CO-119: Benefit Maximum Reached
CO-119 means the payer says a benefit limit (visits, dollars, or occurrences) for the period has been used up.
Why payers issue CO-119
- The plan's visit or dollar limit for the period was reached
- The count is wrong because prior claims were mis-attributed
- A different benefit category actually applies
- The limit applies but an exception or medical necessity supports more
Is it recoverable? Worth checking the count and category — miscounted maximums and wrong-category denials are recoverable.
Common questions
What does CO-119 mean?
CO-119 means the payer says a benefit limit (visits, dollars, or occurrences) for the period has been used up. Benefit maximum for this time period or occurrence has been reached.
How do I appeal or fix a CO-119 denial?
Worth checking the count and category — miscounted maximums and wrong-category denials are recoverable. Common causes: the plan's visit or dollar limit for the period was reached; the count is wrong because prior claims were mis-attributed; a different benefit category actually applies; the limit applies but an exception or medical necessity supports more.
Is a CO-119 denial worth appealing?
Worth checking the count and category — miscounted maximums and wrong-category denials are recoverable. You only pay on what's actually recovered, so there's no cost to working the ones that are winnable.
Upload your remittance and see what's recoverable.
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