Medical Billing Company Costs: 2026 Pricing Guide​

Medical Billing Company Costs

If you’re a practice owner weighing whether to outsource billing, the first question is always the same: what does it actually cost? Here’s a straight answer, plus the part most billing companies won’t tell you, the hidden fees that make a “cheap” quote expensive.

The short answer

Most medical billing companies charge between 4% and 10% of your monthly collections. The exact rate depends on your specialty, claim volume, and how much of the revenue cycle they handle.

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Here’s roughly how it breaks down:

  • High-volume practices often qualify for lower rates, around 4% to 6%.
  • Smaller or newer practices typically pay more, around 7% to 10%.
  • Complex specialties that need advanced coding, like cardiology or behavioral health, sit at the higher end.
Some companies also offer flat monthly fees ($1,000 to $5,000 a month) or per-claim pricing ($4 to $10 per claim). But the percentage model is the most common, for a specific reason.

Why percentage-based pricing exists

A lot of providers ask why billing companies don’t just charge a flat fee. The answer is incentive alignment. When your biller takes a percentage of what they collect, they only make money when you get paid. That means they’re motivated to work every denial, appeal every recoverable claim, and chase every unpaid balance, because their revenue is tied directly to yours.
A flat fee pays the same whether your claims get collected or not. A percentage model puts your biller on the same side of the table as you.

The hidden fees that make a cheap quote expensive

Here’s the part that matters most. The headline percentage is not the whole cost. Before you sign anything, ask for a full fee schedule, because these charges are where a low rate quietly turns into a high one:
  • Setup or transition fees. Onboarding a new practice can carry a one-time charge, sometimes several thousand dollars.
  • Minimum monthly fees. Some contracts charge a floor even in slow months when your collections are low.
  • Aged A/R charges. If a company takes over your books, they may charge a separate, higher rate to work old claims (over 90 or 120 days) created before the relationship began.
  • Statement and mailing fees. Printing and mailing patient statements is sometimes billed separately.
  • Reporting add-ons. Basic dashboards are usually included, but custom or real-time reporting can be an extra $200 to $800 a month.
  • Termination and data-retrieval fees. Some contracts charge you to leave, or to get your own data back.
The lesson: the lowest percentage doesn’t guarantee the lowest total cost, or the highest revenue. A biller charging 5% who collects aggressively beats a biller charging 4% who lets denials age into write-offs.

What you should actually be comparing

Don’t compare headline percentages. Compare net revenue after all costs. Ask each company three things: what’s your full fee schedule including every add-on, what’s your clean claim rate and denial rate, and what results have you produced for practices my size in my specialty? The right answer isn’t the cheapest quote. It’s the partner who puts the most money in your account after their fee.

How we price at Claim N Billing

We’re a medical billing company in Irvine, and we charge a percentage of collections, so we only earn when you get paid. We go over the exact rate on a discovery call based on your volume and specialty, and we’re transparent about it up front, no buried transition fees or surprise add-ons. Before you decide anything, we can run a free billing audit to show you what revenue you’re currently leaving on the table.

See what you’re leaving on the table

We’ll audit your last 90 days of claims and show you your denial rate and what’s recoverable, with no obligation. Call 949-969-4397 or request your free billing audit.