CO-29 denial code guide showing timely filing limits, claim rejection causes, and denial prevention strategies

CO-29 Denial Code: What It Means, Why It Happens, and How to Fix It

What Is the CO-29 Denial Code?

The Official CARC 29 Definition

What CO-29 Looks Like on Your 835 ERA

CO-29 vs. PI-29: Understanding the Difference

CO-29, Occurrence Code 29, and Modifier 29: Clearing Up the Confusion

Why CO-29 Denials Happen: The Real Root Causes

The Causes Most Billing Teams Already Know

The Causes Most Billing Teams Miss

The Medicare Timely Filing Rule That Drives CO-29 Denials

CO-29 for Medicare Part B vs. N39011 for Medicare Part A

The 2026 CMS Update You Need to Know: CR 12909

How CO-29 Differs from Other Common Denial Codes

How to Resolve a CO-29 Denial: A Step-by-Step Process

Step 1: Confirm the Payer’s Timely Filing Rule and Clock Start Date

Step 2: Check Your Submission Records Against the Receipt Date

Step 3: Gather Your Proof of Timely Filing Documentation

Step 4: File the Appeal with Evidence (Commercial Payers)

Step 5: For Medicare, Pursue a Claim Reopening, Not an Appeal

Step 6: Document the Root Cause and Close the Loop

Medicare CO-29 Exceptions: When a Claim Reopening Can Save the Revenue

Proof of Timely Filing: What Payers Actually Accept

Timely Filing Limits by Payer: 2026 Reference Table

Preventing CO-29 Denials Before They Happen

The Daily and Weekly Controls That Actually Work

Frequently Asked Questions About CO-29 Denial Code

What does CO-29 mean on an EOB?

Can a CO-29 denial be appealed?

What is the difference between CO-29 and N39011?

What is the difference between CO-29 and PI-29?

What is proof of timely filing in medical billing?

What is the Medicare timely filing limit for CO-29 denials?

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