National medical credentialing & payer enrollment
ProCred
National · all 50 states

Medical Credentialing Services

Credentialing is the gate between a provider and getting paid. Until a payer has verified the license, confirmed the NPI and approved the enrollment, every claim that provider sends comes back denied. One missing form on a CMS 855 application can stall revenue for months.

So here is the short version. Medical credentialing is the process of verifying a healthcare provider's qualifications and enrolling that provider with insurance payers, so they can treat patients in network and bill for it. ProCred runs that process end to end for physicians, groups and facilities across the United States.

Free, itemized quote. No obligation.
hero — provider reviewing a credentialing application checklist
We work acrossMedicare / PECOSMedicaidCAQHCMS 855 formsCommercial payersNPPES / NPI
Standards

Built on the standards payers actually check against

We do not ask you to take our word for it. We work to the same standards the payers and accreditors use, so applications go in clean the first time.

Primary source verification (PSV) of every credential, confirmed with the original issuer, not a copy you supplied
NCQA aligned process, including the 90 to 120 day verification windows credentialing bodies hold to
CAQH ProView profile build, attestation and maintenance on the 120 day cycle
PECOS and the CMS 855 forms for Medicare enrollment, revalidation and reassignment
HIPAA compliant handling of every provider document and data point we touch
OIG and exclusion screening so a sanctioned provider never slips into an enrollment
any specific accreditation, certification or partnership claim before publishing.
What's included

What medical credentialing services include

Credentialing is not one task. It is a stack of verifications and applications, and each one has to be right. Here is what we handle:

Primary source verification of education, training, work history, board certification and malpractice coverage
State license and DEA confirmation, plus NPI registration through NPPES (NPI Type 1 for individuals, Type 2 for groups)
CAQH ProView profile build, attestation and ongoing maintenance
Payer enrollment and contracting with Medicare, Medicaid and commercial plans
Hospital privileging applications and facility coordination
Recredentialing and Medicare revalidation, so panels never lapse
Process

How our credentialing process works

You hand off the paperwork. We run a clear, trackable process and tell you exactly where each application stands.

1Intake and audit
We gather your documents, confirm your NPI and taxonomy, and build your target payer list with you.
2Profile and verification
We build or clean your CAQH ProView profile, attest it, and complete primary source verification of every credential.
3Submission
We file each payer application, the CMS 855 forms for Medicare through PECOS, and the state Medicaid enrollments, with the right supporting documents attached.
4Follow up
We chase every payer, answer committee questions, and push the application toward an effective date instead of letting it sit in a queue.
5Go live and maintain
We confirm your effective dates, set up EDI, ERA and EFT, and track every recredentialing and revalidation deadline so nothing lapses.
See the full sequence on our how it works page.
The process
  1. 1Onboarding & documents
  2. 2Verification & CAQH / PECOS
  3. 3Payer applications & submission
  4. 4Follow-up & approval
  5. 5Go live & maintenance
Clarity

Credentialing vs payer enrollment: the difference

These two terms get used as if they mean the same thing. They do not, and the distinction matters for your timeline.

Credentialing
Credentialing is the verification step. A payer or its credentialing committee confirms that a provider is who they say they are: license, education, board certification, work history and malpractice record, all checked at the source.
Payer enrollment
Payer enrollment (also called provider enrollment or contracting) is the application that adds that verified provider to a specific insurance network and sets the effective date you can start billing from.

You almost always need both, in that order, for every payer. We handle credentialing and enrollment together so there is no gap between them.

Who we credential

We credential and enroll providers of nearly every type: physicians and surgeons, nurse practitioners and physician assistants, behavioral and mental health providers, dentists and dental groups, telehealth groups operating across state lines, DME suppliers, and new or multi provider group practices. New to all of this? Start with what is medical credentialing or browse our resources.

Nationwide

Credentialing in all 50 states

We are a national service. We credential and enroll providers in every US state, which means we know how each state Medicaid program and licensing board works, not just the easy ones.

State Medicaid portals, supervision rules and timelines vary, so local knowledge saves weeks. See all locations, or jump to a high volume state: Texas, California, Florida or New York.

Payers

Payers we handle

We enroll providers with the payers that actually move your revenue:

Medicare, through PECOS and the CMS 855 forms (855I for individuals, 855B for groups, 855R for reassignment), including revalidation
Medicaid in your state, including the state specific portals and supervision rules
Commercial plans: Aetna, Cigna, UnitedHealthcare, Humana and Blue Cross Blue Shield

Once you are live, we set up EDI, ERA and EFT, so claims, remittances and payments all flow electronically from day one. More on that on the payer enrollment page.

Payers we handle
Medicare
Enrollment via PECOS (855 forms).
Medicaid
State programs and managed-care plans.
Commercial
Aetna, Cigna, UHC, Humana, BCBS and more.
Timelines

How long credentialing takes

Timelines depend on the payer, not on how fast you fill out the forms. These are industry typical ranges, not a guarantee:

90–120days
Commercial payers
about 90 to 120 days
60–90days
Medicare through PECOS
about 60 to 90 days
45–90days
Medicaid
about 45 to 90 days, depending on the state

CAQH attestation has to be refreshed every 120 days to stay current, and most payers want recredentialing every two to three years. We track those dates so nothing lapses. Any timeline we commit to for your engagement, we put in writing company specific turnaround commitment.

Typical timeline
ApplyDay 0
Verify1–30
Submit30–45
Review45–90
Go live90–120

What credentialing late actually costs

Here is the part most practices underestimate. A provider cannot bill a payer before their effective date. If credentialing takes a typical 90 to 120 day window for a commercial plan and you start late, that is three to four months of patient visits you either cannot bill or have to write off.

For a single full time provider, that lost billing window is rarely small, and it compounds across every payer you are not yet enrolled with. Starting credentialing the moment you hire, not the week the provider arrives, is the single cheapest way to protect revenue. We build the schedule backward from your start date so the effective dates land on time.

Pricing

Transparent pricing

Credentialing pricing in this industry is usually quoted per provider, per payer, or as a flat monthly fee for ongoing maintenance. What drives the number is simple: how many providers, how many payers, and whether you need a one time setup or continuous recredentialing.

We quote each engagement individually rather than hide a number behind a form. Outsourcing also tends to cost less than carrying a full time credentialing coordinator, with no gap when that person is out. See how the math works on our credentialing services cost page. exact pricing is quoted per engagement.

Trust & security

Compliance and data security

HIPAA compliantPrimary sourceNCQA alignedOIG screening

Credentialing runs on sensitive provider data, so how it is handled matters. We work to a HIPAA compliant process across every document and portal. Verification follows primary source standards and the NCQA aligned timelines that payer committees expect, and we run OIG and exclusion screening so a sanctioned provider never reaches an enrollment. It is the same rigor an in house compliance team would apply, without the overhead.

Why ProCred

Why providers choose ProCred

We are credentialing specialists, not a billing company that does credentialing on the side. We know which form goes to which payer, why an application gets kicked back, and how to follow up without losing an afternoon on hold.

You get one point of contact, status you can actually see, and a team that does this every day. We win on transparency and accuracy: real timelines framed honestly, named payers and forms, and a process you can track, not invented bragging numbers. specific proof points — providers credentialed, years in business, client results.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Primary source verification of your license, education, work history and board certification, NPI and DEA confirmation, CAQH ProView profile setup and attestation, and enrollment with the payers you bill. Recredentialing and Medicare revalidation keep it all current.

Plan on roughly three to four months from a clean, complete file for commercial plans, with Medicare and Medicaid each moving on their own timeline. We map realistic dates for your specific payers at the start rather than quote one number.

Credentialing proves a provider is qualified; payer enrollment loads that proof into an insurer's network so the claims actually pay. Most providers need both, and we run them together.

Medicare through PECOS, Medicaid in your state, and the major commercial plans including Aetna, Cigna, UnitedHealthcare, Humana and Blue Cross Blue Shield. We also set up EDI, ERA and EFT once you are live.

Yes. We build and maintain your CAQH ProView profile, keep attestation current every 120 days, and handle Medicare enrollment, revalidation and reassignment through PECOS and the CMS 855 forms (855I, 855B and 855R).

Primary source verification, or PSV, is confirming each credential directly with the original issuer rather than a copy the provider supplied. We verify licenses with state boards, degrees with schools, and board certification with the certifying body, which is what payers and NCQA aligned committees require.

Yes. We are a national service and enroll providers in every US state, including the state specific Medicaid portals, licensing boards and supervision rules that vary from one state to the next.

It depends on how many providers and how many payers you need, and whether you need one time setup or ongoing maintenance. We quote each engagement individually. Our credentialing services cost page walks through the pricing models and what drives the number.

Most payers require recredentialing every two to three years, Medicare runs its own revalidation cycle, and CAQH attestation has to be refreshed every 120 days. We track all of those dates so a panel never lapses.

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