Carepatron blog · draft for review
Most medical billing services charge a percentage of what they collect for you, typically 4 to 10% of collections, and most practices pay 5 to 7% (Physicians Side Gigs, 2025). Some bill a flat fee per claim, usually $3 to $10. Carepatron's collections fee is 3.9%, below that range, plus a flat per-provider monthly fee.
That last line matters, so read it carefully. The 3.9% is a collections fee, not the whole bill. A flat per-provider monthly fee applies on top, while most percentage-based services fold everything into their percentage. The honest comparison is always total cost, not the headline number, and this article shows you how to do that math.
Below you will find the three pricing models explained, a side-by-side table, a worked example in real dollars, and the hidden fees to check before you sign anything.
Medical billing services use one of three pricing models: a percentage of collections, a flat fee per claim, or in-house billing. Each suits a different practice profile, and the right choice depends on your claim volume, your average reimbursement, and how clean your claims already are.
Percentage of collections is the most common model for small practices. You pay an agreed percentage of every dollar the service actually collects on your behalf. Because the fee scales with revenue, the service is paid more when you are paid more, which aligns incentives around getting claims paid.
Flat fee per claim charges a fixed dollar amount for each claim submitted, commonly $3 to $10 (Physicians Side Gigs, 2025). This can suit high-volume practices with consistent, simple claims, but you pay the same whether the claim is paid in full, partially paid, or denied.
In-house billing means you employ the biller yourself rather than outsourcing. The cost is a salary plus overhead rather than a percentage, which changes the math entirely. We cover that full loaded cost in the in-house vs outsourced comparison.
The percentage a service quotes is not arbitrary. According to Physicians Side Gigs (2025), a rate under 4% often signals a basic, automated, or offshore service rather than full-service revenue cycle management. Higher rates usually reflect more hands-on work.
Three factors move the number most:
The table below compares the three pricing models on how the fee is calculated, who they tend to suit, and the main trade-off. Use it to narrow your shortlist before you ask any service for its all-in number.
| Pricing model | How the fee works | Typical range | Suits | Main trade-off |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Percentage of collections | A percentage of what the service actually collects | 4 to 10% of collections, most pay 5 to 7% | Small and growing practices; aligns the service's pay with yours | Cost rises with revenue; rates under 4% may signal a basic service |
| Flat fee per claim | A fixed dollar amount per claim submitted | $3 to $10 per claim | High-volume practices with simple, consistent claims | You pay the same whether a claim is paid, partially paid, or denied |
| In-house biller | A salary you pay directly, plus benefits, software, and overhead | Loaded cost covered in the in-house vs outsourced guide | Larger practices with steady volume and management capacity | Fixed cost regardless of collections; you carry turnover and error risk |
Source for ranges: Physicians Side Gigs, 2025. The in-house loaded-cost math is covered in the in-house vs outsourced guide.
To see what the numbers mean, take a solo practice that collects $25,000 a month, or $300,000 a year. The table applies common percentage rates to that figure so you can compare them directly. Read the labels carefully, because the models are not all measured the same way.
| Annual collections | Rate | Annual fee | What this covers |
|---|---|---|---|
| $300,000 | 3.9% (collections fee only) | $11,700 | Carepatron's collections fee. A flat per-provider monthly fee applies on top. |
| $300,000 | 6% (all-in) | $18,000 | A typical mid-range percentage service, everything folded in |
| $300,000 | 8% (all-in) | $24,000 | A higher-touch or complex-specialty percentage service, everything folded in |
Here is the part that keeps the comparison honest. Carepatron charges 3.9% of collections plus a flat per-provider monthly fee, while most percentage-based competitors fold all their costs into a single percentage. So the $11,700 line is not Carepatron's total, and the 6% and 8% lines already include everything those services charge.
Flat per-claim pricing changes the shape of the comparison again. If that same practice submits about 200 claims a month at $6 a claim, it pays $1,200 a month, or $14,400 a year, regardless of how much each claim actually collects. A slow month with the same claim count still costs $1,200, which is the risk a per-claim model puts on you.
Even after you add the flat per-provider monthly fee to the 3.9%, the total for a single-provider practice at this volume typically lands below the 5 to 7% most practices report paying (Physicians Side Gigs, 2025). The way to confirm it for your own numbers is simple. Ask every service, including us, for its all-in annual cost on your actual collections, then compare those totals side by side.
The quoted percentage is rarely the full story. Many billing contracts add fees that do not appear in the headline number, so the service that looks cheapest can end up costing more. Before you sign, get the all-in cost in writing.
Watch for these common add-ons:
Ask any service these questions before committing:
That last question is worth pressing on. With Carepatron, billing runs under your own NPI and Tax ID, so your payer contracts and credentialing stay yours if you ever leave. Platforms that credential you under a group NPI work differently, which we cover in who owns your insurance contracts on Headway and Alma.
Most practices pay 5 to 7% of collections, within a broader range of 4 to 10% (Physicians Side Gigs, 2025). Flat per-claim pricing usually runs $3 to $10 per claim. Total cost depends on your claim volume, specialty complexity, and whether denials, appeals, and credentialing are included.
Percentage-based billing ties the service's pay to what it collects, which suits most small practices and aligns incentives around getting claims paid. Flat fee per claim can be cheaper for high-volume practices with simple, consistent claims, but you pay the same whether a claim is paid or denied.
A rate under 4% of collections often signals a basic, automated, or offshore service rather than full-service revenue cycle management (Physicians Side Gigs, 2025). Confirm what is actually included before choosing on price alone. A low percentage that excludes denials, appeals, or patient billing can cost more in unrecovered revenue.
No. The percentage is only part of the bill. Setup fees, monthly minimums, per-statement charges, and credentialing add-ons can make a low headline rate more expensive overall. Always compare the all-in annual cost on your actual collections rather than the advertised percentage.
Carepatron's collections fee is 3.9% of collections, below the typical industry range of 4 to 10%, plus a flat per-provider monthly fee. The monthly fee covers each provider regardless of claim volume, and credentialing for up to five payers per provider is included in it.
Price matters, but scope and ownership matter as much. A service that handles denials, appeals, and credentialing recovers revenue a cheaper claims-only service leaves on the table. Confirm what is included, how the fee is calculated, and what you keep if you leave before deciding.
Carepatron's managed billing is full-service revenue cycle management run inside your practice software: claims, denials, patient billing, and credentialing, all under your own NPI. The collections fee is 3.9%, below the typical industry range of 4 to 10%, plus a flat per-provider monthly fee.
That structure is deliberate. The flat monthly fee covers each provider regardless of claim volume, and the 3.9% applies to collections received, so you are not charged a percentage of money that was never collected. Credentialing for up to five payers per provider, eligibility checks, denial management and appeals, payment posting, patient billing, and monthly reporting are part of the service. When you compare us against percentage-based services, add our flat monthly fee to the 3.9% and weigh that total against their all-in number on your actual collections.
Carepatron offers managed billing, so we have a commercial interest in this topic. The pricing ranges above come from the cited third-party source; the comparison is ours.
If you are weighing the cost against handling billing yourself, the in-house vs outsourced comparison runs the full loaded-cost math. For the full picture across billing and credentialing, start with the private-practice billing guide. And because unpaid denials quietly raise your real cost of billing, it is worth understanding why insurance claims get denied and how to fix it.
See how Carepatron's revenue cycle management works.
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}All nine articles · Previous: medical-billing-for-private-practice · Next: How to Get Credentialed With Insurance Companies: Timeline, Cost & Steps