US Medical Billing

Clearinghouse

A clearinghouse is an intermediary that receives claims from providers, scrubs them against payer edits, and routes them electronically to the right payers — returning rejections and remittances.

Updated

A clearinghouse sits between a provider’s billing system and the payers. It accepts submitted claims, checks them against format and payer-specific edits, translates them into each payer’s required electronic format, and forwards them — then routes the payers’ rejections and remittances back to the provider.

It is a category of system, not a specific product: named clearinghouse products are examples of the concept, never the concept itself.

In practice

A clearinghouse catches many format and data errors before a claim reaches the payer, so a claim rejected at the clearinghouse can be fixed and resubmitted without ever counting as a payer denial. That front-line scrubbing is part of what lifts the clean-claim rate.

Commonly confused with

Sources

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