PECOS problems that do not allow the practice to bill Medicare for the enrolled provider, and where the fix can get stuck in a processing queue that can be 90 days or longer, are among the most annoying revenue disruptions a healthcare practice can experience. All Medicare-participating providers and suppliers must enroll through the CMS database called the Provider Enrollment, Chain and Ownership System, or PECOS. Mistakes in PECOS applications are the most common culprit for Medicare enrollment periods extending far beyond what practices expect when hiring a new physician or adding a new practice location.
Most PECOS errors are preventable with proper data entry and proper document preparation. Billing teams can remedy those that are not immediately preventable more quickly if they understand the specific types of errors, the MAC’s correction process, and how to prioritize their responses to reduce the gap between a provider’s start date and their Medicare billing eligibility.
What Is PECOS and Why Does It Matter?
PECOS is the online enrollment system for Medicare provider and supplier enrollment applications. PECOS is administered by CMS. All physicians, non-physician practitioners, and group practices that want to bill Medicare must be enrolled through PECOS. The system handles new enrollments, revalidations (every five years), and change requests when provider information changes.
Errors in PECOS (caused by a mistake in the original application or a failed update request) have immediate consequences: claims submitted by that provider under that group will be refused, delayed, or held until the enrollment issues are resolved. A PECOS error that delays enrollment by 60-90 days amounts to a lot of deferred revenue for a physician coming into a practice and expecting to produce revenue right away, revenue that may not be completely recoverable based on the MAC’s retroactive billing policy.
Most Common PECOS Errors That Delay Medicare Enrollment
| Error Type | What Goes Wrong | Typical Delay Caused |
| NPI mismatch | NPI on application doesn’t match the NPPES record | 10 to 30 days for correction |
| Missing or incorrect PECOS reassignment | Group and individual NPIs not properly linked | 30 to 60 days |
| Incomplete or missing signatures | Authorized official hasn’t signed or the wrong signatory has been used | 15 to 45 days |
| Incorrect practice location data | Address doesn’t match state license or doesn’t match IRS records | 20 to 40 days |
| Missing supporting documents | License, malpractice certificate, or DEA not attached | 15 to 30 days |
| Revalidation deadline missed | Provider deactivated for failing to revalidate on schedule | 60 to 120 days |
| Change of ownership errors | Ownership information not updated correctly after group restructuring | 30 to 90 days |
How to Fix the Most Common PECOS Errors
NPI Mismatch Errors
The NPI supplied on a PECOS application must exactly match what is published in the National Plan and Provider Enumeration System (NPPES) database. Application holds are triggered by differences in provider name spelling, middle initials, or business name formatting between NPPES and PECOS. The fix involves:
Comparison of the provider’s present NPPES record to the PECOS application, field by field
Updating the NPPES record if the error is there, and then resubmitting or revising the PECOS application
Waiting 24 to 48 hours for NPPES changes to take effect before the MAC can confirm the corrected data
Reassignment of Benefits Errors
The physician billing under a group practice must have a valid reassignment of benefits on file in PECOS. This reassignment links the physician’s individual Type 1 NPI to the group’s Type 2 NPI. Without this link, claims being made under the group’s billing number for that physician are refused because the provider is not enrolled with that entity. To fix a reassignment error, you need to:
Confirming that the individual and group PECOS records are active and up to date
Submitting CMS-855R (paper) or the reassignment portion of the online PECOS application
Checking the status of the reassignment application through the MAC’s provider enrollment inquiry line or online status tool
Missing Authorized Official Signatures
The practice’s authorized official, who must be someone with legal authority to bind the organization, must sign every PECOS application wet or electronically. Mistakes in common signatures are:
The wrong person signs as authorized official (the physician themselves can’t sign as approved official for their own group application)
Missing signature date or before the date of submission of the application
Electronic signatures on printed documents outside of the PECOS system that should have been signed electronically
The MAC returns signature problems with a certain deficiency warning. The practice has a set period (usually 30 days) to respond with a revised signature. If you miss that window, you must restart the application.
Practice Location Discrepancies
The practice location address in PECOS must match the address on the provider’s state license and, for group practices, match the address on the IRS records for the employer identification number for that site. Discrepancies cause holds; CMS utilizes location verification as a fraud protection checkpoint. First, you have to update all your source records, then edit the PECOS application to address location mistakes. Upgrading the state license before upgrading PECOS causes a secondary mismatch, resulting in a longer stay.
How to Avoid PECOS Enrollment Delays Proactively
The best way to prevent delays in PECOS processing is to begin the application with complete, confirmed data, rather than trying to repair issues later. These practices bypass the most frequent application holds:
Before initiating the PECOS application, run a pre-submission checklist that cross-references NPI data against NPPES, state licensing data, and IRS records.
Verify the group’s authorized official prior to starting the application and their legal permission to sign
Collect all supporting documents, licenses, DEA certificates, malpractice certificates, board certifications, etc., before beginning data input so that documents are readily available at the point of submission.
Register for PECOS at least 90 days prior to the provider’s expected start date: 120 days for practices with complex group structures or numerous practice locations
Set calendar reminders for revalidation deadlines 6 months out because CMS normally sends revalidation notices. Those who do not receive the notices are deactivated and must go through the complete re-enrollment procedure.
Verify the provider’s current PECOS status using the Medicare enrollment status lookup tool on the CMS website before presuming a provider’s enrollment is active after a change request.
PECOS Revalidation: The Enrollment Error Most Practices Miss
All enrolled providers and suppliers must revalidate their Medicare enrollment with the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) every five years. If a provider fails to meet their revalidation deadline, they are deactivated from Medicare, and claims submitted after deactivation are refused. To reactivate after a missed revalidation, the whole re-enrollment application must be submitted, which takes the same 60 to 120 days as an initial enrollment.
Practices with several suppliers on varying revalidation schedules are prone to missed deadlines on a rolling basis. The best preventive measure is a centralized credentialing management system that maintains each provider’s PECOS revalidation due date separately from their state licensing and DEA renewal dates and sends automated alerts at 6 months and 90 days prior to each deadline.
What to Do When PECOS Processing Is Delayed
If a PECOS application has been delayed for longer than the MAC’s declared processing time window and no communication has been received, billing teams should:
Track application status via PECOS online site using application tracking number.
Have the application tracking number, provider NPI, and submission date available to call the MAC’s provider enrollment customer support line.
If delay is causing active billing interruption, request expedited review, as most MACs provide an escalation route for providers already actively treating Medicare patients.
Record any interaction with the MAC, including the name of the representative, date, and any reference numbers given for your inquiry.
Conclusion
PECOS faults occur frequently but can be managed. The best practices to avoid enrollment delays are to treat PECOS applications with the same level of scrutiny as any other compliance document: validated data, complete supporting documents, accurate signatures, and timetables based on the MAC’s processing windows, not the start date of the provider. When mistakes do happen, knowing the rectification path and the MAC’s communication process goes a long way toward shortening the resolution timescale rather than waiting passively for the application to clear.
Provider enrollment and medical credentialing services for PECOS applications, change requests, and revalidation tracking for physician practices and group organizations. Contact us to guarantee your providers are enrolled correctly and on time, without the revenue gaps PECOS issues produce.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is PECOS in medical billing?
PECOS – Provider Enrollment, Chain and Ownership System. That’s the CMS online database that all Medicare-participating clinicians and suppliers have to be enrolled in to bill Medicare. PECOS is used for new enrollments, revalidations, and change requests.
How long does PECOS enrollment take?
PECOS standard enrollment processing is 60-120 days, depending on the MAC jurisdiction and complexity of the application. When revisions are sent in, applications with errors or missing documents have their clocks reset. This is why it’s important for practices with a fixed provider start date to get the initial application right.
What happens if PECOS has an error on my application?
The MAC may issue a development letter or a deficiency notice that identifies the inaccuracy and provides a rectification window (usually 30 days). Failure to receive the adjustment within that period will result in rejection of the application, which must be resubmitted from the beginning, with the processing time restarting.
How do I check my PECOS enrollment status?
To verify your PECOS enrollment status, you can log in to the CMS PECOS web portal at pecos.cms.hhs.gov using the authorized official’s login credentials. Also, the MAC’s provider enrollment customer care line can provide status updates with the application tracking number and provider NPI.
How often does Medicare PECOS revalidation occur?
According to CMS, all providers and suppliers enrolled in Medicare must revalidate their participation every five years. CMS sends out revalidation notices, but it is really up to providers to meet the deadline. Failure to meet a revalidation date will lead to deactivation and a full re-enrollment application and processing delay of 60 to 120 days.