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NC Dept of Insurance · External Review for HMO/PPO · 60-Day Appeal Deadline

🌲 Fight Your Insurance Denial in North Carolina

Denied by Blue Cross Blue Shield of NC, Aetna, UnitedHealthcare, Cigna, or Ambetter? North Carolina provides external review for both HMO and PPO plans. ClaimBack writes your appeal in 3 minutes.

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Your Rights in North Carolina

North Carolina provides a structured appeal framework through the NC Department of Insurance, with external review available for both HMO and PPO plan members. Act quickly — the 60-day internal appeal deadline is shorter than many states.

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NC Department of Insurance (NCDOI)

The North Carolina Department of Insurance regulates all insurance companies in the state under NC General Statutes Chapter 58. NCDOI handles consumer complaints, enforces insurance law, and administers the external review program. You can file a complaint with NCDOI at no cost. The department has authority to investigate claims handling practices and require compliance with North Carolina law.

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External Review for HMO & PPO Plans

Unlike some states that limit external review to HMO plans only, North Carolina provides external review for both HMO and PPO plan denials under Article 50C. After exhausting internal appeals, an independent review organization (IRO) reviews your case. The IRO decision is binding on your insurer. External review covers denials based on medical necessity, appropriateness, health care setting, and experimental/investigational determinations.

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60-Day Internal Appeal Deadline

North Carolina requires you to file an internal appeal within 60 days of receiving your denial notice — shorter than the 180-day deadline in many other states. Your insurer must respond within 30 days for standard cases or 72 hours for urgent situations. After a final internal denial, you can request external review through NCDOI. Expedited external review is available for urgent medical cases.

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North Carolina-Specific Protections

North Carolina mandates coverage for autism spectrum disorders (NCGS 58-3-190), requires mental health parity under federal MHPAEA standards, and provides surprise billing protections. The state also mandates coverage for mammography, cervical cancer screening, colorectal cancer screening, and clinical trials. These state mandates give ClaimBack additional legal citations to strengthen your appeal.

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Share your insurer (BCBSNC, Aetna, UnitedHealthcare, etc.), plan type (HMO or PPO), claim type, and the denial reason from your EOB.
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Our AI reviews your claim against NC General Statutes Chapter 58, Article 50C external review rules, federal ACA protections, and your plan's own coverage criteria.
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60 days
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Related Guides

How to Appeal a Denied Claim in NCNorth Carolina Insurance Appeal GuideBCBS North Carolina Denial GuideUS Insurance Appeal Rights Overview

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I appeal a health insurance denial in North Carolina?

In North Carolina, start by filing an internal appeal with your insurer within 60 days of the denial (or as specified in your denial letter). Your insurer must provide a first-level grievance review. If denied again, you can request a second-level review. After exhausting internal appeals, you can request external review through the NC Department of Insurance. External review is available for both HMO and PPO plan denials based on medical necessity or coverage determinations.

What is the role of the NC Department of Insurance in claim denials?

The North Carolina Department of Insurance (NCDOI) regulates all insurance companies in the state. NCDOI handles consumer complaints, enforces North Carolina insurance law (Chapter 58 of the NC General Statutes), and administers the external review program for both HMO and PPO plans. You can file a complaint with NCDOI at no cost if your insurer improperly denies a claim or fails to follow proper procedures.

What is the 60-day internal appeal deadline in North Carolina?

North Carolina requires you to file an internal appeal within 60 days of receiving your denial notice. This is shorter than some states that allow 180 days. Your insurer must respond to your internal appeal within 30 days for standard cases or 72 hours for urgent/expedited cases. Missing the 60-day deadline may forfeit your right to internal appeal and external review, so it is critical to act quickly after receiving a denial.

Does North Carolina provide external review for both HMO and PPO plans?

Yes. North Carolina provides external review for both HMO and PPO plan denials. Under NC General Statutes Chapter 58, Article 50C, members of both HMO and PPO plans can request external review after exhausting internal appeals. The review is conducted by an independent review organization (IRO) and covers denials based on medical necessity, appropriateness, or experimental/investigational determinations. The IRO decision is binding on your insurer.

ClaimBack provides AI-assisted document drafting. We are not a law firm and do not provide legal advice.