Revenue Cycle Metrics for Urgent Care
Urgent care revenue cycle management differs from hospital and specialty practice RCM because of the high claim volume, lower average reimbursement per claim, and the transactional nature of patient relationships. A single-provider urgent care center generating 50 claims per day produces 1,000 claims per month. At that volume, small percentage improvements in collection rate or denial rate translate into significant dollar amounts.
Days in Accounts Receivable
The AR days benchmark for urgent care is 22 to 30 days. Urgent care should have faster payment cycles than most specialties because claims are relatively straightforward: single-date encounters with a limited number of line items. Centers running above 35 days have either a submission delay, a payer-specific adjudication bottleneck, or a denial rework problem.
Break AR days into buckets: 0-30, 31-60, 61-90, and 90+. For urgent care, at least 75% of AR should be in the 0-30 day bucket. If more than 10% of AR sits in the 90+ bucket, those claims are at serious risk of becoming uncollectible. Weekly review of the aging report by payer identifies which contracts are creating the slowest payment cycles.
Average Revenue Per Visit
Average revenue per visit is the most important urgent care-specific metric. The benchmark range is $130 to $200 per visit for centers with a balanced mix of E/M visits and procedures. Centers below $120 per visit are likely undercoding E/M levels, missing procedure charges, or failing to bill for in-house diagnostic tests.
Track revenue per visit by provider to identify coding pattern variations. If one provider averages $145 per visit while colleagues average $175, the lower-performing provider may be consistently selecting level 3 E/M codes when documentation supports level 4, or may be skipping modifier 25 on visits that include procedures.
Collection Rate
Net collection rate for urgent care should be 95% or higher. This metric compares actual collections to the allowed amount after contractual adjustments. A collection rate below 93% typically indicates problems with patient responsibility collection (copays, deductibles, coinsurance), write-offs on denied claims that should have been appealed, or payer underpayments that went unchallenged.
Point-of-service collection rate is a sub-metric worth tracking separately. The target is collecting 90% or more of patient copays at the time of service. Every dollar not collected at the point of service costs between $8 and $12 to collect through statements and follow-up calls.
Denial Rate and First-Pass Resolution
Urgent care denial rate target is below 5%. First-pass resolution rate (percentage of claims paid on first submission) should be 93% or higher. The gap between first-pass rate and 100% represents claims that required rework, and each reworked claim costs $25 to $35 in staff time and delayed revenue.
Patient Responsibility Collection
With the growth of high-deductible health plans, patient responsibility now represents 20% to 30% of urgent care revenue. Tracking the patient collection rate separately from insurance collection reveals whether you have a payer problem or a patient billing problem. Patient responsibility balances should be collected within 60 days of the statement date. Balances beyond 90 days collect at rates below 15% and often cost more to pursue than they recover.