Provider Enrollment & Credentialing

Expert Medical Credentialing Services — Get Enrolled, Get Paid, Get There Faster

PerfectMBS manages your complete credentialing and provider enrollment lifecycle—from CAQH setup and PECOS submission to commercial payer contracting and re-credentialing—so your providers can begin billing faster.

Medical credentialing services are the non-negotiable gateway between your providers and your payers. Before a single claim can be submitted, each provider must be verified and enrolled with the insurance networks they intend to bill. Without completed credentialing, reimbursement from Medicare, Medicaid, and commercial plans can be delayed or denied—and every day enrollment remains pending can create revenue your practice may never recover.

The Revenue Loss Nobody Warns You About One provider delayed by credentialing issues can cost a practice $6,000–$8,000 per month in unbilled revenue.

A 90-day delay for a specialist may represent $50,000–$200,000 in permanently lost collections when payer effective dates are not applied retroactively.

Speak With a Credentialing Specialist Call Now: +1 (800) 000-0000
Credentialing Command Center Provider Enrollment Progress
Active
New Provider Enrollment Dr. Sarah Mitchell, MD Cardiology • Texas • 7 Active Applications
76%
01
CAQH Profile & Documents Completed and attested
Complete
02
PECOS / Medicare Enrollment Application submitted
Submitted
03
Commercial Payer Enrollment Aetna, Cigna, UHC and BCBS
In Review
04
Contracting & Effective Dates Final payer approvals
Pending
Payer Follow-Up Cycle Every 10–14 Days
Client Status Updates Every Two Weeks
Dedicated Credentialing Specialist One point of contact from start to approval
Assigned
Credentialing Coverage Applications tracked from setup to payer approval
120 Days Recommended lead time
All 50 States served
150+ Insurance payers
Zero Credentialing lapses
Credentialing Explained

What Are Medical Credentialing Services?

Medical credentialing services manage the formal verification and insurance enrollment process that allows healthcare providers to participate in payer networks and receive reimbursement for covered services.

Verification Before Reimbursement Qualifications, enrollment, and payer approval
Simple Definition

Medical credentialing is the process insurance payers use to verify a provider’s education, training, licensure, board certification, malpractice coverage, professional history, and eligibility to participate in their network.

Why Credentialing Matters

Credentialing Connects Qualified Providers to Insurance Reimbursement

Insurance payers—including Medicare, Medicaid, Blue Cross Blue Shield, UnitedHealthcare, Aetna, Cigna, Humana, and other commercial plans—must confirm that a physician or advanced practice provider meets their network participation standards before claims can be processed as in-network services.

The payer verifies education, residency, fellowship training, licensure, board status, malpractice history, professional standing, and other required records before approving the provider.

In Simple Terms Credentialing and enrollment give your providers the payer approval required to bill insurance and receive reimbursement.
Revenue Risk

A Provider Can Be Fully Qualified and Still Be Unable to Bill

A provider may be licensed and clinically ready but still unable to submit payable in-network claims until payer credentialing and enrollment are complete.

Commercial payer effective dates may not always be applied retroactively, while timely-filing deadlines continue to run. That means visits performed during an enrollment delay can become permanently uncollectible.

Three Related Processes

Credentialing vs. Provider Enrollment vs. Privileging

Know the Difference
01
Verification Phase

Medical Credentialing

The payer confirms that the provider is qualified, licensed, properly insured, professionally eligible, and free from disqualifying adverse actions.

Payer verifies qualifications
02
Administrative Phase

Provider Enrollment

The formal application process used to join the payer network, establish participation, complete contracting, activate billing privileges, and confirm an effective date.

Provider joins the payer network
03
Facility Permission

Hospital Privileging

The healthcare facility determines which clinical procedures, treatments, and services the provider is permitted to perform within that institution.

Facility grants clinical privileges
Quick Reference Three processes, three different approvals
Credentialing Payer verifies qualifications
Provider Enrollment Application to join payer network
Privileging Facility permission to perform procedures
Billing Readiness Required approvals must be complete before billing begins
Primary Source Verification

What Medical Credentialing Actually Verifies

Payers confirm credentials directly with issuing institutions, licensing bodies, government databases, and professional boards. They do not rely only on the documents supplied by the provider.

Direct Verification
Medical School Education

Degree, attendance dates, completion, and institutional accreditation.

Residency & Fellowship

Program completion, dates, specialty training, and accreditation status.

Board Certification

Current certification status through ABMS, AOA, or the appropriate specialty board.

State Medical Licensure

Active license, expiration date, restrictions, and disciplinary actions.

DEA Registration

Registration status, expiration, authorized schedules, and prescribing eligibility.

Malpractice History

Current insurance coverage, claims history, settlements, and judgments.

NPDB Query

Adverse actions, malpractice payments, restrictions, and reportable professional history.

OIG Exclusion Screening

Federal healthcare-program exclusion status and Medicare or Medicaid eligibility.

Work History

Past affiliations, employment gaps, locum arrangements, and professional references.

Credentialing Unlocks Your Ability to Bill Once enrollment is active, reimbursement depends on clean claims, coding accuracy, denial prevention, and consistent A/R follow-up.
Explore Medical Billing Services
Credentialing Timelines

How Long Does Medical Credentialing Take?

The honest answer is more specific than “90 to 120 days.” Credentialing speed depends on the payer, state, provider specialty, application quality, panel availability, and the payer’s current processing backlog.

2026 Timeline Guide Payer-by-payer expectations and delay factors
The Honest, Payer-by-Payer Credentialing Timeline for 2026

“About 90 to 120 Days” Is Accurate — But It Is Not Specific Enough

Ask any credentialing company how long credentialing takes and you will get the same answer: “about 90 to 120 days.” That answer is technically accurate—and practically useless.

The real timeline for your practice depends on which payers you are enrolling with, what state you are in, your provider specialty, and most critically, how accurately and completely your initial application is submitted.

PerfectMBS publishes a specific, transparent credentialing timeline breakdown because providers deserve real numbers—and because the financial stakes are too high for vague answers.

The No. 1 Thing Most Credentialing Companies Do Not Tell You The “90-day estimate” is the floor, not the ceiling.

It assumes a complete, accurate, error-free application. In reality, many credentialing applications contain at least one error or missing piece of information that can reset the payer review process and add approximately 2–6 additional weeks per incident. PerfectMBS uses a pre-submission review to catch preventable errors before they become avoidable delays.

2026 Real-World Data

Credentialing Timeline by Payer

All timelines below assume a complete and accurate application submitted from the start. Errors, missing documents, or an incomplete CAQH profile can add 2–6 weeks per occurrence.

14 Enrollment Tracks
Typical medical credentialing timelines by payer or program for 2026
Payer / Program Typical Timeline Fast-Track? Key Factor
Medicare (PECOS) Federal enrollment 45–90 days Yes — 30–45 days possible PECOS submission accuracy; MAC regional processing backlog
Medicaid — Fast States TX, FL, GA, AZ 45–75 days Yes — 30–60 days Automated vs. manual verification; managed care vs. fee-for-service track
Medicaid — Slow States NY, CA, IL, PA 90–180 days Rarely — 75 days minimum State portal backlogs; eMedNY and DHCS processing capacity
UnitedHealthcare Commercial network 60–90 days Sometimes — 45–60 days Panel open status; UHC monthly committee review cycle
Aetna Commercial network 60–90 days Rarely — 75 days typical Site visit requirements for some specialties; processing backlog
Blue Cross Blue Shield 38 independent plans 75–120 days Rarely — plan dependent Each independent BCBS plan has its own process and timeline
Cigna Commercial network 60–120 days Sometimes — 60–75 days Panel open status by specialty and geography
Humana Commercial and Medicare Advantage 60–90 days Sometimes — 45–60 days Network adequacy status; MA credentialing is separate from commercial
Molina Healthcare Medicaid MCO and marketplace 45–90 days Yes — 45 days in many states Medicaid MCO and marketplace enrollment tracks differ
WellCare / Centene State-specific subsidiaries 45–90 days Yes — Medicaid MCO often faster State-specific subsidiary rules and enrollment platforms
TRICARE Military health program 60–120 days Rarely Defense Health Agency approval; regional contractor processing
Hospital Privileges Facility approval 60–120 days Sometimes Medical staff committee schedule; completeness of privilege requests
Telehealth Multi-State Multiple licenses and payer tracks 120–360 days No — cumulative complexity Each state Medicaid program is separate; license compact may help but adds steps
Re-Credentialing Existing payer participation 30–60 days Yes — often 30 days Current CAQH attestation; no changes to license or malpractice status
Critical Revenue Warning

Effective Dates Are Not Automatically Retroactive

Commercial payers generally do not adjust effective dates retroactively. Services rendered before the official enrollment effective date—even by a single day—may be unbillable and may not be appealable. That can become permanently lost revenue.

PerfectMBS recommends starting the credentialing process at least 120 days before a provider’s intended start date. If a provider has already started seeing patients while uncredentialed, contact us immediately so the available options can be reviewed.

Review My Credentialing Timeline
Credentialing Revenue Risk

What Credentialing Delays Actually Cost Your Practice

Credentialing is not an administrative formality—it is a direct revenue activation mechanism. When credentialing is delayed, incomplete, or lapsed, the financial consequences are immediate, specific, and in many cases permanent.

Revenue Loss Analysis 2025–2026 credentialing impact data
The Real Financial Cost of Credentialing Delays and Lapses

Every Credentialing Failure Has a Measurable Revenue Consequence

Credentialing delays affect more than administrative timelines. They determine when a provider can submit payable claims, when a payer will recognize an effective date, and whether revenue from already-rendered services can ever be collected.

The table below shows the practical financial impact of common credentialing failures, including monthly revenue loss, timeline disruption, and whether the lost revenue can realistically be recovered.

Financial Impact by Failure Type

Credentialing Failure Cost Breakdown

These figures show how quickly credentialing delays, lapses, and application errors can turn into permanently lost revenue.

8 Failure Scenarios
Financial cost of common medical credentialing failures
Credentialing Failure Revenue Lost Timeline Impact Recoverable?
New provider — credentialing delay First-time enrollment $6,000–$8,000/month 30–180+ day gap before the first billable claim No — revenue gone forever
Specialist — high procedure volume High-revenue provider $15,000–$50,000+/month 60–90 day delay = $30,000–$150,000 lost No — revenue gone forever
Expired credentialing / lapse Active payer participation ends $2,000/day Claims deny the day enrollment expires No — revenue gone forever
Single returned application Error or missing information $5,000–$25,000 per incident Adds 2–6 weeks and may reset queue position No — cannot backdate
Wrong effective date recorded Payer enrollment mismatch Full month of claims denied At least one billing cycle lost No — no retroactive fix
Missed re-credentialing deadline Existing payer enrollment lapse Full A/R stop for that payer 30–90 days to restore billing privileges No — gap revenue is gone
Closed payer panel found after submission Network availability issue Zero revenue from that payer 2–4 months wasted waiting for rejection Yes — but major time is wasted
CAQH profile lapse Not attested within 120 days All commercial payers may stall Every CAQH-dependent payer may stop processing Yes — recoverable after update
One Avoidable Oversight

A missed re-credentialing deadline can cost a primary care practice $40,000 in one month

A primary care physician who loses approximately $2,000 per day because of a credentialing lapse can lose $40,000 in a single month from one avoidable administrative oversight.

Daily Loss $2,000
×
20 Business Days 20
=
Monthly Loss $40,000
Prevent Credentialing Revenue Loss PerfectMBS tracks every re-credentialing deadline for every payer and every provider in our system. No lapse has ever occurred on our watch.
Protect My Provider Revenue
Complete Credentialing Support

Our Medical Credentialing and Enrollment Services

PerfectMBS manages every phase of the credentialing lifecycle—from initial document collection and CAQH setup through payer enrollment, contract execution, and ongoing re-credentialing.

Everything Under One Roof Setup, enrollment, contracting, and maintenance
Parallel Filing Multiple payer applications submitted at the same time
Full Lifecycle Coverage From initial application to re-credentialing
Deadline Monitoring Expiration and revalidation dates tracked proactively
Provider Setup & Practice Structure Build the credentialing foundation correctly from day one
4 Services
02

CAQH ProView Management

We build and complete the CAQH profile, upload required documents, and maintain the 120-day attestation cycle so the profile does not lapse—the most common cause of commercial credentialing delays.

What You Get A fully attested CAQH profile with no preventable lapse holding up commercial payer applications.
03

Group Practice Enrollment

TIN-based group enrollment, linking individual providers to the group NPI, and adding locations as the practice grows or opens new sites.

What You Get Providers correctly linked to the group so claims process under the correct NPI and TIN combination.
04

Hospital Credentialing and Privileging

Medical staff office applications, privilege delineation support, and hospital credentialing maintenance are managed in parallel with insurance credentialing.

What You Get Active privileges for target facilities without an avoidable billing gap caused by delayed facility approval.
Complete Credentialing Support Choose the services your practice needs today, or let PerfectMBS manage the complete credentialing lifecycle.
Discuss My Credentialing Needs
Delay Prevention System

What Causes Credentialing Delays — And How PerfectMBS Prevents Each One

Industry data shows that 85% of credentialing applications contain at least one error or omission that causes a payer delay. Understanding these root causes is the most powerful way to prevent them before a single application is filed.

Seven Preventable CausesEach paired with a specific PerfectMBS control
The 7 Most Common Credentialing Delay CausesOur pre-submission process is engineered to catch each issue before a payer application enters the review queue.
85%contain an error or omission

The Problem

About 30% of credentialing delays trace directly to CAQH issues. CAQH ProView is used by virtually every commercial payer to verify provider credentials. If your profile is incomplete, contains outdated information, or has not been attested within the required 120-day cycle, payers cannot pull your information and every commercial application stalls simultaneously.

PerfectMBS Solution

PerfectMBS builds, completes, documents, and actively manages your CAQH ProView profile from day one of engagement. We track the 120-day attestation cycle and renew before it ever lapses—for as long as you are a PerfectMBS client.

Prevent the Delay Before It StartsPerfectMBS reviews the data, documents, payer strategy, follow-up schedule, and renewal calendar before an avoidable issue can turn into lost billing time.
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Credentialing Process

How PerfectMBS Handles Your Credentialing — From Day One to First Billable Claim

Every PerfectMBS credentialing engagement follows the same proven process. Select a step to see exactly what happens, when it happens, and the outcome your practice receives.

01
Step 1 • Day 1–2 Provider Document Collection and Data Audit

On the day you engage PerfectMBS, your dedicated credentialing specialist sends a comprehensive document checklist tailored to your specialty and target payer mix. We collect medical school diplomas, residency and fellowship certificates, state medical licenses, DEA certificates, board certifications, malpractice certificates with correct dates, hospital privilege letters, and a complete employment history.

We then audit your data for consistency across CAQH, NPPES, PECOS, and state medical board records before a single application is filed.

Outcome Complete credentialing packet assembled, verified, and data-consistent across all systems.
Ready to Begin? Start with a complete, accountable credentialing workflow from day one.
Start My Credentialing Process
Provider Credentialing Document Checklist

What PerfectMBS Needs to Begin Your Credentialing - Complete Document Checklist

The single fastest way to accelerate your credentialing timeline is to have all required documents ready before your engagement begins. PerfectMBS will guide you through each item and chase anything missing, but starting with a complete packet means your first applications go out within 5-7 business days of signing.

01

Provider Identity and Licensure

  • Government-issued photo ID (driver license or passport - current)
  • Social Security Number or Individual Taxpayer Identification Number
  • National Provider Identifier - NPI-1 (individual) and NPI-2 (group) if applicable
  • Current state medical license - all states where the provider practices
  • DEA certificate - current, with registration number and authorized schedules
  • State controlled substance permits where applicable
02

Education and Board Certification

  • Medical school diploma - original or certified copy
  • Residency training certificate for every residency program completed
  • Fellowship certificate for every fellowship completed, if applicable
  • Board certification certificate from the applicable ABMS or AOA specialty board
  • ECFMG certificate for international medical graduates
03

Professional and Employment History

  • Complete work history for the past 10 years with exact start and end dates, employer names, addresses, and reason for leaving
  • Written explanation for any employment gaps of 30 days or more (required by most payers)
  • Current curriculum vitae
04

Malpractice Insurance

  • Current malpractice insurance certificate with carrier name, policy number, coverage dates, and dollar limits
  • Written explanation of any prior malpractice claims, settlements, or judgments
  • Tail coverage documentation if you have changed carriers
05

Hospital Affiliations

  • Hospital privilege letters from all current and past hospital affiliations in the past 10 years
  • Three to five physician references with name, specialty, and contact information
06

Practice and Organization Information

  • Practice Federal Tax ID (EIN) - for group enrollment
  • Practice name, all locations, and phone numbers
  • Practice specialty and taxonomy codes - must match NPI registry and CAQH
  • Existing PECOS ID if previously enrolled in Medicare
  • Existing CAQH ProView ID if previously registered

PerfectMBS provides every client with a customized checklist specific to their specialty, practice type, and target payer mix. The items above represent the core requirements for most credentialing engagements.

Why PerfectMBS

Why Choose PerfectMBS for Medical Credentialing?

What Makes PerfectMBS Different From Every Other Credentialing Company

Most credentialing companies submit applications and wait. PerfectMBS is built around a different philosophy: credentialing is a revenue protection strategy, not a paperwork task. Every operational choice we have made reflects that.

02

We Submit All Payers on the Same Day - Not One at a Time

Sequential payer submission is the most common and most costly mistake in credentialing. PerfectMBS submits every payer application - Medicare, all applicable Medicaid programs, and all commercial payers - on the same day we receive a complete document packet. Parallel submission is the single biggest timeline advantage we deliver.

03

One Named Credentialing Specialist Manages Your Account

You get a real person assigned to your account - someone who knows your providers, your payer mix, your state requirements, and your timeline goals. You can call them. You can email them. They respond the same day. No shared inboxes, no ticket systems, no starting over from scratch every time you reach out.

04

Biweekly Written Status Reports - You Always Know Where You Stand

Every two weeks you receive a written status report covering every active application: payer name, date last contacted, current status, next follow-up date, and estimated completion timeline. You never have to wonder whether anything is being worked on. It is all documented and in your inbox on a predictable schedule.

05

Pre-Submission Audit - We Catch What Causes Delays Before Payers Do

Every application goes through a completeness and accuracy audit before submission. Data discrepancies between CAQH, NPPES, PECOS, and the application are corrected. Missing documents are collected. Applications leave our system complete and accurate the first time - because a returned application means weeks of lost time.

06

Panel Open Status Verified Before Every Application Filed

We check whether each target payer network is open to new providers in your specialty and geography before we submit anything. Payer panels open and close without announcement. Filing an application to a closed panel wastes weeks waiting for a rejection that was always coming.

07

Proactive Re-Credentialing - No Lapse Has Ever Occurred on Our Watch

Re-credentialing lapses are the most avoidable and most expensive failure in provider enrollment. PerfectMBS tracks every deadline for every payer for every provider in our system and acts at 90, 60, and 30 days before each one. No provider under active PerfectMBS management has ever had a credentialing lapse.

90 / 60 / 30 day controls
08

Integrated With Your Billing Team - Activation Happens Immediately

Because PerfectMBS handles both billing and credentialing, there is no handoff delay between enrollment and billing activation. The moment a payer approves your enrollment, your billing team is notified and claim submission for that payer begins. No waiting for two separate vendors to talk to each other.

Credentialing Built Around Revenue Protection Faster preparation, parallel submissions, named accountability, proactive follow-up, and immediate billing activation.
Discuss My Credentialing Needs
Frequently Asked Questions

Medical Credentialing Services - Frequently Asked Questions

10 Credentialing Questions Select any question to view the complete answer.
01 How long does medical credentialing take?
Answer

Medical credentialing timelines in 2026 range from 45 days to 180 days or more depending on the payer. Medicare PECOS enrollment takes 45-90 days for a clean, complete application. Medicaid varies by state: fast states like Texas, Florida, and Georgia process applications in 45-75 days, while high-volume states like New York and California can take 90-180 days. Commercial payers like UnitedHealthcare, Aetna, Cigna, and BCBS typically take 60-120 days. The single most important factor in your timeline is application accuracy - 85% of credentialing delays are caused by incomplete or inconsistent applications. PerfectMBS clients consistently achieve enrollments at the faster end of each payer timeline through pre-submission audits and parallel application submission.

02 What happens if a provider sees patients before credentialing is complete?
Answer

If a provider sees insured patients before credentialing is complete, those services cannot be billed to insurance. Commercial payers do not retroactively adjust enrollment effective dates, meaning the revenue from those visits is permanently lost even after credentialing is approved. Some government payers allow retroactive billing back to the application date in specific circumstances, but this is the exception and cannot be relied upon. The safest strategy is to start credentialing at least 120 days before a provider intended first patient date. PerfectMBS advises every client on available options during the credentialing gap period.

03 What is CAQH and why does it matter?
Answer

CAQH ProView is a centralized online database that most commercial insurance payers use to verify healthcare provider credentials. Providers upload their credentials once and payers query the database directly during credentialing. A complete, accurately maintained, and currently attested CAQH profile is the foundation of commercial credentialing. An incomplete or outdated CAQH profile - one not attested within the required 120-day cycle - stalls every commercial payer application simultaneously. PerfectMBS builds, manages, and maintains your CAQH profile throughout our engagement.

04 How much does medical credentialing cost?
Answer

Professional medical credentialing services typically charge $200-$275 per payer per provider for initial enrollment, or a flat monthly retainer covering all credentialing activity. The correct way to evaluate this cost is against what delayed or lapsed credentialing costs your practice: $6,000-$8,000 per month per provider in lost revenue during enrollment delays. Professional credentialing services typically deliver 10-20 times their cost in protected revenue - particularly when they prevent even one credentialing lapse or eliminate one month of enrollment delay.

05 What is the difference between credentialing and re-credentialing?
Answer

Initial credentialing is the first-time enrollment of a provider with a payer network. Re-credentialing (also called revalidation) is the periodic renewal of that enrollment, required by every payer on a schedule ranging from every 2 years for commercial payers and Medicaid managed care plans, to every 5 years for Medicare. Missing a re-credentialing deadline results in immediate deactivation of billing privileges - and all revenue lost during the deactivation period is permanently unrecoverable.

06 Can providers bill insurance during the credentialing process?
Answer

Generally no. Providers cannot bill insurance for insured patients until credentialing and enrollment are fully approved. Limited options during the gap include billing self-pay patients directly, incident-to billing under an enrolled supervising provider for eligible services in a group practice setting, and locum tenens billing arrangements in certain situations. PerfectMBS advises every client on what temporary billing options apply to their specific situation during the credentialing gap.

07 What is provider enrollment and how is it different from credentialing?
Answer

Provider enrollment is the formal process of registering a healthcare provider with insurance payers so the organization can submit claims and receive reimbursement. Medical credentialing is the verification component - the payer confirms qualifications, licenses, and professional standing. In practice both happen together: credentialing verifies who you are, enrollment registers you to receive payment. Both must be complete before billing can begin.

08 How does PerfectMBS handle credentialing for a new practice?
Answer

New practice credentialing involves steps beyond individual provider enrollment: establishing the practice group NPI (NPI-2) through NPPES, registering the practice Tax Identification Number with all payers, enrolling the group entity separately from individual providers, obtaining a practice DEA registration, and setting up EFT and ERA for the organization. PerfectMBS manages the complete new practice credentialing package - group and individual enrollments simultaneously - so your practice can start billing as quickly as possible after opening.

09 What states does PerfectMBS handle credentialing in?
Answer

PerfectMBS handles credentialing and provider enrollment in all 50 states and U.S. territories. Our team maintains active expertise with every state Medicaid portal, every state medical board verification process, and the regional commercial payer networks in each state. We credential providers with state-specific programs including TMHP in Texas, eMedNY in New York, DHCS in California, AHCCCS in Arizona, and every other state program.

10 How quickly can PerfectMBS start credentialing for a new provider?
Answer

PerfectMBS can begin within 24 hours of engagement. Our document collection process launches the same day you sign. CAQH profile work begins within 48 hours of receiving initial documentation. First applications are submitted within 5-7 business days of receiving a complete document packet. The only limiting factor is documentation completeness - the faster you can provide a complete packet, the faster your first applications go out.

Protect Your Provider Revenue

Every Day Without Credentialing Is Revenue You Cannot Get Back

A provider who starts seeing patients without completed credentialing is generating revenue your practice will never collect. A provider whose re-credentialing lapses is generating claims your practice cannot bill. A provider whose CAQH profile has expired is stalling applications at every commercial payer simultaneously.

PerfectMBS was built to prevent all of this - and to get every new provider enrolled as fast as payer timelines allow. Our credentialing specialists begin work on your account the same day you engage us. Your providers get enrolled faster. Your billing activates sooner. Your re-credentialing is tracked and filed before a single deadline is ever at risk.

Start now. The 120-day credentialing window is already ticking for every provider you have hired or are planning to hire. Contact PerfectMBS today and protect your revenue from day one.

Speak With a Credentialing Specialist Call Now: +1 (800) 000-0000
Free Credentialing Consultation

Tell Us About Your Credentialing Needs

Complete the short form below. A credentialing specialist will contact you within 4 business hours.

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