What it means: The patient's insurance member ID number submitted on the claim does not match the name the payer has on file for that ID. The payer's system cannot verify the patient's identity, so the claim is rejected. This is almost always a front desk data entry issue.
| Field | Detail |
|---|---|
| Code | 140 |
| Group | CO (Contractual Obligation) |
| Official Description | Patient/Insured health identification number and name do not match. |
| Common Cause | Typo in member ID, wrong subscriber listed, name change not updated |
| Billable to Patient? | No. CO group = provider responsibility to correct. |
| Typical Resolution | Corrected claim resubmission after verifying eligibility |
CO-140 is a registration and eligibility denial. The clinical side of the claim may be perfectly coded, but the payer can't process it because the patient identification data doesn't check out. This code is responsible for a disproportionate amount of revenue delay because it's entirely preventable with proper front-end verification.
The most common cause. A single transposed digit, missing letter, or extra character in the member ID (Box 1a on CMS-1500) means the payer's system pulls up no match or the wrong subscriber. This happens most often when front desk staff manually types the ID from the insurance card instead of scanning or copying it.
The patient's name in your system doesn't match what the payer has. Common scenarios: the patient goes by a nickname ("Bob" vs. "Robert"), the patient recently married or divorced and changed their name, or there's a hyphenation or suffix difference ("Smith-Jones" vs. "Smith Jones" vs. "Jones").
For dependents, the claim may have the dependent's name but the primary subscriber's member ID, or vice versa. If a child is covered under a parent's plan, the subscriber information (Box 4) needs to show the parent, while the patient information (Box 2) shows the child. Getting this relationship wrong triggers CO-140.
The patient switched insurance plans (new employer, marketplace enrollment, turning 65 and moving to Medicare) but your system still has the old member ID on file. The old ID either doesn't exist in the new payer's system or belongs to a different person.
The patient has multiple insurance plans and the claim was submitted with the wrong payer's member ID. For example, the primary insurance member ID was submitted to the secondary payer, or the patient's spouse's ID was used instead of the patient's own.
Get a fresh copy of the patient's insurance card, either from the patient directly or from the scanned image in your system. Compare every character of the member ID and subscriber name against what's on the claim. Look for transposed digits, missing prefixes/suffixes, and name spelling differences.
Use your clearinghouse or practice management system to run an eligibility verification with the payer. This will confirm whether the member ID and name combination is valid and active. If the eligibility check returns a match, compare the returned data against what's on your claim to find the discrepancy.
If the eligibility check fails too, call the payer with the patient's date of birth and last four of SSN. Ask them to look up the correct member ID. The patient may have a new ID number, or the payer may have the name listed differently than expected. Document the correct information.
Correct the member ID and/or patient name in your practice management system so the patient's demographic record matches the payer's data exactly. Then resubmit a corrected claim (frequency code 7) with the correct information.
If the member ID was wrong in the patient's demographic record, every claim for that patient has the same issue. Search for other denied or pending claims and batch-correct them.
Front Desk Tip: The majority of CO-140 denials originate at patient registration. Implementing a policy of scanning insurance cards (rather than typing) and running real-time eligibility verification before every visit eliminates most CO-140 denials before they happen. A 30-second eligibility check saves 30 minutes of denial follow-up.
Verify eligibility before every visit. Run an electronic eligibility check through your clearinghouse before the patient is seen. This confirms the member ID and name match in real time. If the check fails, resolve it at the front desk before the encounter, not after the claim denies 30 days later.
Scan insurance cards, don't type them. Optical character recognition (OCR) from a card scan eliminates the typo risk that causes most CO-140 denials. If scanning isn't available, have two staff members independently verify the member ID on new patient registrations.
Ask about insurance changes at every visit. Train front desk staff to ask "Has your insurance changed since your last visit?" at check-in. Update the record on the spot if anything has changed. Don't assume last visit's insurance is still active.
Verify subscriber vs. dependent relationships. For any patient who is not the primary subscriber (children, spouses), confirm that Box 4 (Insured's Name) and Box 1a (Insured's ID) reflect the subscriber, not the patient. This is the #1 CO-140 trigger for pediatric practices.
CO-140 denials are 100% preventable with proper front-end verification. We implement eligibility workflows that catch mismatches before claims are submitted, not after they deny.
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