...
Credentialing Insurance Credentialing

How Much Does Medical Credentialing Cost in New York

How Much Does Medical Credentialing Cost in New York

Credentialing is the factor that will allow you to see insured patients and receive payment. Your practice may be a single-practice, multi-provider clinic or a hospital in NYC. Still, realistic costs of credentialing will assist you in budgeting the exercise correctly and in placing the providers into the money-making commitment within a short time, without any surprises. 

This blog discusses the realistic cost amounts, New York-based fees, cost differences, and at what point it is economical to outsource to a company like Credex Healthcare

Overview of Credentialing Requirements in New York 

All the payers (Medicare, Medicaid, and commercial payers like Empire BlueCross BlueShield and UnitedHealthcare) demand documentation, verification, and different fees. State enrollment is also necessary in New York with the help of eMedNY. Examples of typical requirements are: 

  • Unexpired, active New York professional license(s). 
  • NPI, practice FEIN, tax information. 
  • DEA registration (where necessary). 
  • Evidence of malpractice insurance having coverage limits. 
  • CAQH ProView profile (most payers are based on CAQH). 
  • Copies of the diplomas, board certifications, and supervising agreements (where necessary). 

In the case of New York Medicaid, it is eMedNY that is offering enrollment forms and types of providers, which require an application fee. Visit the official enrollment pages of the state to find up-to-date amounts and regulations. 

Typical Cost Range for Credentialing Services (New York) 

The average commercial payer applications are priced at $250-$800/ payer, per provider. An initial account with one provider in two or more networks (e.g., Medicare, Medicaid, and various commercial plans) costs about $1200-$2500 on average. 

Cost Components You’ll See 

Application/administration fee: $250-$800 for each payer. Covers the collecting of documents, preparation of applications, and follow-up. 

Senior enrollment fees (e.g., New York Medicaid): Certain types of providers pay an eMedNY application fee. Make sure that you are checking the newest fee rates and types on eMedNY. 

CAQH profile configuration/renewal: CAQH ProView is free, but you have to spend staff/vendor time to develop and maintain the profile. Most companies are also covering CAQH work as part of the per-payer price; others are adding it as a minor addition or bundling it. 

Expedited service surcharge: Varying by application, with expedited service, is often $50- $300. 

Why costs vary: The high payer mix in NYC (NYC regional plans, various portals) and the Medicaid regulations compound administrative complexity, particularly among specialty providers and larger groups, and expand cost ranges. 

One-Time vs. Ongoing Maintenance Fees 

First enrollment (once-only): Maximum effort: collecting documents, organizing attestations, organizing primary-sources checking, and first-of-their-kind submissions. Average individual per provider: $1,250 – $2,500, varying by panels. 

Recredentialing/maintenance (per cycle about 2 to 3 years): The fee is usually $100 to 400 per payer. CAQH re-attestation does not have fees, although time-consuming; other vendors impose a low maintenance charge. 

Factors That Affect Credentialing Costs in New York 

  • Payers: There are many payers as applications. Hypothetical: five payers, 5 application fees (volume deal is typical). 
  • Specialty and documentation load Specialists could need board approval, hospital authority, or other certifications- more administrative time, more money. 
  • Practice size & provider mix: Per-provider pricing can decline as the size gets bigger, but coordination goes up (group NPI/FEIN, delegated credentialing, rosters). 
  • Medicaid/Medicare necessities: eMedNY and CMS-855 include permanent steps and other potential state charges; the state of New York may need additional compliance records. 
  • Speed/expedite requirements: Decelerated schedules demand additional personnel man-hours- high bids required. 
  • Plan-specific charges: In certain plans or state programs, they impose application fees (in particular, NY Medicaid). 

Local Payer Enrollment Challenges in New York 

The number of payers in NYC is dense, which includes Empire BCBS, local HMOs, and regional plans with their portals and checklists. 

Heightened primary-source verification: A significant number of payers conduct comprehensive primary screening, which increases timeframes. 

The Multifaceted nature of Medicaid: in New York, Medicaid enrolments are distinct formats and compliance issues, and application fee regulations that increase the time and effort of administration but require stage complexity. 

Consequently, New York schedules tend to be at the end of the national averages (~6090 days). Time cost Delays can cost the lost of in-network revenue thousands in loss per provider per month. 

In-House vs. Outsourced Credentialing in NYC: Cost Comparison 

In-House 

Pros: 

  • Direct control. 
  • Large volume savings could be possible. 

Cons: 

  • Occupied overhead: wages, benefits, software, training, and clinician time on paperwork. 
  • Greater chances of error or delays due to the churn of personnel. 
  • Cost in the internal is easily underestimated; full-loaded costs can be equal to or even greater than that of the vendors. 

Outsourced (Credentialing Firm)

Pros: 

  • Per-payer pricing is predictable, workflows are mature, and there are payer escalation paths; typically, higher throughput. 
  • Informed of portal developments and specialty complexities. 

Cons: 

  • Per-payer rates may be steep in the short run. 
  • Needs due diligence of vendors and SLAs. 

Summary

Considering the complexity of New York, outsourcing can save the small to mid-sized practices or groups that frequently add providers more money in saved time, reduction of denials, and in-network dates. 

How Credex Healthcare Helps New York Providers Save on Costs 

  • Open pricing: Basic per-payer payments and bulk incentives on multi-provider enrollments; therefore, clinics can make predictions on expenses. 
  • CAQH and eMedNY experience: To put it in other words, we create and keep CAQH (a free platform, your cost of time) and fill the eMedNY form correctly to prevent redundancy. 
  • Payer relationships. Proactive payer follow-up and build-up (e.g., Empire BCBS, UnitedHealthcare) lowers time-to-panel. 
  • Maintenance plans: Recredentialing and CAQH attestation assistance to support maintenance to avoid lapses. 

With your help, providing your provider count, specialty, and target payer, Credex can provide a line-item estimate of one-time and recurring expenses. 

Fast Turnaround & Transparent Pricing: Questions to Ask Vendors 

  • Is it priced on a per-provider basis or a per-application basis? Does it have multi-provider discounts? 
  • CAQH setup charged on its own (note: CAQH itself is free)? 
  • Do you manage eMedNY and CMS-855 forms? Passing state fees through how? 
  • What are your mean schedules and liftoffs? (Request SLAs and past metrics.) 
  • What is your price on recredentialing and CAQH maintenance? 

Conclusion 

New York credentialing is also a cost that can be managed considering per-payer effort, eMedNY/CMS enrollment, CAQH maintenance, and the hidden cost of delayed paneling. To most of the small and mid-sized practices, having a vendor such as Credex Healthcare reduces the overall cost and reduces the time to payment. 

Describe the number of providers you have, their specialties, and payers that you are targeting (Medicare, Medicaid, Empire/Anthem, UnitedHealthcare, and NYC regional plans). We will give you a practice-specific, line-item estimate so that you can easily compare the in-house facility costs with outsourcing costs. 

FAQs 

What does it cost to credential a provider in New York?
Most vendors charge $250–$800 per payer, per provider. First-time multi-payer enrollment for one provider typically totals $1,200–$2,500, depending on the number of payers and complexity. 

Are credentialing costs higher for NYC-based practices?
Not necessarily by list price, but NYC’s payer density and deeper verification often lengthen timelines—raising effective cost through delays. 

How long does credentialing take in New York?
Commonly, 60–90 days from submission to paneling. Medicaid/Medicare can take longer. Expedited options, when available, may add fees. 

Do estimates include CAQH and Medicaid (eMedNY)?
CAQH ProView is free; vendors bill the time to build/maintain the profile. eMedNY has its own forms and may require state application fees (passed through at cost). Confirm inclusions with your vendor. 

Does Credex handle New York recredentialing?
Yes. Credex offers recredentialing and ongoing CAQH maintenance packages, tailored to your provider count and service level. 

Book a Consultation








    Testimonials

    As a Homecare agency, navigating credentialing and enrollment can be a headache, but Credex Healthcare made it simple and straightforward. They took care of everything from our NPI management to PECOS enrollment, ensuring compliance at every step. Their expertise in primary source verification and network research helped us expand our network, allowing us to provide care to more patients. Highly recommend!

    Homecare Agency Owner
    Homecare Agency Owner

    Credex Healthcare has been an invaluable partner for our multi-specialty group practice. They handled all our credentialing and enrollment needs, ensuring every provider was up-to-date across insurance networks and credentialing portals like CAQH and PECOS. Their ability to track and manage multiple providers’ licenses and certifications has saved us a tremendous amount of time and reduced our administrative burden.

    Pediatric Group
    Pediatric Group

    Running a lab comes with its own set of compliance challenges, but Credex Healthcare has taken care of it all. They managed our CLIA waiver, credentialing, and enrollment processes, ensuring that we met every regulatory requirement. Their attention to detail and ability to handle complex credentialing issues has allowed us to focus on our operations without worrying about missing deadlines or facing compliance issues. Exceptional service!

    Lab Director
    Lab Director

    Credex Healthcare has been a game-changer for our HomeHealth agency. They managed our credentialing process from start to finish, ensuring all our licenses, DEA registrations, and CAQH profiles were up to date. Their expiration tracking system is incredibly helpful in keeping everything in check. Thanks to them, we can focus on delivering quality care to our patients without worrying about administrative hurdles.

    HomeHealth agency Owner
    HomeHealth agency Owner

    Credex Healthcare has been amazing to work with. As a Nurse Practitioner, they took care of everything, from managing my NPI and PECOS enrollment to handling all my licensing and revalidation requirements. Their support has allowed me to concentrate fully on patient care, and their thorough primary source verification ensured that my credentials were always accurate and up to date. I couldn’t ask for a better partner!

    Nurse Practitioner (NP)
    Nurse Practitioner (NP)

    I’ve had an outstanding experience with Credex Healthcare. They took over my credentialing, managed my CAQH profile, and handled my DEA registration with ease. Their team made sure my practice stayed compliant and helped me with network research and application follow-up. I don’t know what I would do without them handling all the administrative tasks!

    Dentist
    Dentist