How to Appeal a Molina Denial (Code 31)
Molina 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 We do not publish a percentage for this category because we will not show a number we cannot back.
Molina issued a code 31 denial. The patient cannot be identified as the payer's insured.
Why Molina issues this: Member ID or eligibility 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 We do not publish a percentage for this category because we will not show a number we cannot back.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 Molina'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
An eligibility denial means the plan says you were not covered on the date of service, or had not met a waiting, residency, or spend-down requirement. The first step is verification: confirm your effective dates, enrollment records, and premium status, because these denials often stem from data errors at the plan or employer. If you were in fact covered, the appeal is straightforward once you supply enrollment confirmation and proof of coverage for the relevant dates. The denial is an adverse benefit determination, so the full-and-fair-review standard of 29 CFR 2560.503-1(h)(1) applies, with at least 180 days to appeal under 29 CFR 2560.503-1(h)(3)(i). Be aware that determinations about plan membership or eligibility are generally excluded from the federal external review process under 45 CFR 147.136(d)(1)(i), so the internal appeal and the enrollment record are your key tools. Honest odds: eligibility denials reverse readily when coverage on the service date can be documented.
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.
Don't write off a bill you can appeal
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 Molina denialFrequently asked questions
- What does a Molina code 31 denial mean?
- The patient cannot be identified as the payer's insured.
- Is denial code 31 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 31 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.