Credex Healthcare operates FQHC billing services designed around how FQHC billing actually works: encounter-based CPT and HCPCS (G-series) codes, payer-specific session limits, HIPAA-sensitive documentation, telehealth billing rules, and clinician credentialing timelines that differ from medical provider enrollment. Our FQHC billing specialists manage the full revenue cycle from insurance verification and EHR-integrated charge capture through claims submission, denial follow-up, and payment posting.
Credex Healthcare’s FQHC revenue cycle management is built specifically for clinicians, allied medical providers, group practices, and community FQHCs billing insurance across all 50 states.
First-pass claim approval rate
Average FQHC billing turnaround
Insurance networks we bill across
Credentialing & enrollment support
Credex Healthcare operates a dedicated FQHC billing process that checks each claim against payer-specific session rules, benefit limits, and documentation requirements before submission. Our team verifies that ICD-10 diagnosis codes and CPT codes are paired correctly, confirms that PPS standards are applied for accurate reimbursement, and reviews session notes for the documentation elements each insurer requires. The result is a consistent first-pass rate and a predictable billing turnaround time for FQHC practices that general billing companies rarely achieve in this specialty.
Our FQHC billing services in the USA cover the following:
Claims go out with verified CPT and HCPCS codes, correct ICD-10 pairings, and complete session documentation. Our team tracks adjudication in real time and follows up on any claim before the timely filing window closes.
We manage CAQH credentialing and payer enrollment for clinicians, allied medical professionals, and social workers across commercial carriers, Medicare, and Medicaid managed FQHC organizations, cutting the wait between hire and first billable session.
Denied claims are reviewed within 48 hours. Our FQHC billing specialists identify the exact rejection reason, whether it is a benefit-limit issue, missing prior authorization, or a documentation gap, and resubmit with the correct correction.
Our coders review session notes for CPT code accuracy across core FQHC visitation codes, preventive and wellness codes, onsite E/M codes, and transitional care codes, confirming that documentation supports the time and service level billed.
Telehealth billing rules vary by payer and by state. We apply the correct place-of-service codes, 95 modifiers, and payer-specific telehealth coverage rules to every virtual session claim, so remote visits pay at the right rate.
As a dedicated FQHC billing company in the USA, Credex Healthcare tracks state-level Medicare FQHC coverage rules through HCPCS codes, FQHC parity enforcement requirements, payer-specific session limits for office E/M, and the provider credentialing process across commercial and government payers.
Parity standards require commercial insurers to cover telehealth-based FQHC services on the same terms as in-person services, but enforcing that in billing requires knowing which payers are out of compliance and how to appeal.
Insurance billing for FQHC spans commercial carriers, including Aetna, Cigna, Anthem, UnitedHealthcare, and Humana, as well as Medicare and state Medicaid-managed FQHC organizations. We manage enrollment and recredentialing across all of them.
Telehealth billing for FQHCs uses different place-of-service codes and modifiers depending on the payer and session type. Our team applies those rules correctly to every claim, whether the session took place in the office, at home, or in a school-based setting.
We support community health centers, health centers for the homeless, and outpatient clinics. For group practices, we manage individual provider credentialing alongside group NPI billing. For Medicare-affiliated practices, we handle G-codes under the Prospective Payment systems (PPS)
Clinicians licensed in multiple states and practices with providers across state lines need payer enrollment that is managed state by state. Our team coordinates multistate CAQH credentialing and payer applications within a single workflow.
FQHC claims need correct ICD-10 diagnosis coding, session paperwork that is compliant with HIPAA, and payer-specific prior authorization before they can be submitted. All of that is checked by Credex Healthcare against the government and payer-level standards for FQHC paperwork on every claim.
Before any claims are sent to a payer, your practice verifies that each clinician, preventive care specialist, and allied medical professional has a valid license, an NPI, a complete CAQH profile, and the right taxonomy code.
Aside from CPT codes, we make sure that each HCPCS encounter code for standard medical visits (new and established patients), annual wellness examinations, mental health examinations, and telehealth codes is matched to a valid ICD-10 diagnosis code.
Prior Authorization Tracking
Session authorizations are obtained, tracked against the appointment calendar, and renewed before expiry. A central authorization log means no session is billed outside an approved window, and no renewal slips past the deadline.
HIPAA-Compliant Documentation Review
Session notes are reviewed for the documentation elements payers require: session duration, diagnostic presentation, treatment modality, and progress toward treatment goals. Notes that do not meet payer standards are flagged before the claim is endorsed.
Benefit Limit & Parity Tracking
We track session limits, annual caps, and co-pay structures for each patient's plan. When a commercial payer applies more restrictive limits to FQHC than to medical services, we identify the parity violation and prepare the appeal.
Accounts Receivable Follow-Up
AR reports are addressed weekly. Aged claims are pursued before the timely filing limits close, underpayments are identified against contracted rates, and formal appeals are submitted when the clinical record and parity law support the original claim.
FQHC practices lose revenue in ways that a general billing company will not catch: session limit denials that should have been parity appeals, telehealth claims paid at the wrong rate due to a missing modifier, and provider credentialing delays that push a provider’s first billable date weeks later than it should be. Credex Healthcare’s FQHC revenue cycle solutions are built around these specific problems.
End-to-end FQHC claims management from charge entry and EHR-integrated code review to electronic submission across commercial payers, Medicare, and Medicaid managed FQHC organizations.
Our FQHC billing specialists apply HCPCS-sanctioned G-codes and CPT codes with the right ICD-10 pairings and time-based documentation every time, reducing denials due to coding and documentation mismatches.
Prior Authorization Management
Authorizations are tracked against the session schedule. Renewals are initiated before the current approval expires so providers keep seeing patients without billing gaps caused by lapsed authorizations.
Denial management for FQHC claims covers benefit limit disputes, PPS payment lapses, documentation deficiency corrections, and medical necessity appeals, each handled with the specific documentation that the payer requires.
The provider credentialing process is managed from CAQH profile completion through payer application, follow-up, and activation. Recredentialing is tracked on a calendar, so no provider enrollment lapses.
Monthly reports show collections by provider and payer, denial trends by reason code, telehealth vs in-person reimbursement comparison, AR aging, and billing turnaround time for FQHC practices.
Years of FQHC Billing Expertis
Provider Credentialing & Enrollment Success
Claim Compliance Rate Across All Payers
Support Available for All Your Needs
Customized FQHC Billing Solutions
RSW
Casey
“I had been getting counseling session-limit denials from one major payer for months and assumed they were legitimate. Credex looked at the EOBs and told me those denials were parity violations. They filed the appeals, won most of them, and recovered several thousand dollars I had already written off. I had no idea that was even an option.”
Group Practice Owner
Emani
“Growing from solo to eight clinicians meant eight separate credentialing timelines, eight CAQH profiles to maintain, and eight sets of payer applications to track. Credex took all of that and ran it as one process. Every new hire got enrolled faster than I expected, and the billing started on time. That kind of organization made the expansion actually manageable.”
Executive Director
Chelsea
“Our Medicaid billing had persistent problems with service code errors and documentation rejections. Credex reviewed our EHR documentation workflow and identified exactly where the notes were falling short of payer requirements. They did not just fix the claims, they helped us fix the process upstream. Rejection rates dropped within the first quarter.
MD
Ida
“FQHC billing includes codes for chronic care management, depending on the required duration and complexity, and the rules are different for every payer. The Credex team understood the add-on rules without me having to explain them. Claims went out correctly from the start, and I stopped seeing the same rejection reasons I had dealt with at my previous practice.”
Practice Manager
Cheryl
“We are a fully telehealth practice, and telehealth billing rules change constantly. Credex tracks those changes by payer and automatically updates our billing. We have not had a telehealth modifier error in months. For a practice where every single session is a remote visit, that consistency makes a real difference to monthly collections.”
Practice Assessment
We audit your current billing workflow, EHR documentation setup, AR aging by payer, denial history sorted by rejection reason, and payer mix. This identifies where revenue is being lost and which problems should be addressed first.
Credentialing & Payer Enrollment
Every clinician and community health professional in your practice is verified for active CAQH completion, NPI status, and payer enrollment. Gaps in the provider credentialing process are resolved before new sessions are billed.
Authorization Management Setup
Active session authorizations are pulled and mapped against your appointment calendar. A renewal calendar is built, so every authorization is refreshed before the current approval period ends.
Clean Claim Submission
Our FQHC billing specialists review session documentation, verify HCPCS and ICD-10 code pairings, apply correct telehealth modifiers where applicable, and submit claims electronically to all commercial payers, Medicare, and Medicaid.
Denial Management & Follow-Up
Every claim is tracked through adjudication. Denials are reviewed within 48 hours. Parity violations, benefit-limit disputes, and documentation-deficiency corrections each get a targeted response, not a generic resubmission.
Reporting & Ongoing Optimization
Monthly reports cover collection rates by provider and payer, denial trends, telehealth vs in-person reimbursement data, AR aging, and billing turnaround time for FQHC practices. Recurring problems are addressed in the next billing cycle.
FQHC billing is more than filing claims with targeted CPT and G-series codes. Session-limit tracking, parity enforcement, telehealth modifier compliance, HIPAA-compliant documentation review, and CAQH credentialing maintenance all must run correctly at the same time. Credex Healthcare focuses on FQHC revenue cycle management specifically because this specialty has too many moving parts for a general billing approach to handle well.
Our team works at community health centers and FQHC claims. We know the CPT codes for preventive care, the documentation standards payers require in session notes, and the telehealth rules that change by payer and by state.
Your practice works with one dedicated FQHC billing specialist who knows your providers, payer panel, authorization history, and EHR setup. Issues are handled by someone who already understands the context of your practice.
Practice owners see claim status, denial rates by payer and reason, AR aging, collections by provider, and telehealth vs in-person performance in clear monthly reports. The numbers reflect what is actually happening in the revenue cycle.
FQHC records carry heightened privacy protections. Every step of our billing process operates under strict HIPAA protocols, with documented security standards and limited access controls applied to all patient data.
FQHC practices lose revenue in ways that do not always appear to be an issue at first glance. Session limit denials that were actually parity violations. Telehealth claims were paid at the wrong rate for months. Provider credentialing delays pushed a provider’s panel start date back by six weeks. These are the problems Credex Healthcare found in the first audit.
The first step is a free consultation. We review your current payer mix, denial history, AR aging, and credentialing status, then show you what better FQHC revenue cycle management would produce for your practice in concrete terms. No commitment is required to get that review.
FQHC billing services handle the entire revenue cycle for practices that help patients, who are often marginalized or far from urban spaces, access bundled preventive and primary care medicine. It includes verifying insurance, obtaining CAQH credentials, submitting claims, handling denials, and processing payments. It is important because the rules for billing at FQHCs are very different from those for primary care. It is important to track session-based CPT and HCPCS codes, telehealth modifier standards, and session boundaries that are set by each payer.
Yes. State Medicare programs cover FQHC services, provided that the codes match the standards under the HCPCS, which outlines the prescribed billing codes for Medicaid and Medicare. The reimbursement rates for these billed services are processed through a Prospective Payment System (PPS), aside from the applied CPT codes used to justify medical necessity.
The FQHC G-series codes G0467 (medical visit for new patients), G0468 (medical visit for established patients), G0469 (mental health visit for new patients), and G0470 (mental health visit for established patients) are used to indicate bundled services subject to PPS reimbursement standards. These codes comprise the core encounter billing of FQHCs, commonly used on commercial and Medicaid/Medicare billing.
It takes 14 to 30 days for Medicare to handle clean computer FQHC claims. When all the paperwork is in order and the CPT-ICD-10 pairs are right, most commercial payers pay within 30 days. All these constraints are addressed by Credex Healthcare’s pre-submission review and authorization tracking before they cause payment to be held up.
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At Credex Healthcare, we know how frustrating it is when claims are denied. That is
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