Insurance Claim Denial Statistics
Denial rates, appeal success rates, and documentation requirements by procedure and denial reason. This data is intended for patients, attorneys, journalists, and researchers.
Note: Figures represent estimated averages across major US health plans and may vary by insurer, state, and plan type. Updated 2026.
27%
Average Denial Rate
across tracked procedures
71%
Average Appeal Success
when appealed correctly
24
Procedures Tracked
procedure × reason combinations
88%
Top Appeal Rate
Mammogram screenings
Key Findings
- Prior authorization denials are the most common and most frequently overturned on appeal
- Documentation errors have the highest resolution rate — these are administrative, not clinical, decisions
- Emergency care denials are overturned at high rates, particularly under the No Surprises Act (US)
- Mental health claim denials are disproportionately high relative to physical health — often violating parity laws
- Less than 1% of denied claims are appealed, yet a majority of appeals succeed when properly structured
- Spinal and bariatric surgery denials have lower appeal success rates due to high insurer scrutiny
Denial Data by Procedure
Commonly Required Appeal Documents
The following documents are most frequently required when appealing denied claims.
Letter of medical necessity from treating physician
94%Required in almost all medical necessity appeals
Denial letter and Explanation of Benefits (EOB)
100%Required in all appeals as the starting document
Insurer's clinical policy bulletin
88%Must be requested from the insurer — legally required to provide
Published clinical guidelines (e.g. NCCN, ACS)
76%Used to demonstrate medical standard of care
Physician treatment notes and records
92%Required to support clinical justification
Prior authorisation correspondence
71%Required when the denial involves prior authorisation