Data for researchers, journalists, and patients

Insurance Denial Statistics 2026

The data behind denied claims: denial rates by insurer, appeal success rates, total dollars denied, and why 99.8% of patients never fight back. All figures cited to primary sources.

Sources: CMS, KFF, AHIP, OIG, State Insurance Departments — Last updated February 2026

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Key Statistics at a Glance

These are the most-cited facts on US insurance denial rates. Each figure is linked to its primary source.

1 in 7
Medicare Advantage claims denied

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services found that Medicare Advantage plans denied 1 in 7 prior authorization requests in 2023 — many of which met coverage criteria and would have been approved under traditional Medicare.

Source: CMS 2023 Medicare Advantage Audit Data
0.2%
of denied claims are actually appealed

Despite high success rates for appeals, fewer than 1 in 500 people with a denied claim file a formal appeal. The overwhelming majority of denials — 99.8% — go entirely unchallenged by patients who don't know their rights.

Source: KFF Marketplace Enrollment Report 2023
57–80%
of properly-filed appeals succeed

When policyholders do appeal with proper documentation and legal citations, they overturn the insurer's decision at rates between 57% and 80% depending on the denial type and appeal level. At external review, the overturn rate reaches 72%.

Source: KFF / HealthAffairs / CMS External Appeals 2023
$4,200
average value of a denied insurance claim

The average denied claim in the US is worth approximately $4,200 — making it financially significant for most patients. Yet most patients never challenge the denial, leaving billions on the table annually.

Source: AHIP Health Insurance Coverage & Cost Drivers 2023
$262B
in insurance claims denied annually in the US

$262 billion in legitimate healthcare claims are denied by US insurers every year. This figure represents a massive transfer of cost from insurers back to patients — most of it never challenged.

Source: AHIP / CMS Transparency in Coverage Analysis 2023
17%
average in-network claim denial rate (US marketplace)

US marketplace health plans deny approximately 17% of all in-network claims on average. Some insurers deny more than 30% of in-network claims. The variation between insurers is extreme.

Source: KFF analysis of CMS data 2023
200M+
insurance claims denied annually in the US

Over 200 million individual insurance claims are denied each year in the United States alone. Combined with the 0.2% appeal rate, this represents an enormous unaddressed patient rights crisis.

Source: CMS Transparency in Coverage Data / AHIP 2023

Citing this data? Please attribute: "ClaimBack Insurance Denial Statistics 2026, compiled from CMS, KFF, and AHIP public data."

CMS.govKFF.orgAHIP.orgOIG HHS

Denial Rates by Insurer — Medicare Advantage

Based on CMS Medicare Advantage audit and enforcement data. These figures represent prior authorization denial rates for Medicare Advantage plan members. Rates vary by plan type and state.

InsurerMA Denial Rate (approx.)NotesSource
UnitedHealthcare32%Highest denial rate among major MA plans per CMS auditCMS Medicare Advantage Audit 2023
Humana18%Above average MA denial rate; high prior auth usageCMS Medicare Advantage Audit 2023
Aetna (CVS Health)15%Midrange MA denial rate; strict CDG applicationCMS Medicare Advantage Audit 2023
Cigna14%Algorithmic prior auth denials flagged in Congressional inquiryCMS / House Energy & Commerce 2023
Anthem BCBS22%Elevated denial rate; subject to state DOI investigationsCMS Medicare Advantage Audit 2023
Kaiser Permanente7%Lower denial rate; integrated model reduces prior auth frictionCMS Medicare Advantage Audit 2023

Note: These are approximate figures from publicly available CMS audit reports and Congressional investigation data. Actual denial rates may vary by plan and year. Commercial (non-Medicare) plan denial data is less standardized.

Appeal Success Rates by Denial Reason

Not all denials are equal — and neither are the odds of winning an appeal. Here is the breakdown by denial type, based on CMS external review data and peer-reviewed health policy research.

~70%
overturn rate
Prior authorization denials

Prior auth denials — the most common Medicare Advantage denial type — are overturned approximately 70% of the time on appeal. CMS data shows these denials are frequently not clinically justified.

~60%
overturn rate
Medical necessity denials

Medical necessity is the most common denial reason across all plan types. When appealed with proper clinical documentation and the treating physician's statement, approximately 60% are reversed.

~45%
overturn rate
Experimental / investigational denials

Experimental treatment denials are harder to overturn but succeed roughly 45% of the time, particularly when supported by NCCN guidelines, peer-reviewed literature, or FDA breakthrough designations.

~55%
overturn rate
Out-of-network denials

Out-of-network denials, especially for emergency care or when no in-network alternative was available, succeed on appeal approximately 55% of the time under federal balance billing and network adequacy rules.

External review note: When appeals are escalated to an Independent Review Organization (IRO) — as required by the ACA — policyholders succeed approximately 72% of the time. External review is free and legally binding on the insurer. (Source: CMS External Appeals Data 2023)

The 0.2% Problem: Why Patients Don't Appeal

Despite a 57–80% appeal success rate, fewer than 1 in 500 people with a denied claim ever challenge it. Understanding why reveals a system-wide patient rights failure.

1
Fear of complexity

Most patients don't know how to write a formal appeal letter that correctly cites ERISA, ACA Section 2719, CMS guidelines, and insurer-specific coverage determination guidelines (CDGs). The regulatory landscape is intentionally dense. An appeal that fails to cite the right statute often loses on procedural grounds alone.

2
Not knowing their rights

A landmark JAMA study found that most patients are unaware they have a federally protected right to appeal under the Affordable Care Act (42 U.S.C. § 300gg-19) and ERISA. Insurers are not required to prominently explain this right in denial letters. Many denial notices bury appeal information in fine print.

3
Time and cognitive burden

Insurance appeals require patients to gather medical records, obtain physician statements, research regulatory grounds, and draft formal correspondence — often while seriously ill. The average successful appeal takes 8–12 hours of patient time. For people dealing with illness, this burden is effectively insurmountable without help.

4
Belief that it's hopeless

Insurance companies project an image of finality in their denial letters. Language like "coverage not available under your plan" is designed to close the conversation. Most patients don't know that 57–80% of properly-filed appeals succeed — or that external review reverses insurer decisions 72% of the time.

99.8%
of denied claims go unchallenged — worth billions in legitimate healthcare costs shifted onto patients
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Global Insurance Denial Statistics

Insurance denial and appeal data from key international markets. While the US has the most detailed public data, other countries show similar patterns of under-reporting and under-appealing.

🇬🇧 United Kingdom
75,000+
insurance complaints handled by FOS annually

The Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS) handles over 75,000 insurance complaints per year. Approximately 35% are upheld in the consumer's favour. FOS awards up to £375,000 per complaint.

Source: FOS Annual Review 2023/24
🇦🇺 Australia
98,000+
complaints received by AFCA in 2022/23

The Australian Financial Complaints Authority (AFCA) received over 98,000 complaints in 2022/23 — a record high. Health insurance complaints via the Private Health Insurance Ombudsman (PHIO) rose 13%. AFCA awards up to AUD 1.08 million.

Source: AFCA Annual Review 2022/23 / PHIO Annual Report 2023
🇸🇬 Singapore
SGD 100K
max FIDReC dispute limit — free for consumers

Singapore's Financial Industry Disputes Resolution Centre (FIDReC) handles insurance disputes up to SGD 100,000 free of charge. Cases are typically resolved within 6 months. MAS Notice 120 mandates insurer compliance.

Source: MAS / FIDReC 2024
🇦🇪 UAE
30 days
insurer response deadline under CBUAE regulations

UAE insurers must respond to all claims within 30 days under Central Bank of UAE (CBUAE) regulations. Dubai Health Authority (DHA) and Department of Health Abu Dhabi (DoH) also set strict claim processing standards for health insurance.

Source: UAE Federal Insurance Law / CBUAE 2023

Methodology Note

ClaimBack compiled these statistics from the following primary sources:

  • CMS (Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services) — Medicare Advantage audit data, Transparency in Coverage data, External Appeals database
  • KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation) — Health Insurance Survey, Marketplace Enrollment Report, analysis of CMS claims data
  • AHIP (America's Health Insurance Plans) — industry utilization and denial reports
  • OIG (HHS Office of Inspector General) — Medicare Advantage oversight reports (2021, 2022, 2023)
  • State insurance department databases — NY DFS, CA CDI external appeal data
  • International regulators — AFCA (Australia), FOS (UK), FIDReC (Singapore), CBUAE (UAE), PHIO (Australia)
  • Peer-reviewed literature — HealthAffairs, JAMA, NEJM on insurance appeals and patient rights

Where precise figures are not publicly available, approximate ranges are stated. Insurer-specific denial rate figures represent Medicare Advantage data and may differ from commercial plan rates. All data is subject to revision as primary sources update.

Last updated: February 2026. Next review scheduled: August 2026.

Frequently Asked Questions

What percentage of Medicare Advantage claims are denied?

According to CMS 2023 data, 1 in 7 (approximately 14%) of Medicare Advantage prior authorization requests are denied. A 2022 OIG report found that 13% of prior authorization denials would have been covered under traditional Medicare, suggesting many denials are unjustified.

How many people appeal denied insurance claims?

Only 0.2% of people with a denied insurance claim formally appeal, according to KFF analysis of CMS marketplace data. This means 99.8% of all denied claims go entirely unchallenged — despite 57-80% of properly-filed appeals succeeding.

What is the appeal success rate for denied insurance claims?

The appeal success rate for denied insurance claims ranges from 57% to 80% depending on the denial type and appeal level. At external independent review (required by law under the ACA), policyholders succeed approximately 72% of the time. Prior authorization denials have the highest overturn rate at approximately 70%.

Which insurance company has the highest claim denial rate?

Among major Medicare Advantage insurers, UnitedHealthcare had the highest denial rate in CMS audit data at approximately 32% of prior authorization requests. Anthem BCBS followed at approximately 22%. Kaiser Permanente had the lowest at approximately 7%, attributed to its integrated care model.

How much money is denied in insurance claims each year?

Approximately $262 billion in healthcare claims are denied by US insurers annually, based on AHIP and CMS Transparency in Coverage data analysis. With over 200 million individual claims denied per year and an average denied claim value of approximately $4,200, the scale of unchallenged denials represents an enormous financial burden on patients.

Why don't more patients appeal denied insurance claims?

Research identifies three primary barriers: (1) fear of complexity — patients don't know how to write an effective appeal; (2) unawareness of rights — most patients don't know they have a legally protected right to appeal under the ACA and ERISA; (3) time constraints — the process seems overwhelming when dealing with illness. Only 0.2% of denied claims are appealed despite 57-80% of appeals succeeding.

Related Guides

How to Appeal an Insurance Claim DenialTop 10 Reasons Claims Are DeniedInsurance Denial Report 2026MRI Claim Denied — Appeal GuideMental Health Claim Denied🇺🇸 US Insurance Claim DeniedAppeal Deadline CalculatorDenial Rate Lookup ToolInsurance Regulators by CountryInsurer Complaint IndexOur Data SourcesOur Methodology

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Statistics sourced from publicly available data including CMS, KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation), AHIP, OIG HHS, AFCA, FOS, FIDReC, and other regulatory bodies. Insurer-specific figures are approximate and based on Medicare Advantage audit data — commercial plan rates may differ. Individual results may vary. ClaimBack is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. Data last updated: February 2026.