Home / Resources / Medical Billing Cost Guide 2025: Complete Breakdown
Read Our Blog

Medical Billing Cost Guide 2025: Complete Breakdown

Practice Management
A complete breakdown of medical billing costs in 2025. Compare in-house vs outsourced billing, understand hidden fees, and find the most cost-effective approach for your practice.
Published January 8, 2026 Updated April 13, 2026 10
Medical Billing Cost Guide 2025: Complete Breakdown

The True Cost of Collecting Revenue

Most practice owners — from dental practices to multi-specialty groups — know their rent, payroll, and malpractice premiums — but few can name their total cost to collect a dollar of revenue. That number matters most.

Performance Tier Cost to Collect What It Means Status
Best-in-Class 2% – 4% Highly automated, low denial rate, experienced staff OPTIMAL
Industry Standard 3% – 5% Well-run operation; some manual processes remain ACCEPTABLE
Below Average 6% – 9% Excess staff, high denial rate, or outdated systems ATTENTION NEEDED
Problem Territory 10% – 14% Significant inefficiencies; revenue leakage is high URGENT ACTION

Sources: HFMA, MGMA DataDive, MD Clarity RCM Metrics[1][2][6]

You employ billing staff, own your software, and manage the process directly. Costs are largely fixed regardless of revenue volume.

A third-party RCM company handles billing for a percentage of collections. Costs scale directly with revenue — lower in slow months.

Cost Driver Why It’s Hidden Annual Impact
Denial write-offs Spread across multiple patient accounts, never aggregated $6K – $60K+
Provider time on billing Tracked as clinical time, not billing overhead ~$25K/provider
Staff turnover Recruiting/training costs spread across HR budget 50–75% of salary
Underpayment leakage Payer underpayments often go undetected without auditing 2–5% of revenue
Clearinghouse fees Invoiced separately from PM software $2.4K – $6K/yr

SKIP1: Full Cost Breakdown

A detailed look at every expense category for practices maintaining internal billing operations.

Role Salary Range BLS Median (2024) Fully Loaded (+30%) FTEs Needed (3 providers)
Medical Biller $38K – $52K $50,250 $65,325 1.0 – 1.5
Medical Coder $45K – $62K $55,970 $72,761 0.5 – 1.0
Billing Manager $55K – $80K $67,000 $87,100 0 – 0.5
Total Staffing (3-provider) $83K – $142K $108K – $185K 1.5 – 3.0 FTEs

AAPC Salary Survey shows certified coders with 3+ credentials earn up to $81,227/year — 41% more than non-certified staff.[7]Benefits and employer taxes add 25–35% on top of base salary.

Cost Category Solo Practice 2–3 Providers 4–5 Providers Notes
Practice Management (PM) Software $3,600 – $9,600 $7,200 – $19,200 $14,400 – $38,400 $300–$800/provider/mo
Clearinghouse Fees $600 – $1,800 $2,400 – $6,000 $3,600 – $8,400 $0.25–$0.50/claim
Patient Statements $240 – $1,200 $480 – $2,400 $960 – $3,600 Paper: $0.50–$1.50; Digital: $0.10–$0.30
EHR Integration / Add-ons $500 – $2,000 $1,000 – $4,000 $2,000 – $6,000 Eligibility, ERA processing
Staff Training & CE $500 – $1,000 $1,000 – $3,000 $2,000 – $5,000 CPT/ICD-10 updates, compliance
Total Technology (Annual) $5.4K – $15.6K $12.1K – $34.6K $23K – $61.4K
Practice Size Est. Annual Collections Total Billing Cost Cost to Collect % Benchmark vs. Industry
Solo (1 provider) $400K – $700K $45K – $80K 8% – 14% ABOVE BENCHMARK
Small Group (2–3 providers) $900K – $1.8M $85K – $175K 5.7% – 11.7% VARIABLE
Mid-Group (4–5 providers) $1.8M – $3.5M $140K – $280K 4% – 9% APPROACHING OPTIMAL
Large Group (10+ providers) $4M – $12M $120K – $360K 2% – 5% CAN BE OPTIMAL

Note: Solo practices often have thehighestcost-to-collect ratios because fixed billing expenses cannot be spread over sufficient volume. Software Advice estimates firms with $2.5M in annual claims spend ~$120,000 on in-house billing.[9]

SKIP2: What You’re Really Paying

Understanding pricing structures, what’s included, and how to evaluate RCM vendor contracts.

Specialty / Practice Type Typical Rate Range Cost at $1M Collections Cost at $2M Collections Why Rate Varies
Family Medicine / Primary Care (Solo) 7% – 9% $70K – $90K $140K – $180K Lower volume, more patient-facing work
Internal Medicine (2–3 providers) 6% – 8% $60K – $80K $120K – $160K Moderate complexity, predictable coding
Orthopedics (5+ providers) 4.5% – 6% $45K – $60K $90K – $120K Higher claim values offset volume costs
Mental Health / Behavioral 7% – 10% $70K – $100K $140K – $200K High denial rates, frequent auth issues
Cardiology 5% – 7% $50K – $70K $100K – $140K Complex coding, high-value claims
Urgent Care / Multi-site 4% – 6% $40K – $60K $80K – $120K High volume reduces per-claim cost
Hospital / Health System RCM 2% – 4% $200K – $400K* $400K – $800K* *On $10M+ revenue; volume discounts apply
Factor In-House Billing Outsourced (6.5%) Outsourced (5%)
Annual Cost $85K – $175K $97,500 $75,000
Staffing Risk High (turnover disrupts cash flow) Low (vendor absorbs turnover)
Cost in Slow Month Fixed (no reduction) Scales down proportionally Scales down proportionally
Control Over Process HIGH MODERATE
Coding Expertise Access Depends on your staff Specialized team available
Denial Rate (typical) 6% – 10% 3% – 5% (best vendors)
Break-Even vs Outsourcing See the Calculator tab for your personalized break-even analysis

Outsourced RCM firms collect 70% vs. 60% for in-house teams on average, per CareCloud analysis — a gap that can offset a higher billing rate.[9]

The Hidden Costs Most Practices Miss

These losses don’t appear on any invoice — but they directly reduce your bottom line. Quantifying them is the first step to recovering lost revenue.

KPI Benchmarks: How Does Your Practice Compare?

Key performance indicators from HFMA, MGMA, and leading RCM research organizations. Track these monthly — they’re the vital signs of your revenue cycle.[2][6][10]

KPI Best-in-Class Industry Standard Alert Threshold How to Calculate
Cost to Collect 2% – 3% 3% – 5% > 8% Total billing expenses ÷ net collections
Days in A/R < 30 days 31 – 40 days > 50 days Net A/R ÷ avg daily net revenue
Denial Rate < 3% 5% – 8% > 10% $ denied ÷ $ submitted × 100
Net Collection Rate 97% – 99% 95% – 96% < 90% Payments ÷ net charges × 100
Clean Claim Rate ≥ 98% 95% < 90% Claims auto-processed ÷ total claims
A/R Over 90 Days < 10% 10% – 12% > 25% 90+ day A/R ÷ total A/R × 100
Bad Debt Ratio < 1% 1% – 3% > 5% Bad debt ÷ gross revenue × 100
Registration Accuracy ≥ 97% 95% < 90% Accurate registrations ÷ total registrations

Cost-to-Collect Calculator

Enter your practice’s billing data to calculate your current cost-to-collect, compare against benchmarks, and see your break-even point for outsourcing.

Budget Planning & Optimization Tips

Proven strategies for managing billing costs effectively — regardless of whether you bill in-house or outsource.

Scenario Recommendation Rationale
In-house cost-to-collect < 5%, denial rate < 4% KEEP IN-HOUSE Your operation is already performing well. Outsourcing would likely increase costs without proportional improvement.
In-house cost-to-collect > 8% OUTSOURCE Even a 6.5% outsourced rate saves 1.5%+ of collections. At $1.5M, that’s $22,500+ per year.
Biller just left or practice is growing fast CONSIDER OUTSOURCING Outsourcing eliminates turnover disruption risk and provides immediate expertise without a 3-month ramp-up.
Solo practice or < $700K collections OUTSOURCE LIKELY BETTER Fixed in-house costs at low volume almost always produce a cost-to-collect above 10%. Outsourcing scales with revenue.
10+ providers with stable, experienced billing team HYBRID MODEL In-house team handles routine billing; outsource specialized services (credentialing, complex appeals, prior auth).

Sources & References

This guide cites peer-reviewed publications, government data, and authoritative industry bodies. All figures reflect the most recent available data as of 2024–2025.

Disclaimer:This guide is for educational and informational purposes only. Financial benchmarks and cost estimates reflect industry averages and may vary significantly based on practice specialty, geographic region, payer mix, staffing structure, and individual operational circumstances. Always consult a qualified healthcare financial advisor or revenue cycle consultant before making significant changes to your billing operations. All data sourced from publicly available research as of 2024–2025.

Stop Guessing Where Your Revenue Is Going

Every month your billing runs without a clear process, your practice loses money to preventable denials and slow follow-ups. We'll audit your current billing operation and show you exactly where the gaps are, at no cost and no obligation.

Get Your Free Billing Audit

Related Articles

View All Resources