Every time you visit a doctor, get a lab test, or go to the ER, your insurance company sends you an Explanation of Benefits (EOB). Most people file it in the trash. That's a mistake.
The EOB is the most important document in the insurance process. It tells you what was billed, what the insurance allowed, what they paid, and what you might owe. It also flags denials, errors, and things worth questioning. If you know how to read it, you can catch billing mistakes, spot denials early, and know exactly when to appeal.
What an EOB Actually Is (and Why You Get One First)
When a provider submits a claim to your insurance company, the insurer processes it and produces an EOB. This document tells you how the claim was handled: whether it was paid, denied, or reduced. It arrives before the provider's bill because you need to know what the insurance thinks happened before you pay anything.
The EOB has two audiences: you and the provider. For you, it's transparency — a way to verify that your insurance processed the claim correctly. For the provider, it's notice of what the insurance paid, which determines how much (if anything) they can bill you for.
If your plan has a deductible, the EOB will show you how much of it you've met. If you've already paid your copay for the year, it will show that. If there's a denial, it will show the code. All of this information is useful — and none of it appears on the provider's bill until much later.
The Key Sections on Every EOB
EOBs look dense, but they're organized into distinct sections. Once you know what each does, the whole document becomes readable in about five minutes.
The Header: Who's Billing You
The top of the EOB identifies who submitted the claim, when, and under which plan. Key fields:
- Patient name and member ID — Verify this is your record. Errors here cause denials that are entirely avoidable.
- Provider name and tax ID — If you don't recognize the provider, that's a red flag (see below).
- Date of service — Confirm this matches what you actually received.
- Plan name and group number — Useful when calling your insurance company, as the rep will ask for these.
The Service Lines: What Was Done
Below the header is a table — sometimes called the "service line detail" — listing each procedure or service on the claim. Each row shows:
- Date of service (when you were seen)
- Procedure code (CPT code) — The medical code for the specific service
- Description — Plain-English name of the service
- Billed amount — What the provider charged
- Allowed amount — What your insurance will recognize as the maximum charge
- Insurance payment — What the insurer paid
- Patient responsibility — What you owe
- Adjustment codes — Why the billed amount differs from what was paid
Here's a simplified example of what those rows look like:
| What happened | Billed | Allowed | Insurance paid | You owe | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Office visit, established patient | $185 | $112 | $89.60 | $22.40 | Paid |
| Chest X-ray (two views) | $340 | $98 | $0 | $98.00 | Denied: CO-4 |
| Lab panel (CBC + metabolic) | $220 | $64 | $64.00 | $0.00 | Paid |
In this example, the chest X-ray was denied (code CO-4 — see below). The patient is responsible for $98 based on the allowed amount, not the $340 billed. That's the difference the EOB makes: knowing the real baseline prevents you from being surprised by a bill that looks higher than expected.
The Three Amounts: Billed, Allowed, and Patient
These three numbers are the core of every EOB. Getting comfortable with them is the whole game.
- Billed amount — The provider's list price. Almost never what you actually pay. Used as a starting point for negotiations if you're uninsured.
- Allowed amount — The contracted rate between the provider and your insurance company. This is the only number that matters for in-network care. You can never be billed more than this for an in-network service.
- Patient responsibility — Your share of the allowed amount. Includes your copay, deductible, and coinsurance. Does not include balance billing from out-of-network providers (see below).
Upload your EOB — free
Not sure what your EOB numbers mean? ClaimSage's EOB Reader extracts every field, explains the denial codes, and tells you what to do next.
Analyze My EOB Insurance GlossaryDenial Codes: The Field Most People Skip
Every EOB row has an adjustment code or remark code — a short alphanumeric code that explains why the billed amount and the paid amount differ. These codes are cryptic by design (they're meant for billing professionals), but they're the most important part of the document if a claim was denied or reduced.
Common codes and what they actually mean:
| Code | What it means | Should you worry? |
|---|---|---|
| PR-1 | Deductible applied — your plan requires you to pay this amount first before coverage kicks in | No — this is normal if you haven't met your deductible yet |
| PR-3 | Coinsurance — you pay a percentage of the allowed amount | No — expected if your plan has coinsurance |
| PR-4 | Network discount — provider is in-network, you only owe based on the allowed amount | No — this is actually good news |
| CO-4 | Procedure code inconsistency — the billed code doesn't match the service description or your plan's coverage rules | Maybe — could be a coding error that can be corrected and reprocessed |
| CO-18 | Duplicate claim — the insurer received this claim more than once | Usually no — often a billing system error, not your problem |
| CO-45 | Charges exceed the allowed amount — for out-of-network providers, you may owe the difference (balance billing) | Yes — verify the provider network status and understand your exposure |
| CO-97 | Benefit is included in another processed claim | Depends — check if the primary service was covered correctly |
| MA-15 | Missing or invalid information — usually requires resubmission with corrected data | Fixable — call the provider to correct and resubmit |
EOB vs. a Bill: Why You Get Two
These are different documents from different parties. Confusing them is one of the most common sources of unnecessary payments.
- The EOB comes from your insurance company. It shows how the claim was processed.
- The bill comes from your provider (the hospital, doctor, or lab). It shows what they're requesting you pay.
The amounts often differ. The EOB uses the insurance company's allowed amount as the ceiling. The provider's bill may not reflect that reduction immediately, especially if billing is processed in stages. When the provider's bill arrives, compare it to the EOB. If the bill shows you owe significantly more than the EOB indicated, call the billing department.
Rule of thumb: Always wait for the provider's actual bill before paying. Don't pay based on the EOB alone. And don't ignore the EOB — it's your advance notice of what the final bill should look like.
Common Mistakes People Make Reading Their EOB
Mistake 1: Ignoring EOBs when they show $0 patient responsibility
When your insurance pays everything and you owe nothing, it's tempting to stop reading. Don't. A $0 balance can hide a denied claim that's being written off — which means it won't be covered in the future if you have a similar service.
Mistake 2: Assuming the billed amount is what they want
Insurers negotiate rates. Providers bill high expecting negotiations. The number you actually owe is based on the allowed amount, not the billed amount. If a bill arrives showing the full billed amount, something went wrong in processing.
Mistake 3: Not checking if the provider was in-network
In-network providers can't balance bill you. Out-of-network providers can charge whatever they want, and your insurance only applies its lower in-network rate to the claim. The difference is your responsibility. If you went to an out-of-network provider and weren't aware of it, that shows up in the patient responsibility column.
Mistake 4: Missing the deadline to appeal
If your EOB shows a denial, you typically have 180 days from the date of the EOB to file an appeal. This deadline is strict. Calendar it immediately. Even a partial appeal filed on time preserves your rights while you gather documentation.
Need to appeal a denied claim?
If your EOB shows a denial, ClaimSage's Appeal Letter Generator creates a formal letter citing your state's insurance regulations and the relevant ACA provisions.
Generate Appeal Letter Read: Appeals GuideRed Flags That Signal Billing Errors
EOBs catch errors before they become collections problems. Here are the situations that should prompt a call:
- Dates of service you don't recognize. You may have been billed for someone else's visit.
- Provider names you've never heard of. Could be a lab that processed your samples — or could be a billing error.
- Procedures you weren't told about. If you went in for a checkup and the EOB shows surgery codes, something's wrong.
- Duplicate claims. The same service appearing twice may mean you're being double-billed.
- Out-of-network when you thought you were in-network. Your insurance's provider search isn't always current. If a claim came back out-of-network and you believed the provider was in-network, contest it.
- Denial codes for services that should be covered. Preventive care, certain screenings, and immunizations are required to be covered at no cost under the ACA. A denial on these may be incorrect.
- Patient responsibility far exceeding your expectations. If the number is much higher than you anticipated given your deductible status and copay, something may have processed incorrectly.
What to Do When Something Looks Wrong
Here's the step-by-step process:
- Note the specific error. Identify exactly what's wrong: the wrong date, wrong provider, wrong amount, or unexpected denial code.
- Call the provider's billing department. Many errors — wrong codes, duplicate charges, wrong insurance info — are corrected with a single call. Have your EOB in front of you.
- Call your insurance company. If the provider won't fix it, call member services. Reference the specific claim number (on the EOB) and the specific adjustment code. Ask them to review the claim.
- File an appeal if needed. If the insurer refuses to reprocess the claim and you believe it's covered, file an internal appeal. You have 180 days. Our appeals guide covers the full process.
- Document everything. Write down the date, time, name of the representative, and what was discussed. Keep this record for at least a year after the claim is resolved.
Start Reading Your EOBs
EOBs aren't designed to be readable. But they're not meant to be a mystery either. The information on them — provider name, service date, allowed amount, denial codes — is all there for you. Once you know what to look for, five minutes is enough to know whether the claim looks right.
If you get an EOB and something doesn't add up, you're not stuck. Upload it to ClaimSage's free EOB Reader and we'll extract the key fields, explain the denial codes, and tell you what to do next.