What “Not Medically Necessary” Actually Means
When your physical therapy claim is denied as “not medically necessary,” it usually means the insurance company doesn’t believe there was enough clinical evidence to justify ongoing treatment.
These decisions are often based on documentation—not your actual recovery progress. If key details are missing, your sessions may be denied even if therapy was helping.
Why Physical Therapy Claims Get Denied
Physical therapy claims are often denied for reasons like:
- Lack of documented improvement over time
- Missing or incomplete progress notes from your provider
- Too many sessions without updated justification
- Treatment not aligned with the insurer’s guidelines
Even ongoing care can be denied if it isn’t properly documented.
What Insurance Companies Are Really Looking For
Insurance companies want to see:
- Measurable progress in your condition
- Updated clinical notes supporting continued therapy
- Clear justification for additional sessions
- Documentation that aligns with the insurer’s guidelines
If your appeal doesn’t include this, it may be denied again.
Common Mistakes When Appealing a Denial
Common mistakes include:
- Submitting the same documentation without updates
- Not addressing the reason for denial directly
- Missing provider support for continued treatment
- Sending incomplete or disorganized records
Appeals need to show new, stronger justification.
Before You Submit Your Appeal
Before you submit your appeal, make sure you’re not missing something that could lead to another denial.
Many appeals fail because missing details are not obvious until after submission. Use the checklist before you send anything.