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Patient Collections in Healthcare: What It Is and Best Practices

Lorraine Quintana

Clinical Writer•13 July 2026•8 min read•
•

Fact checked by Dr. Maxwell Beresford

Table of Contents

What are Patient Collections?

Why Patient Collections Drive Revenue Cycle Performance

What Patient Collections Cover

7 Steps of the Patient Collections Process:

Support Better Patient Collections with Heidi

Frequently Asked Questions about Patient Collections

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What are Patient Collections?

In medical billing, patient collection is the process of acquiring payments from patients for healthcare services they received.

It includes the amount owed after insurance has processed a claim, such as co-pays, deductibles, coinsurance, and any out-of-pocket balances. For most healthcare systems, this represents the final stage of the healthcare revenue cycle.

In this article, we’ll dive into what patient collection involves, why it creates friction for clinical and administrative teams, and best practices to close the gap between care delivered and revenue generated.

Why Patient Collections Drive Revenue Cycle Performance

Sitting at the end of the revenue cycle, patient collections carry a lot of weight. Medical claims can be clean, denial rates low, and payer relationships strong, but if the patient balance is uncollected, net revenue still falls short.

For health systems, that gap is growing as more financial responsibility shifts to patients. Patients are now one of the fastest-growing payer classes in healthcare. As high-deductible health plans become more common and out-of-pocket costs rise, a larger share of each bill lands directly with the patient.

Because of that, patient collections change the equation. Payer reimbursement alone no longer covers the margin, and the administrative cost of chasing patient balances piles on top.

Incomplete or delayed clinical notes give billing teams less to work with, slowing coding, increasing errors and pushing follow-up further out. Billing and coding staff are left to chase the resulting disputes during collections, while clean documentation closes those gaps before they reach that stage.

That gain traces back to notes finished at the point of care instead of reconstructed days later, exactly the kind of documentation billing teams need to code cleanly the first time. Indiana Health Group, a behavioral practice in Indiana, addressed that problem after using Heidi.

The result: documentation time cut by 120,000 minutes in five months, recovering an estimated $200,000 in clinical time.

Dr. Chris Bojrab, President, said the impact was more direct

It allows me to build a better note but at the same time actually talk to my patient more conversationally, be more present in the moment and still wind up with a good note.

What Patient Collections Cover

Patient collections cover the portion of a bill that falls to the patient after insurance processes a claim. That includes copays, deductibles, coinsurance, and any balance left once the payer has paid their share.

To better understand, below explains the components of patient payment collections, including how it works within the revenue cycle collections:

Components of Patient Payment Collections

Copays and known deductible amounts are usually collected at the point of service. Coinsurance and outstanding balances depend on how the payer processes the claims so they surface later and move into post-service follow-up such as statements, reminders, and payment plans.

The process of collecting patient balances follows four specific stages, each anchored to a different moment in the billing cycle:

  • Copays - This is the fixed amount due at the time of service, set by the patient’s plan.
  • Deductibles - The amount a patient pays out of pocket before insurance coverage kicks in.
  • Co-insurance - The percentage split between patient and payer after the deductible is met.
  • Outstanding balances - Whatever remains once the claim is adjudicated, whether from a denied line item, a coverage gap or a miscalculated estimate.

Patient Collections vs Revenue Cycle Collections

Patient collection is one piece of the broader revenue cycle. Revenue cycle collections cover the full path of a claim, from insurance verification and claim submission through payer adjudication and any denial management. It picks specifically at the point where the payer’s portion ends and the patient’s share begins.

The distinction matters when you trace where revenue leaks. A denied claim is a revenue cycle issue, while a patient who never pays their co-insurance is a patient collection issue, even when the root cause sits upstream in the documentation process.

Patient collections work best when expectations are clear. Transparent billing and timely follow-up help improve payments while maintaining patient trust.

7 Steps of the Patient Collections Process:

Start with documentation accuracy. Collecting patient balances reliably starts before a bill is sent. Here is how an effective patient collections process works in practice:

Step 1: Verify Coverage and Estimate Patient Responsibility

Confirm the patient’s insurance coverage and calculate their expected out-of-pocket balance before the visit. This includes deductibles, co-pays, and co-insurance. Catching eligibility gaps at this stage prevents common and costly denials later.

Clear expectations before a visit reduce confusion, disputes, and delayed payments. When your front-desk team shares the estimated patient balance and available payment options at booking or check-in, patients arrive knowing what they will owe. That alignment reduces the likelihood of a bill coming as a surprise.

Step 2: Collect Payment at the Point of Care

Ask for co-pays and any known patient balances during the visit. Collections made before a patient leaves the clinic are significantly more likely to be paid in full than those billed afterward.

Step 3: Submit and Process Insurance Claims

Submit claims promptly after the visit. Accurate medical coding, complete documentation, and confirmed authorization reduce the risk of denial and shorten the time between service delivery and payer reimbursement.

Billing errors trace back to documentation gaps more often than to billing staff mistakes. Accurate, timely documentation at the point of care is the foundation of patient billing and collection.

Audit coding denials regularly to identify documentation gaps that are creating the most friction. Work with coding teams to standardize clinical documentation. This is specifically helpful for high-volume specialties where ambiguity is costly.

Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mX8BqsxyrxE

Caption: See how Heidi helps clinicians reduce administrative workload, all from the clinician-patient conversation.

Step 4: Issue Patient Billing Statements

After the medical claim processes, send the patient a clear statement showing what insurance covered and what balance remains. Itemized, easy-to-read statements reduce confusion and speed up payment.

Step 5: Send Payment Reminders and Follow-Up Communications

Unpaid balances should be followed up on through a structured sequence. Timely outreach, whether by text, email, or phone, keeps the balance visible and gives patients a chance to pay or flag billing questions before the account ages.

Automate outreach at 30, 60, and 90 days. Segment follow-up by balance size and payer type to prioritize staff on accounts with the highest recovery potential.

Structured SMS-first reminders work best when they carry the patient's visit context. Connect your reminder tooling to your medical practice management software so the visit date and outstanding balance pull automatically, cutting the manual prep for each outreach cycle.

Step 6: Collect Outstanding Balances or Establish a Payment Plan

Patients who cannot pay in full can be offered structured payment plans with clear terms. Giving patients a manageable path to settlement recovers more revenue than sending a single statement and hoping.

Patients pay faster when the path to do so is clear. Offer multiple payment channels, including online, phone and in-person, so patients can pay through whichever route fits them.

Documentation quality shapes this step too. Accurate handoffs into billing systems mean statements reflect the actual episode of care. When billing teams aren’t reconciling missing clinical details, they can spend time identifying the accurate payment option for each patient instead of chasing record gaps.

Step 7: Transfer Delinquent Accounts to Collections

Unpaid accounts should be transferred to a third-party collections agency when internal thresholds are hit. Set those thresholds clearly, and document each step taken before transfer to keep the process compliant.

Every step in patient collection traces back to documentation quality. When that’s consistent, the rest of the cycle follows. The right documentation platform support makes that possible across the full workflow.

Support Better Patient Collections with Heidi

Heidi covers three connected capabilities that support collections performance across the full clinical workflow. With these at work, you get to save time and focus on your patients with better intent:

  • Scribe: Transcribes the visit and generates complete, structured notes so key clinical and billing details are captured accurately at the point of care.
  • Coding: Surfaces real-time coding prompts and evidence-linked code suggestions, cutting ambiguity and denial risk.
  • Evidence: Pulls up relevant clinical references as you write, giving your documentation a clearer paper trail for billing.

Heidi is a connected clinical platform covering documentation and coding. This allows clinicians to select and confirm relevant codes directly within the note workflow. This cuts the hand-off gap between clinical documentation and billing.

Heidi is built to meet HIPAA, GDPR, and Australian Privacy Principles. Built for clinicians, deployable across health systems worldwide.

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