Clean claim rate
The clean claim rate is the share of claims accepted on first submission without edits or rejections — a leading measure of front-end and coding accuracy.
Updated
The clean claim rate — also called the first-pass acceptance rate — is the percentage of claims accepted by the payer on first submission, without needing correction, additional information, or manual intervention. It measures how often a practice gets a claim right the first time.
A claim is “clean” when it carries complete, accurate data and passes the payer’s edits on first pass. The rate is a leading indicator of front-end quality (registration, eligibility) and mid-cycle quality (coding, charge capture) — problems there surface here first.
How it’s calculated
Clean claims accepted on first submission ÷ Total claims submitted × 100
What counts as “clean” varies slightly by organization and clearinghouse; apply one consistent definition so the trend stays comparable over time.
How to read it
A higher clean claim rate generally means less rework, faster payment, and a lower cost to collect. Because a healthy range depends on specialty, payer mix, and how “clean” is defined, read the rate as a trend over time rather than against a fixed target — treat any external benchmark as directional, not absolute.
What moves it
- Accurate patient and insurance capture at registration
- Eligibility and benefits verified before the visit
- Correct, current-year coding and complete charge capture
- Effective claim scrubbing and edits before submission
Commonly confused with
- Denial rate: The clean claim rate is measured at submission (did the claim pass first-pass edits); the denial rate is measured after adjudication (did the payer refuse to pay).
- Rejection: A rejected claim failed a front-end edit and never reached adjudication — it lowers the clean claim rate but is not a denial.