How to Appeal a BCBS FEP Denial (Code 146)
BCBS FEP is counting on one thing: that you will not push back before the deadline. The denial letter is written to make you give up. The data says appealing is worth it. Denials like this are frequently overturned when the appeal supplies the missing element and cites the plan's own rules. We do not publish a percentage for this category because we will not show a number we cannot back.
BCBS FEP issued a code 146 denial. The diagnosis was invalid for the date or dates of service reported.
Why BCBS FEP issues this: Diagnosis code or date mismatch.
Denials like this are frequently overturned when the appeal supplies the missing element and cites the plan's own rules. We do not publish a percentage for this category because we will not show a number we cannot back.
Your move: appeal citing BCBS FEP's own coverage policy plus the federal rule that governs your plan. You have a limited window, and most people never file. We prepare and submit it for you.
Expert analysis: how this denial is overturned
A coding denial means the plan rejected the claim because the diagnosis, procedure, or modifier did not align: the procedure did not match the diagnosis, a modifier was missing or invalid, or the code was deemed wrong for the service. These are technical and very fixable. Compare the submitted codes against the medical record, correct any mismatch, add the appropriate modifier, and resubmit with documentation that supports the corrected coding. Because the rejection is an adverse benefit determination, the full-and-fair-review requirement of 29 CFR 2560.503-1(h)(1) applies and the plan must disclose the edit or rule it used under 29 CFR 2560.503-1(g)(1)(v). You generally have at least 180 days to appeal (29 CFR 2560.503-1(h)(3)(i)), though a corrected claim often resolves the issue faster. Honest odds: coding denials are highly correctable when the record supports the corrected codes.
Sources: 29 CFR 2560.503-1 (ERISA claims procedure), 45 CFR 147.136 (ACA internal and external review), and the X12 Claim Adjustment Reason Code standard.
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A senior reviewer reads your file and we prepare and file the appeal for you. You pay nothing upfront, and only if your appeal wins.
Appeal my BCBS FEP denialFrequently asked questions
- What does a BCBS FEP code 146 denial mean?
- The diagnosis was invalid for the date or dates of service reported.
- Is denial code 146 appealable?
- Yes. Denials like this are frequently overturned when the appeal supplies the missing element and cites the plan's own rules. We do not publish a percentage for this category because we will not show a number we cannot back.
- What should I send to appeal a code 146 denial?
- Supply the missing element for this code, a short appeal letter citing the plan's claims-procedure rules, and any clinical support. Apellica prepares and files this for you.