OA-23: Prior Payer Adjudication Impact
OA-23 means this payer adjusted its payment to account for what a prior payer already paid or adjusted. It appears on secondary/tertiary remits and reflects coordination of benefits — but the coordination math is often wrong.
Why payers issue OA-23
- The secondary applied its own allowed instead of covering the balance the primary left
- The primary's payment or adjustments were read into coordination incorrectly
- The primary/secondary order was mis-sequenced
- The secondary processed the line as if it were primary
Is it recoverable? Worth reconciling — when the secondary underpays the balance owed after the primary's EOB, the shortfall is a recoverable COB error.
Common questions
What does OA-23 mean?
OA-23 means this payer adjusted its payment to account for what a prior payer already paid or adjusted. It appears on secondary/tertiary remits and reflects coordination of benefits — but the coordination math is often wrong. The impact of prior payer(s) adjudication including payments and/or adjustments.
How do I appeal or fix a OA-23 denial?
Worth reconciling — when the secondary underpays the balance owed after the primary's EOB, the shortfall is a recoverable COB error. Common causes: the secondary applied its own allowed instead of covering the balance the primary left; the primary's payment or adjustments were read into coordination incorrectly; the primary/secondary order was mis-sequenced; the secondary processed the line as if it were primary.
Is a OA-23 denial worth appealing?
Worth reconciling — when the secondary underpays the balance owed after the primary's EOB, the shortfall is a recoverable COB error. You only pay on what's actually recovered, so there's no cost to working the ones that are winnable.
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