The Ultimate Nursing Home Billing Checklist for 2026

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The Ultimate Nursing Home Billing Checklist for 2026

For nursing home owners, CFOs, administrators, and billing managers, billing success depends on more than submitting claims. A strong nursing home billing process starts at admission, continues through payer verification and authorization, moves through clean claim submission, and does not end until every payment, denial, adjustment, resident balance, and AR item is resolved.

In 2026, nursing home billing remains complex. Facilities must manage Medicare, Medicaid, Medicare Advantage, HMO plans, MLTC plans, Medicaid managed care, private pay, hospice, secondary insurance, authorizations, documentation, denials, payment posting, and accounts receivable follow-up.

CMS continues to update skilled nursing facility payment rules each year. For FY 2026, CMS finalized a 3.2% SNF PPS payment update, equal to an estimated $1.16 billion increase in SNF payments compared with FY 2025 before SNF Value-Based Purchasing reductions. CMS also explains that skilled nursing facility consolidated billing generally makes the SNF responsible for billing the full package of care residents receive during a covered Part A SNF stay, with certain services excluded and separately payable.

For facility leadership, the takeaway is simple: reimbursement rules matter, but operational discipline matters just as much. A nursing home can lose money even when rates increase if the billing process is weak.

At Zeebra Group, we help nursing homes and long-term care facilities improve billing workflows, reduce denials, clean up AR, and strengthen revenue cycle performance. You can learn more at Zeebra Group Services.

Why Every Nursing Home Needs a Billing Checklist

A billing checklist helps prevent avoidable revenue leakage. Without a checklist, facilities often depend on memory, individual staff habits, old payer notes, emails, or informal communication between departments.

That creates risk.

A strong checklist helps the facility confirm:

  • The correct payer is identified

  • Eligibility is active

  • Authorizations are approved

  • Census is accurate

  • Documentation is available

  • Claims are clean

  • Denials are tracked

  • Payments are posted correctly

  • AR is reviewed consistently

  • High-risk accounts are escalated

Billing mistakes do not usually happen because staff do not care. They happen because the process is not controlled. A checklist turns billing into a repeatable system.

Admission Billing Checklist

The billing process starts before the first claim is created. If the admission information is wrong, the billing process will be wrong.

Verify Resident Demographics

Confirm:

  • Legal name

  • Date of birth

  • Social Security number, if applicable

  • Address

  • Responsible party

  • Emergency contact

  • Medicaid ID, if applicable

  • Medicare number, if applicable

  • Insurance member ID

  • Spelling of name across payer records

Small demographic errors can cause eligibility problems, claim rejections, and payment delays.

Confirm Primary Payer

Before or immediately after admission, confirm the resident’s primary payer.

Review whether the resident is covered by:

  • Medicare Part A

  • Medicare Advantage

  • Medicaid

  • Medicaid pending

  • MLTC

  • HMO

  • Medicaid managed care

  • Commercial insurance

  • Private pay

  • Hospice

  • Secondary insurance

Do not assume the payer listed on the hospital face sheet is complete or current.

Identify Secondary Coverage

Secondary coverage can affect billing order, resident balances, and final collections.

Confirm:

  • Secondary insurance name

  • Member ID

  • Coordination of benefits

  • Medicare secondary payer issues

  • Medicaid secondary responsibility

  • Supplemental policy details

  • Whether secondary billing is automatic or manual

Missed secondary billing can create preventable write-offs.

Payer Verification Checklist

Payer verification should happen at admission, before billing, and whenever payer status changes.

Medicare Verification

For Medicare residents, confirm:

  • Medicare eligibility

  • Part A status

  • Benefit period

  • Qualifying stay requirements, if applicable

  • Skilled coverage status

  • Medicare Advantage enrollment

  • Prior SNF stay history

  • Exhausted benefits

  • Secondary payer involvement

CMS provides SNF billing reference resources for providers, including guidance related to SNF billing and Medicare coverage.

Medicaid Verification

For Medicaid residents, confirm:

  • Active Medicaid eligibility

  • Effective date

  • Coverage period

  • Medicaid ID

  • County or local district involvement, if applicable

  • Managed care enrollment

  • MLTC enrollment

  • Restrictions or coverage issues

  • NAMI or patient responsibility information

  • Pending application status

Medicaid should be verified for the specific dates being billed, not only once at admission.

HMO and Managed Care Verification

For HMO and managed care residents, confirm:

  • Plan name

  • Member ID

  • Effective date

  • Termination date, if any

  • Facility network status

  • Authorization requirements

  • Claim submission method

  • Portal access

  • Provider relations contact

  • Timely filing rules

  • Appeal rules

Managed care billing requires payer-specific workflows. One plan’s process may not match another plan’s process.

Authorization Checklist

Authorizations are one of the biggest billing risk areas for nursing homes.

Initial Authorization

Confirm:

  • Authorization was requested

  • Request date

  • Plan name

  • Authorization number

  • Approved start date

  • Approved end date

  • Approved level of care

  • Approved days or units

  • Case manager contact

  • Required clinical documents

  • Any special billing instructions

No managed care, HMO, MLTC, or Medicare Advantage claim should be submitted without checking authorization details first.

Continued Stay Authorization

Track:

  • Last covered day

  • Next review date

  • Documents needed

  • Therapy updates

  • Nursing notes

  • Physician documentation

  • Discharge planning notes

  • Date submitted

  • Approval or denial status

  • Appeal deadline, if denied

Continued stay gaps often turn into denied claims.

Authorization-to-Claim Match

Before billing, confirm:

  • Authorization number matches the claim

  • Approved dates match billed dates

  • Approved level matches billed level

  • Plan matches claim payer

  • Member ID matches the authorization

  • Service type matches authorization

  • Authorization has not expired

Having an authorization is not enough. It must match the claim.

Census Checklist

The census is the foundation of nursing home billing.

Daily Census Review

Confirm:

  • New admissions

  • Discharges

  • Hospital transfers

  • Returns from hospital

  • Bed hold days

  • Deaths

  • Room changes

  • Level of care changes

  • Payer changes

  • Hospice start or end dates

  • Medicare end dates

  • Medicaid effective dates

Census errors can delay or deny claims. A one-day mismatch can create a billing issue.

Month-End Census Reconciliation

Before monthly billing, reconcile:

  • Admission dates

  • Discharge dates

  • Leave of absence dates

  • Payer changes

  • Resident status

  • Medicare days

  • Medicaid days

  • HMO/MLTC days

  • Private pay days

  • Hospice days

  • Bed hold days

Billing should not begin until census and payer records agree.

Documentation Checklist

Billing must be supported by documentation.

Clinical Documentation

Confirm documentation supports:

  • Skilled need

  • Nursing services

  • Therapy services

  • Diagnosis information

  • Physician orders

  • MDS information

  • Level of care

  • Continued stay request

  • Discharge planning

  • Payer-requested records

Weak documentation can lead to denials, reduced authorization, audits, or delayed payment.

Billing Documentation

Keep organized records of:

  • Eligibility verification

  • Authorization approvals

  • Plan communications

  • Claim submission confirmations

  • Payer portal messages

  • Denial letters

  • Appeal submissions

  • Payment disputes

  • Remittance advice

  • Adjustment support

Billing documentation should be easy to locate when a payer asks for proof.

Claim Submission Checklist

Before submitting claims, confirm every claim is clean.

Resident and Payer Information

Check:

  • Correct resident name

  • Correct date of birth

  • Correct member ID

  • Correct payer

  • Correct provider information

  • Correct facility information

  • Correct billing address or payer ID

  • Correct secondary payer information

Claim Details

Check:

  • Correct dates of service

  • Correct billing codes

  • Correct revenue codes, if applicable

  • Correct rate code, if applicable

  • Correct diagnosis information

  • Correct authorization number

  • Correct level of care

  • Correct patient status

  • Correct admission and discharge information

  • Correct claim type

  • Required attachments included

Timely Filing

Track:

  • Payer timely filing deadline

  • Original submission date

  • Corrected claim deadline

  • Appeal deadline

  • Proof of timely filing

  • Clearinghouse acceptance

  • Payer acceptance

Do not wait until a claim is old to discover that a filing deadline is close.

Medicare Billing Checklist

Medicare SNF billing requires close attention to coverage, documentation, and consolidated billing rules.

Medicare Part A

Confirm:

  • Skilled coverage requirements are met

  • Benefit period is reviewed

  • Documentation supports skilled services

  • Census days are correct

  • Medicare start date is correct

  • Medicare end date is correct

  • Discharge or transition is documented

  • Claim dates match covered days

Consolidated Billing

Confirm whether services are included under SNF consolidated billing or excluded and separately payable. CMS explains that the SNF generally has billing responsibility for the full package of care during a covered Part A stay, while certain services are specifically excluded and separately payable.

For 2026, CMS also provides updated SNF consolidated billing files, including Part A Medicare Administrative Contractor update materials.

Medicaid Billing Checklist

Medicaid billing requires strong eligibility, payer, and resident responsibility controls.

Medicaid Eligibility

Confirm:

  • Active eligibility

  • Effective dates

  • Medicaid ID

  • Correct payer status

  • Managed care involvement

  • Medicare coordination

  • Resident responsibility

  • Coverage restrictions

  • Retroactive eligibility

Medicaid Pending

Track:

  • Application date

  • Responsible party

  • Missing documents

  • Current status

  • Follow-up date

  • Local district or agency contact

  • Estimated approval date

  • Estimated NAMI or patient responsibility

  • Total balance

  • Next action

Medicaid pending accounts should be reviewed weekly.

NAMI / Patient Responsibility

Review:

  • Monthly amount

  • Effective date

  • Changes

  • Payments received

  • Credits

  • Resident balance

  • Medicaid notices

  • Retroactive adjustments

NAMI mistakes can distort AR and create resident account problems.

HMO and MLTC Billing Checklist

Managed care billing requires extra structure.

HMO Checklist

Confirm:

  • Correct HMO plan

  • Active member coverage

  • Authorization approved

  • Continued stay review completed

  • Claim format correct

  • Portal status checked

  • Denial rules known

  • Appeal deadline tracked

  • Payment expected amount reviewed

MLTC Checklist

Confirm:

  • MLTC enrollment

  • Correct plan

  • Correct member ID

  • Approved service dates

  • Authorization number

  • Service type

  • Plan-specific billing rules

  • Documentation available

  • AR follow-up assigned

  • Underpayment review completed

HMO and MLTC claims should be tracked separately from general AR because they require more active follow-up.

Payment Posting Checklist

Payment posting is a revenue control function, not just a data entry task.

Posting Review

Confirm:

  • Payment posted to correct resident

  • Payment posted to correct payer

  • Denial codes captured

  • Adjustment codes reviewed

  • Contractual adjustments appropriate

  • Underpayments flagged

  • Recoupments identified

  • Secondary billing triggered

  • Resident responsibility applied correctly

  • Balance remaining is accurate

Deposit Reconciliation

Reconcile:

  • Electronic remittance advice

  • Bank deposit

  • Posted payments

  • Adjustments

  • Recoupments

  • Unapplied cash

  • Credit balances

If payment posting is wrong, AR reports will be wrong.

Denial Management Checklist

Denials must be worked quickly and tracked carefully.

Denial Log

Every denial should include:

  • Resident name

  • Payer

  • Claim number

  • Dates of service

  • Amount denied

  • Denial reason

  • Root cause

  • Appeal deadline

  • Documents needed

  • Staff member responsible

  • Next action

  • Final outcome

Root-Cause Review

Categorize denials by:

  • Eligibility

  • Authorization

  • Wrong payer

  • Missing documentation

  • Claim data error

  • Timely filing

  • Duplicate claim

  • Rate or billing code issue

  • Payer processing issue

  • Underpayment dispute

The goal is not only to fix denials. The goal is to prevent repeat denials.

Accounts Receivable Checklist

AR should be reviewed weekly, not only at month-end.

AR Aging

Review:

  • 0–30 days

  • 31–60 days

  • 61–90 days

  • 91–120 days

  • 120+ days

Old AR should receive immediate attention.

AR by Payer

Track:

  • Medicare AR

  • Medicaid AR

  • Medicaid pending AR

  • HMO AR

  • MLTC AR

  • Medicare Advantage AR

  • Private pay AR

  • Hospice AR

  • Secondary AR

  • Resident responsibility AR

Each payer category should have an owner and next action.

High-Dollar AR

Review:

  • High-dollar claims

  • Claims over 90 days

  • Denied claims

  • Claims on hold

  • Appeals pending

  • Underpayments

  • Medicaid pending balances

  • Private pay balances

High-dollar balances should never sit without active follow-up.

Reporting Checklist for Administrators and CFOs

Leadership needs clear billing reports to make decisions.

Weekly Reports

Review:

  • Total AR

  • AR by payer

  • AR over 90 days

  • Claims billed

  • Claims on hold

  • Denials

  • Cash collected

  • Medicaid pending

  • HMO/MLTC AR

  • High-dollar accounts

  • Appeals pending

  • Underpayments

Monthly Reports

Review:

  • Revenue billed

  • Cash collected

  • Denial trends

  • Write-offs

  • Adjustments

  • AR days

  • Payer performance

  • Billing productivity

  • Problem payers

  • Department bottlenecks

Good reporting should show what is happening, why it is happening, and what action is being taken.

Nursing Home Billing KPI Checklist

Track these KPIs consistently:

  • AR days

  • AR over 90 days

  • Clean claim rate

  • Denial rate

  • Claims on hold

  • Cash collections

  • Medicaid pending balance

  • HMO AR

  • MLTC AR

  • Underpayment amount

  • Appeal recovery rate

  • Timely filing risk

  • Payment posting accuracy

  • Write-off amount

KPIs should lead to action, not just discussion.

Common Billing Mistakes This Checklist Helps Prevent

This checklist helps reduce:

  • Wrong payer billing

  • Missing authorizations

  • Expired authorizations

  • Census mismatches

  • Late claims

  • Medicaid pending delays

  • NAMI errors

  • Denials not worked

  • Missed appeals

  • Missed secondary claims

  • Underpayments

  • Incorrect posting

  • Inaccurate AR reports

  • Preventable write-offs

A strong checklist creates consistency across the billing department.

How Zeebra Group Helps Nursing Homes Strengthen Billing Workflows

Zeebra Group helps nursing homes and long-term care facilities improve billing operations and revenue cycle performance.

Our team supports facilities with:

  • Billing workflow review

  • AR follow-up

  • Denial management

  • Medicaid billing

  • Medicaid pending tracking

  • HMO billing

  • MLTC billing

  • Authorization tracking

  • Payment posting review

  • Claims cleanup

  • Underpayment review

  • Revenue cycle reporting

  • Billing department support

A checklist is only useful if the facility has the team, time, and experience to follow it consistently. Zeebra Group helps nursing homes put billing controls into action.

Learn more at Zeebra Group Services.

Conclusion: Strong Nursing Home Billing Requires a Repeatable System

The ultimate nursing home billing checklist for 2026 is not just a list of tasks. It is a framework for protecting cash flow.

Facilities that verify payers early, track authorizations, reconcile census, submit clean claims, post payments accurately, work denials quickly, and review AR weekly are in a stronger financial position.

Facilities that rely on memory, informal communication, and month-end cleanup are more likely to experience denials, old AR, write-offs, and cash flow pressure.

For nursing home owners, CFOs, administrators, and billing managers, the goal is clear: build a billing process that is accurate, organized, measurable, and actively managed.

If your facility needs help improving billing workflows, reducing denials, cleaning up AR, or strengthening revenue cycle performance, Zeebra Group can help.

Contact Zeebra Group to discuss how we can support your nursing home billing and revenue cycle process.

FAQ

What should be included in a nursing home billing checklist?

A nursing home billing checklist should include admission verification, payer verification, authorization tracking, census reconciliation, documentation review, claim submission checks, payment posting, denial management, AR follow-up, and leadership reporting.

Why is payer verification important in nursing home billing?

Payer verification is important because residents may have Medicare, Medicaid, Medicare Advantage, HMO, MLTC, private pay, hospice, or secondary insurance. Billing the wrong payer can cause denials, delays, and AR problems.

How often should nursing homes review AR?

Nursing homes should review AR at least weekly. Claims over 90 days, high-dollar balances, denials, Medicaid pending accounts, HMO claims, and MLTC claims should receive regular attention.

Why do nursing home claims get denied?

Common reasons include missing authorization, expired authorization, wrong payer, incorrect resident information, census mismatch, missing documentation, timely filing issues, incorrect billing codes, and payer-specific claim requirements.

Should HMO and MLTC billing be tracked separately?

Yes. HMO and MLTC billing should be tracked separately because managed care claims usually require more authorization tracking, payer follow-up, portal review, denial management, and appeal monitoring.

Does Zeebra Group help nursing homes improve billing workflows?

Yes. Zeebra Group helps nursing homes with billing workflow review, AR follow-up, denial management, Medicaid billing, HMO billing, MLTC billing, authorization tracking, payment posting review, and revenue cycle support. Learn more at Zeebra Group Services or contact our team.

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