Improving Days in A/R: A Best Practices Guide to Optimize Your Revenue Cycle

Reducing Days in Accounts Receivable (A/R) starts with understanding your current DAR performance, identifying the root causes of aging claims, and implementing targeted revenue cycle improvements. For most healthcare organizations, the industry benchmark for Days in A/R is under 40 days, according to the Medical Group Management Association (MGMA).

Days in A/R measures the average number of days it takes for a healthcare organization to collect payment after services are billed. When DAR rises above benchmark levels, cash flow slows, administrative costs increase, and financial stability becomes harder to maintain.

Organizations that consistently maintain low A/R days benefit from stronger cash flow, improved operational efficiency, and greater capacity to reinvest in patient care and growth.

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Table of Contents

    1. Understanding the DAR Calculation Formula

    Days in Accounts Receivable (DAR) measures how long it takes to collect payments after services are billed.

    DAR=Total Accounts ReceivableAverage Daily ChargesDAR = \frac{Total\ Accounts\ Receivable}{Average\ Daily\ Charges}DAR=Average Daily ChargesTotal Accounts Receivable​

    Where:

    Average Daily Charges=Total ChargesNumber of DaysAverage\ Daily\ Charges = \frac{Total\ Charges}{Number\ of\ Days}Average Daily Charges=Number of DaysTotal Charges​

    Definitions

    • Total Accounts Receivable: The outstanding balance owed to the practice for services already provided.

    • Total Charges: Total billed charges during the measurement period.

    • Number of Days: Typically 365 when calculating annually.

    Example

    If a practice has:

    • Total A/R = $300,000

    • Annual charges = $3,650,000

    Average Daily Charges = $3,650,000 ÷ 365 = $10,000

    DAR = $300,000 ÷ $10,000 = 30 days

    This indicates the organization collects payments in 30 days on average, which is well within the MGMA benchmark.

    Practices should calculate DAR regularly and evaluate it by payer, provider group, and specialty to identify performance gaps.

    2. 2026 Days in AR Benchmarks by Specialty

    Days in A/R benchmarks vary across healthcare sectors because billing complexity, payer mix, and reimbursement timelines differ significantly between specialties.

    For example, hospital billing often involves multiple claims and complex payer contracts, while urgent care centers typically process simpler claims with faster reimbursement cycles.

    Healthcare Segment Best-Practice DAR Typical Range
    Physician groups 30–40 days 30–60 days
    Multi-specialty clinics 28–40 days 30–50 days
    Hospitals / health systems 35–50 days 40–70 days
    Ambulatory surgery centers 30–45 days 30–55 days
    Urgent care clinics 25–35 days 25–45 days
    Behavioral health 40–60 days 45–75 days

    Organizations performing above these ranges often face systemic issues such as high denial rates, delayed claim submission, poor eligibility verification, or inefficient payer follow-up processes.

    Benchmark comparisons help revenue cycle leaders prioritize improvement efforts and allocate resources where they will have the greatest impact.

    3. Root Cause Framework for High Days in A/R

    When A/R days rise above benchmark levels, the problem rarely stems from a single issue. Instead, delays usually originate from breakdowns at different stages of the revenue cycle.

    A structured root-cause framework helps organizations pinpoint where these delays occur.

    Revenue Cycle Stage Common Issues Impact on A/R
    Patient Access (Front-End) Eligibility errors, missing authorizations Claims rejected before processing
    Coding & Documentation Coding errors, incomplete notes Claim denials or underpayments
    Claims Submission Delayed claim filing Slower payer processing
    Denial Management Poor denial tracking or delayed appeals Aging receivables
    Payment Posting Posting delays or reconciliation errors Billing discrepancies
    Patient Collections Lack of upfront financial communication Delayed patient payments

    By identifying which stage is causing delays, organizations can move from reactive collections to proactive revenue cycle management.

    4. 12 Proven Strategies to Reduce Days in A/R

    Reducing A/R days requires coordinated improvements across front-end, mid-cycle, and back-end revenue cycle processes.

    4.1 Front-End Optimization

    Front-end accuracy is critical because many claim denials originate during patient registration or scheduling.

    • Capture accurate patient demographics
      Ensure front-desk teams collect complete patient and insurance information. Digital intake systems can significantly reduce manual entry errors.

    • Verify insurance eligibility before appointments
      Insurance coverage should be verified 2–3 days before the visit using automated verification tools.

    • Obtain prior authorizations when required
      Develop payer-specific authorization workflows to prevent authorization-related denials.

    • Collect patient payments upfront
      Providing cost estimates and collecting co-pays at check-in improves patient payment rates and reduces downstream collection efforts.

    4.2 Mid-Cycle Improvements

    The mid-cycle focuses on documentation quality and coding accuracy, both of which directly impact claim acceptance.

    • Ensure accurate medical coding
      Employ certified coders and conduct routine coding audits.

    • Improve documentation completeness
      Implement structured documentation review processes before claims are submitted.

    • Maintain provider credentialing records
      Credentialing management systems help track payer enrollments and avoid billing delays.

    4.3 Back-End Enhancements

    The back-end stage determines how efficiently submitted claims convert into revenue.

    • Submit claims quickly
      Claims should ideally be submitted within 24–48 hours of service.

    • Track and resolve denials promptly
      Denial management tools help categorize rejection reasons and streamline appeals.

    • Segment A/R by aging buckets
      Divide receivables into 0–30, 31–60, 61–90, and 90+ day categories.

    • Establish clear write-off and collections policies
      Define escalation processes for aged claims to avoid inflated A/R balances.

    5. Leveraging Technology and Outsourcing

    Technology and specialized revenue cycle partners have become essential for managing A/R efficiently in modern healthcare environments.

    • Automated eligibility verification
      Real-time eligibility tools confirm coverage before patient visits.

    • Clearinghouse claim edits
      Clearinghouses identify claim errors before submission, reducing rejection rates.

    • Outsourced A/R follow-up teams
      Specialized teams focus on aging claims—particularly those over 60 or 90 days.

    • Revenue cycle analytics dashboards
      Analytics platforms provide visibility into payer performance, denial trends, and aging A/R patterns.

    These solutions help healthcare organizations streamline collections while reducing administrative burden on internal teams.

    6. KPI-Driven A/R Management

    High-performing organizations treat A/R management as a data-driven discipline rather than a reactive process.

    Key performance indicators to monitor include:

    • Days in A/R

    • Denial rate

    • Clean claim rate

    • Net collection rate

    • Aging A/R distribution

    Breaking down these metrics by payer, provider, and specialty allows organizations to detect performance gaps and implement targeted improvements.

    Claims older than 90 days represent revenue at risk and should be prioritized for follow-up.

    7. 90-Day Improvement Roadmap

    Healthcare organizations can often reduce Days in A/R significantly within three months by implementing structured improvements.

    Hello, World!

    Organizations following structured improvement plans often reduce Days in A/R by 10–25% within 90 days.

    8. Clinician Engagement and Documentation Quality

    Clinicians play a critical role in revenue cycle performance, particularly in documentation and coding accuracy.

    Healthcare organizations should:

    • Train physicians on documentation best practices

    • Share denial trends with clinical teams

    • Provide feedback on documentation deficiencies

    • Encourage collaboration between coders and clinicians

    Improved documentation leads to cleaner claims, fewer denials, and faster reimbursement cycles.

    9. Case Study

    A multi-specialty practice reduced its Days in A/R from 55 days to 33 days within four months by:

    • Outsourcing A/R follow-up

    • Implementing automated eligibility verification

    • Strengthening front-end registration workflows

    Results included:

    • 22% increase in collections

    • 35% reduction in claim rejections

    Conclusion

    Reducing Days in A/R requires more than simply pursuing unpaid claims—it requires a disciplined, data-driven revenue cycle strategy.

    By understanding the DAR formula, benchmarking performance by specialty, identifying root causes of aging receivables, and implementing a structured 90-day improvement roadmap, healthcare organizations can consistently maintain A/R performance below the MGMA benchmark of 40 days.

    Partnering with experienced revenue cycle specialists such as MBW RCM can further accelerate improvement through advanced analytics, denial management expertise, and dedicated A/R follow-up services.

    For more insights, visit www.mbwrcm.com or schedule a consultation with our revenue cycle experts by filling the form below.


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    Dhinesh R

    Dhinesh R is a Marketing Manager at MBW RCM with 5 years of experience specializing in Revenue Cycle Management (RCM) marketing and strategy. He has deep expertise in medical billing, coding workflows, denial management, and optimizing end-to-end RCM processes for healthcare organizations. Dhinesh leverages industry insights and data-driven marketing to position MBW RCM as a trusted authority in improving financial performance and operational efficiency.

    https://www.mbwrcm.com/leadership/dhinesh-manager-digital-marketing
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