
When a Medicaid claim is denied with CO 146, it means one thing:
“Claim or service was submitted after the time limit for filing expired.”
This denial appears most often in Medicaid and Managed Care Organization (MCO) claims — not Medicare — and signals that the provider missed the timely filing window set by the payer or state Medicaid agency. While code CO 29 denial is the universal time-limit denial for Medicare, 146 CO denial is uniquely associated with Medicaid and MCO timely filing enforcement. In 2025, as states tighten their claim-processing systems and post-COVID filing extensions have expired, CO-146 denial is appearing more frequently than ever.
According to the official CO 146 denial code description, this denial occurs when the claim reaches the payer after the allowed filing window has closed. That means the payer rejects it simply because it was submitted too late. It is a Claim Adjustment Reason Code (CARC) used primarily in Medicaid and Managed Care Organization (MCO) billing. While the code may occasionally appear in commercial claims, it is most commonly associated with state Medicaid systems that enforce strict timely filing requirements (for example, 95 days in Texas, 90 days in New York, or 180 days in Illinois).
This reason code is often accompanied by a Remittance Remark Code (RARC) for further detail — for example:
In 2025, nearly all states have reinstated standard timely filing rules that were temporarily relaxed during the COVID-19 emergency period. That means no more leniency — claims must strictly meet each payer’s published time-frame, or they will deny automatically under CO 146. Billing teams must now track these windows state by state and plan by plan, since even one missed day can turn a payable claim into a permanent denial.
| Aspect | CO 146 |
|---|---|
| Definition | Claim/service submitted after the time limit for filing claim/service expired. |
| Primary Use | Medicaid and Managed Care Organization (MCO) claims. |
| Regulation | Governed by 42 CFR §447.45(d) — states set their own limits. |
| Filing Limit | Fixed at 12 months from the date of service. |
| Proof Requirement | Must show timely submission (EDI 277CA, eligibility letter, or portal log). |
| Exceptions | State-defined (e.g., retroactive eligibility, provider enrollment delay). |
| Appeal or Reopening Rights | Through state Medicaid or MCO appeals |
| Common Remark Codes | N39011, MA39, CO 252. |
| Consequence of Missing Deadline | Often final, unless exception approved by state or MCO. |
Denial code 146 usually appears when a Medicaid or Managed Care Organization (MCO) claim is received after the allowable filing period. While it might sound like a simple timing error, in practice, several operational and technical factors cause this denial — many of which can be prevented with better tracking and documentation. Below are the most common scenarios that lead to CO 146 denials:
The most direct cause: the claim was submitted after the payer’s filing window expired.
If a claim was initially rejected for errors (like missing diagnosis codes or invalid member IDs) and wasn’t corrected within the filing period, it still counts as late.
Sometimes the claim was submitted on time, but the provider can’t prove it.
A provider who isn’t fully enrolled in Medicaid during the date of service can’t bill — even if the claim is timely later.
Another frequent cause is sending the claim to the wrong plan or payer ID.
CO 146 doesn’t always mean negligence — it often reflects process breakdowns between your billing system, clearinghouse, and payer. Still, Medicaid payers rarely grant flexibility without documented evidence, so timely filing proof (EDI reports, logs, acknowledgment numbers) is essential.
Denial code CO 146 is universal in meaning but not in application. Each state Medicaid program — and sometimes each Managed Care Organization (MCO) — interprets and enforces this denial based on its timely filing window and internal claim processing system. Here are real-world examples showing how CO 146 appears in different Medicaid programs in 2025:
| State | Typical Filing Limit | CO 146 Frequency | Appeal Options |
|---|---|---|---|
| Georgia | 180 days | High | Limited – exception proof required |
| Illinois | 180 days | Medium | Reopen with proof of timely original |
| Texas | 95 days | Very High | Reopen via TMHP with valid documentation |
| New York | 90 days | Very High | DOH extension request only |
| Florida | 90–365 days | Medium | AHCA Form 2040 certification allowed |
This section converts the problem into a process — it tells billing teams exactly what to do after receiving a CO 146 denial, how to verify eligibility for exception, and how to reopen claims under 2025 Medicaid rules.
When a Medicaid claim is denied with CO 146, it usually means the payer believes your claim was submitted after the allowed time window. The good news: some of these denials can be overturned — but only with solid documentation and a clear exception reason recognized by the state or MCO. Follow these steps carefully to correct or appeal a CO 146 denial in 2025:
Before doing anything, verify the timely filing limit for that claim’s payer:
Example: Texas Medicaid allows 95 days; Aetna Better Health in the same state allows only 120 days.
If the claim truly missed the payer’s limit, you’ll need an exception to reopen it.
Pull both key dates from your system:
If the claim was transmitted before the deadline but marked “late” by the payer, you can dispute it with proof of submission (see next step).
This is the single most important part of overturning CO 146.
Acceptable proof includes:
💡 Tip: Medicaid will not accept your internal EHR timestamps alone — you must show that the payer (or clearinghouse) actually received the claim within the deadline.
Each state allows only specific exceptions under 42 CFR §447.45(d)(4).
The most common include:
If your claim fits one of these, attach documentation like eligibility notices, FEMA declarations, or enrollment letters.
| State | Form / Process | Deadline for Request |
|---|---|---|
| Florida | AHCA Form 2040 – Timely Filing Certification | Within 6 months of denial |
| Texas | TMHP Late Claim Appeal Form | Within 120 days of denial |
| Louisiana | Form 146 – Late Claim Certification | Within 180 days |
| New York | DOH Timely Filing Extension Request | Same quarter as denial |
| Illinois | HFS Provider Portal Appeal Submission | Within 180 days |
Attach all proof and keep copies of your submission.
After submission:
If no response is received within 30–60 days, follow up directly through the payer’s provider relations channel.
To prevent recurring CO 146 denials:
A CO 146 denial doesn’t always mean lost revenue — but success depends entirely on documentation. If you can prove the claim was filed on time or meets an approved exception, many state Medicaid programs will reopen and pay it. The key is to act quickly, attach verifiable proof, and never let resubmissions linger past the state’s or plan’s correction window
Denial code CO 146 is one of the most common — and most preventable — Medicaid billing denials in 2025. It simply means the claim was submitted after the payer’s allowed filing window. Unlike Medicare’s universal 12-month rule (CO 29), Medicaid filing deadlines vary state by state and plan by plan, with many MCOs allowing only 90–180 days from the date of service. The key to preventing CO 146 denials is awareness and documentation. Providers must know each payer’s timeline, track every claim’s submission date, and maintain proof of timely filing — such as clearinghouse reports, EDI acknowledgments, and portal confirmations. When a claim denies late, the only chance of recovery lies in valid exceptions like retroactive eligibility, provider enrollment delays, or documented system errors.
In today’s tighter regulatory environment, state Medicaid agencies and MCOs are enforcing timely filing rules with greater precision. That’s why healthcare organizations need automated monitoring, state-specific expertise, and exception handling workflows to keep revenue flowing smoothly.
At MedStates, we specialize in identifying and resolving Medicaid timely filing denials like CO 146 — helping providers track submission timelines, manage exceptions, and prevent revenue loss before it happens.
👉 Contact MedStates today to protect your Medicaid reimbursements from timely filing denials and ensure your claims meet every 2025 filing rule — no matter the state or payer.
Demo Description
![]()
Get Free Practice Audit
Gain expert insights into your Practice’s current performance and the ways to improve that further.
Book your slot now!
This will close in 50 seconds