Every time a health insurance payer processes a claim, it generates a document that explains exactly what was paid, what was adjusted, and what the patient owes. That document is the Explanation of Benefits, or EOB. For patients, it arrives as a notice in the mail. For providers and billing teams, it is one of the most actionable records in the entire revenue cycle.
Yet many practices do not treat it that way. According to the American Hospital Association, insurance underpayments cost U.S. hospitals nearly $63.9 billion in a single year — a figure that grows when EOBs go unreviewed, discrepancies go unchallenged, and denial codes are left unworked. Understanding what an EOB contains and how to respond to it is not a clerical function. It is a core revenue protection responsibility.
This guide explains what an EOB is, how it differs from a remittance advice, how to read it section by section, and what to do when the numbers do not add up.
Why Do EOBs Exist?
The explanation of benefits exists because federal law and standard insurance practice require payers to communicate how a claim was processed. Under ERISA, the ACA, and various state insurance regulations, insurers must notify both providers and patients of their coverage decisions in a format that is readable and documented.
From the provider’s side, the EOB creates an auditable record of each adjudicated claim. It establishes what the payer acknowledged receiving, what it agreed to pay, and what it declined to cover. That record becomes the foundation for payment posting, underpayment disputes, and denial appeals. Without it, billing teams would have no basis to verify whether a payment matched the contracted rate or whether a denial was coded correctly.
What Is an Explanation of Benefits (EOB)?
An explanation of benefits is a formal statement issued by a health insurance payer after a claim has been adjudicated. It summarizes the services that were billed, the payer’s coverage decision, the amounts applied to the patient’s deductible or cost-sharing, and the remaining patient responsibility.
An EOB is not a bill. It is a communication document, not a payment demand. Any balance owed by the patient is collected separately through the provider’s patient billing process.
EOBs are generated for every adjudicated claim, regardless of whether the claim was paid, partially paid, or denied. A zero-pay EOB, one that returns no payment, is just as important as a paid one. It contains the denial reason codes that determine whether and how the claim can be appealed.
EOB vs. ERA (Remittance Advice): What Is the Difference?
In practice, providers encounter two related documents after a claim is processed: the EOB and the Electronic Remittance Advice (ERA). These documents contain similar data, but they serve different audiences and different functions.
| EOB | ERA |
Sent to | Patient (and provider in some cases) | Provider’s billing team |
Format | Paper or PDF, human-readable | ANSI X12 835 electronic file |
Primary use | Benefit explanation, patient communication | Payment posting, AR reconciliation |
Speed | 2–3 weeks by mail | Within 24–72 hours electronically |
Actionable for billing? | Yes, for auditing and dispute documentation | Yes, primary workflow document |
The ERA is the billing team’s working document. It integrates directly with practice management systems to enable automated payment posting. The EOB covers the same adjudication data but is formatted for human review and designed to be understandable to patients without billing expertise.
When ERA and EOB figures do not reconcile, that discrepancy must be investigated before payment is posted. Treating them as interchangeable leads to posting errors and missed underpayments.
How to Read an EOB: Section by Section
Regardless of payer, most EOBs follow a standard structure. Each section carries specific information that requires active review, not passive filing.
- Patient and Member Information
This section identifies the insured member by name, member ID, group number, and plan type. Verify this against the original claim. A member ID mismatch is often the first indicator of an eligibility or claim routing error.
- Provider Information
Lists the rendering provider’s name, NPI, and practice address. If the provider information does not match what was submitted on the claim, the payment may have been applied to the wrong account or processed under incorrect contract terms.
- Claim Summary
A high-level snapshot: date of service, claim number, total amount billed, total allowed, total payer payment, and total patient responsibility. This is where most reviewers stop. It should be where they start — because each line below deserves its own check.
- Billed Amount
The gross charge submitted by the provider before any adjustments. This reflects what the practice submitted, not what it will receive.
- Allowed Amount
The maximum the payer will reimburse under the provider’s contracted fee schedule or, for out-of-network claims, the payer’s usual and customary rate. If the allowed amount is lower than expected for a given CPT code, this may indicate a fee schedule discrepancy and warrants a payer contract review.
- Contractual Adjustment
The difference between the billed amount and the allowed amount, written off per the provider’s contract. This is not collectible from the patient. Misapplied contractual adjustments are one of the most common sources of silent revenue loss.
- Payer Payment
The amount the payer actually paid after applying the patient’s deductible, copay, and coinsurance. This figure should be posted against the patient account and cross-checked against the ERA deposit.
- Patient Responsibility
The remaining balance broken down by deductible applied, copay, and coinsurance. This is the amount that can be billed to the patient after insurance payment is posted.
- Denial and Adjustment Reason Codes
If any service line was denied or adjusted, the EOB will display a Claim Adjustment Reason Code (CARC) and, in many cases, a Remittance Advice Remark Code (RARC). These codes are not informational footnotes. They are operational instructions.
Common CARCs include:
- CO-45: Fee schedule adjustment (allowed amount less than billed)
- CO-97: Service considered bundled, not separately reimbursable
- PR-1: Deductible applied
- CO-50: Service deemed not medically necessary
Each code maps to a specific denial category and requires a specific response: appeal, corrective resubmission, patient billing, or write-off. For a complete breakdown of what denial codes mean and how to act on them, Neolytix’s guide to denial codes in medical billing covers the most common categories and their resolution strategies.
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What to Do When EOB Numbers Do Not Add Up
Discrepancies between expected and actual payments are not uncommon. The question is whether they are identified and acted on, or silently accepted.
Allowed amount is below the contracted rate. Pull the fee schedule for the relevant payer, CPT code, and effective date. If the payment falls short of what the contract specifies, initiate a formal payment dispute within the payer’s dispute window, typically 90–180 days from the EOB date.
Payer payment is lower than expected after the allowed amount. Check whether the patient’s deductible was applied correctly, whether there is a coordination of benefits issue with a secondary payer, or whether the plan year reset affected the patient’s cost-sharing responsibility.
A service line was denied. Identify the CARC and RARC, determine whether the denial is correctable or appealable, and initiate action within the payer’s filing deadline. For a step-by-step walkthrough of the appeals process, Neolytix’s article on how to appeal a medical billing denial covers triage, documentation, and escalation.
EOB and ERA amounts differ. Do not post the payment until the discrepancy is resolved. Contact the payer and request a corrected remittance if the ERA contains an error. Posting without reconciliation creates AR errors that can take months to unwind.
Contractual adjustment appears on a line that should not have been reduced. This may indicate a payer-side processing error or an outdated fee schedule in the payer’s system. Document the discrepancy and escalate to the payer’s provider relations team.
How EOBs Feed Into the Revenue Cycle
The EOB is not a document to file after payment posting. It is an input into multiple downstream functions simultaneously.
Payment posting and reconciliation. Every payment received must be matched to the corresponding EOB or ERA. Unreconciled payments create AR inaccuracies that compound over time. Neolytix’s overview of accounts receivable in medical billing explains how unworked EOB discrepancies are among the fastest contributors to AR aging.
Denial management. The reason codes on a denied EOB determine whether a denial is correctable, appealable, or should be written off. Practices that route denial codes into a structured workflow, rather than responding claim by claim, recover significantly more revenue and reduce recurrence. Neolytix’s complete guide to denial management covers how to build that workflow.
Underpayment auditing. EOBs allow billing teams to audit reimbursement patterns over time. If a practice is consistently receiving below-contract reimbursement for a high-volume CPT code, the EOB record provides the documentation needed to support a formal dispute or contract renegotiation.
Compliance and audit readiness. EOBs are primary documentation in payer audits and RAC reviews. Organized, accessible EOB records demonstrate that the practice is billing accurately and resolving discrepancies appropriately.
When EOB review is treated as a structured billing function rather than a passive receipt step, practices identify underpayments, reduce A/R days, and build the documentation history that supports stronger denial appeals and payer negotiations.
Conclusion
The explanation of benefits is one of the most information-dense documents in medical billing. It records what the payer adjudicated, what it agreed to pay, what it declined, and on what grounds. Every figure in it is either confirmed, disputed, or acted upon — and practices that do not distinguish between those responses absorb the consequences as unrecovered revenue.
Over 14 years of supporting healthcare organizations across specialties, Neolytix’s billing teams have seen how consistently the practices with the strongest financial performance treat EOB reconciliation as a daily operational discipline, not an afterthought. If your practice is looking to reduce revenue leakage, improve denial resolution rates, and build a billing operation that accounts for every adjudicated dollar, Neolytix’s medical billing services are built to do exactly that.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between an EOB and a bill from my provider?
An EOB is issued by the insurance company to explain how a claim was processed. It is not a payment demand. The provider’s bill is a separate document that reflects any remaining balance after insurance has paid its portion.
Can an EOB be used to appeal a denied claim?
Yes. The EOB contains the CARC and RARC codes that identify the reason for a denial, and it serves as primary documentation in the appeal. Any appeal letter should reference the claim number, date of service, and specific codes listed on the EOB.
What does it mean when the allowed amount on an EOB is lower than what was billed?
The allowed amount reflects the maximum the payer will reimburse under the provider’s contracted rate. The difference between the billed amount and the allowed amount is the contractual adjustment, which is a write-off required by the provider’s payer contract and is not billable to the patient.
What is a zero-pay EOB and when does it occur?
A zero-pay EOB is generated when a payer adjudicates a claim but issues no payment. This occurs when a claim is denied entirely, when the entire balance falls to patient responsibility (such as when a deductible is fully applicable), or when a service is deemed non-covered. Zero-pay EOBs require the same review as paid EOBs because they contain denial codes that determine the next billing action.

