor Capabilities
A radiology billing vendor must demonstrate three capabilities beyond standard medical billing: PACS/RIS integration for automated charge capture (eliminating manual entry of study data), radiology-specific coding accuracy including modifier 26/TC assignment and bilateral modifiers, and referring physician NPI validation with an automated database. Ask vendors for their radiology client clean claim rate (should be 97%+), their referring NPI denial rate (should be below 0.5%), and their average days in AR for radiology professional component claims (should be below 35 days).
Technology Integration Requirements
The vendor billing system must integrate with your radiology information system (RIS) to receive study completion data automatically. The ideal workflow: the RIS sends a completed study record to the vendor system, the system auto-assigns the CPT code based on study type and protocol, the coder reviews and confirms the code assignment, and the claim is submitted within 48 hours. Manual study data entry at radiology volumes is not viable. If the vendor requires your staff to manually enter study data into their system, the labor cost will exceed the value of outsourcing.
Pricing Models
Radiology billing outsourcing is priced at 4% to 6% of collections, slightly below the general medical billing range because the high claim volume provides economies of scale. Some vendors offer per-claim pricing ($3 to $6 per claim) which may be more predictable for budgeting. Large radiology groups with 20,000+ claims per month can negotiate volume discounts to 3.5% to 4.5%. Evaluate total cost including any technology integration fees, setup charges, and transition costs. The vendor should provide a total cost analysis comparing their fee structure to your current in-house billing cost.
Transition and Data Migration
Transitioning radiology billing to an outsourced vendor requires careful data migration: referring physician database, payer contract rate schedules, pending claims and AR balances, and historical billing data for trend analysis. The transition period is typically 60 to 90 days. During this time, expect a temporary increase in claim lag as the vendor team establishes the automated workflows. Set a go-live date and measure the vendor against baseline metrics (clean claim rate, denial rate, days in AR) starting 90 days after go-live to allow for the transition period.
Performance Monitoring and SLA
Establish a service level agreement (SLA) with specific radiology metrics: claims submitted within 48 hours of study interpretation (target 95%), clean claim rate 97%+, denial rate below 4%, days in AR below 35 commercial and 45 Medicare, and net collection rate 96%+. The vendor should provide weekly claim submission volume reports and monthly financial performance reports. Build a quarterly performance review into the contract with the ability to terminate if SLA metrics are not met for two consecutive quarters.