If your AR keeps growing, it’s not because claims aren’t being sent. It’s because they’re not being followed up on properly after submission.
That’s where most billing processes slow down.
A claim goes out, and everyone assumes it will move forward on its own. But it doesn’t. It sits in the payer’s system until someone checks it, questions it, and pushes it forward. If that doesn’t happen on time, the delay starts building quietly.
You don’t see it in one day. But after a few weeks, you’ll notice more claims crossing 60 days than 90. At that point, recovery becomes harder.
This is exactly why AR follow-up strategies matter, not in theory, but in day-to-day billing work.
What Actually Happens After Submission of a Claim
Once a claim is submitted, it doesn’t move in a straight line. Sometimes it’s processed quickly. Other times, it stays in a pending status with no clear update. In some cases, additional information is needed, but no one flags it immediately.
If no one checks, nothing moves.
That’s the part many teams underestimate. Submission feels like progress, but it’s only one step. Payment depends on what happens after that.
Why AR Starts Getting Out of Control
Most teams don’t ignore follow-ups. The issue is inconsistency. You’ll see patterns like this:
- Claims checked only when they become old
- Follow-ups done in batches instead of on schedule
- No clear priority between claims
- Denials corrected without reviewing the reason
None of this looks like a major issue on its own. But together, it slows everything down. AR doesn’t spike suddenly. It builds gradually.
How to Structure Follow-Ups Without Overloading the Team
You don’t need a complicated system. You just need a repeatable one. Start with timing.
Claims should be checked early, not when they’re already aging. Waiting until 30 days to take action means you’ve already lost time.
Then comes ownership. If a claim isn’t assigned to someone, it gets missed. Simple as that.
And finally, the method.
Not every follow-up should be a call. Sometimes, a payer portal gives the answer faster. Sometimes it doesn’t. The team needs to know which route to take and when.
When these three are clear, timing, ownership, and method, follow-ups become manageable.
Breaking Down AR Aging in a Practical Way
Aging buckets aren’t just for reporting. They tell you where to act.
- 0–30 days: Watch for processing issues
- 31–60 days: Start active follow-up
- 61–90 days: Identify the problem and act on it
- 90+ days: Focus on recovery before it’s too late
The mistake many teams make is treating all claims the same. That spreads effort thin. Older claims need faster decisions. Newer ones need monitoring.
AR Follow-Up Strategies That Actually Work in Practice
This is where most of the difference happens. Not in how many follow-ups you do, but how you handle them.
Start Before There’s a Problem
Checking claims early prevents them from becoming delayed cases later.
Don’t Mix Claim Types
A pending claim needs a status check. A denied claim needs correction. Handling both the same way wastes time.
Focus on What Matters First
High-value claims should be prioritized. That improves cash flow faster than clearing smaller ones first.
Escalate When It’s Stuck
If a claim hasn’t moved after multiple attempts, it won’t resolve on its own. Escalation is part of the process.
Look for Repetition
If the same issue shows up across claims, fix it once instead of handling it repeatedly.
These are the kinds of AR follow-up strategies that actually reduce workload instead of increasing it.
Where Teams Lose Time Without Realizing It
Some delays don’t come from lack of effort. They come from how effort is used.
Common patterns:
- Following up without checking previous notes
- Repeating the same steps for the same issue
- Spending time on low-impact claims
- Missing follow-ups because no one owns them
These don’t stop collections completely. They just slow them enough to affect revenue.
Using Systems Without Depending on Them Completely
Technology helps, but it doesn’t fix the process on its own.
A system can:
- Highlight claims that need attention
- Show aging clearly
- Track status changes
But it won’t decide what to do next. That still comes from the team. The goal is to use systems to stay organized, not to rely on them for decisions.
Communication: The Part That Gets Ignored
Follow-ups are not just about frequency. They depend on how clearly you communicate. When speaking with payers, vague questions lead to vague answers.
Instead:
- Mention exact claim details
- Refer to dates and amounts
- Ask what’s holding the claim
- Confirm what happens next
Clear communication reduces repeat calls.
How to Tell If Your Follow-Up Process Is Working
You don’t need complex dashboards to figure this out. Look at simple outcomes:
- Are fewer claims moving into older buckets?
- Are payments coming in faster than before?
- Are the same denial reasons repeating less often?
If not, the process needs adjustment. That’s how you evaluate your AR follow-up strategies in a real setting.
Keeping It Consistent When Workload Increases
This is where most systems break. When volume goes up, follow-ups are the first thing to become irregular. Teams focus on new claims, and older ones get delayed.
To avoid that:
- Keep the process simple
- Stick to fixed checkpoints
- Review AR regularly, not occasionally
Consistency matters more than intensity.
Conclusion
AR doesn’t grow because billing teams aren’t working. It grows when follow-ups aren’t structured.
Once you fix that, things start moving differently, claims don’t sit as long, and payments come in with fewer delays. The workload doesn’t increase, but the output improves.
Rapid RCM Solutions works with healthcare practices to tighten AR processes, improve follow-up consistency, and make sure claims don’t stay stuck longer than they should.