MRI Denied as “Not Medically Necessary”? How to Appeal and Avoid Another Denial

What It Means When Your MRI Is Denied

If your MRI was denied as “not medically necessary,” it usually means the insurance company doesn’t believe there was enough clinical evidence to justify the imaging.

These decisions are based on documentation—not your actual condition. If key details are missing, your MRI may be denied even if it was appropriate.

Why MRI Claims Get Denied

MRI claims are often denied for reasons like:

  • The MRI wasn’t considered necessary based on symptoms
  • Missing or incomplete provider notes explaining the need for imaging
  • The diagnosis didn’t meet the insurer’s criteria for imaging
  • The request wasn’t properly justified before the scan

Even a recommended MRI can be denied if it isn’t properly documented.

Why Many MRI Appeals Get Denied Again

Many appeals fail because they don’t address the original issue.

Common reasons include:

  • Resubmitting the same documentation without changes
  • Not addressing the specific reason for the denial
  • Missing provider notes that support medical necessity
  • Sending incomplete or disorganized records

Appeals need to show new, stronger justification.

How to Appeal an MRI Denial

To improve your chances of approval:

  1. Review the denial letter carefully and identify the reason
  2. Gather updated documentation from your provider
  3. Make sure your appeal directly addresses the denial reason
  4. Include clear justification for why the MRI was necessary
  5. Organize your documents so they are easy to review

Including the right supporting documents can significantly strengthen your appeal.

What to Include in Your Appeal

A strong appeal should include:

  • Any additional evidence that addresses the denial reason
  • Clinical reasoning for why the MRI was needed
  • Documentation supporting your symptoms or condition
  • Provider notes explaining medical necessity

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.

Download the Medical Necessity Appeal Self-Audit Checklist

Additional Appeal Resources