Credentialing Timeline and Checklist
Most providers are surprised by this: medical credentialing commonly runs 90 to 120 days, and it can stretch past 180. The frustrating part? A big chunk of that delay is avoidable, and it usually traces back to paperwork that was missing on day one.
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This page gives you two things. A realistic medical credentialing timeline, stage by stage and payer by payer. And a document checklist you can act on today, so the part you control is done right the first time. Every range here is industry typical, not a guarantee. Your file moves at the speed of the slowest payer in your stack.
How long does medical credentialing take?
Plan for months, not weeks. Across hospitals, payers and commercial plans, credentialing typically takes 60 to 180 days from a clean application to an active panel, with 90 to 120 days the most common window. Some telehealth onboardings move faster. Some Medicaid programs and backlogged payers run far longer.
Why the wide spread? Credentialing is a chain of handoffs between you, a credentialing team, primary source verification, a review committee and each individual payer. Every link adds time, and one missing document can stall the whole sequence. For the full background on what credentialing is and who does what, start with what medical credentialing is.
The credentialing timeline, stage by stage
Here is how a typical file moves. The day ranges below are industry typical and overlap in practice, since payer review often runs in parallel across plans.
| # | Stage | What happens | Typical range |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Prep and document gathering | Collect licenses, NPI, DEA, board certs, CV, malpractice proof and references | 1 to 2 weeks (you control this) |
| 2 | NPI and CAQH | Confirm the NPI in NPPES, build or update the CAQH ProView profile, attest | 1 to 2 weeks |
| 3 | Application submission | File each payer application; Medicare runs through PECOS and the CMS 855 forms | 1 to 2 weeks |
| 4 | Primary source verification | Each credential confirmed straight from the issuing source; exclusion lists screened | 1 to 3 weeks |
| 5 | Committee review | A credentialing committee reviews the verified file and approves | 2 to 6 weeks |
| 6 | Payer enrollment and contracting | Provider loaded into the network, effective dates set, EDI and ERA wired up | 2 to 8 weeks |
| 7 | Go live | Provider is credentialed, in network and able to bill | — |
One rule changed recently. Under NCQA updates effective July 2025, the primary source verification window dropped from 180 days to 120 days for Credentialing Accreditation and 90 days for Credentialing Certification. That does not speed up your file, but stale verifications now expire faster, so a slow application can fall out of the window and restart. Steps 3 through 6 are where most of the calendar disappears. We run them for you inside provider credentialing services.
Credentialing timeline by payer
Different payers move at very different speeds. These are rough, industry typical ranges, not promises, since each program sets its own pace and backlog.
| Payer or setting | Typical range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Medicare (PECOS) | 60 to 90 days | Can exceed 120 days if PECOS flags a discrepancy or the MAC has a backlog |
| Medicaid | 30 to 120+ days | Varies widely by state; some states run six months or longer |
| Commercial plans | 60 to 120 days | Aetna, Cigna, UnitedHealthcare, Humana, Blue Cross Blue Shield; some reach 150 |
| Hospital privileging | 60 to 120 days | Runs alongside payer work, often on its own committee cycle |
| Telehealth groups | 15 to 45 days | Faster when licensing and CAQH are already in place |
The takeaway: build your launch plan around your slowest payer, usually Medicaid or a backlogged commercial plan. We handle submissions and follow up across all of them through payer enrollment.
The credentialing document checklist
This is the part you control, and where most delays start. Have every item ready before step 1 and you cut weeks of back and forth. Print it, work it top to bottom.
Identity and personal details
Professional credentials
Education and training
Work history and references
Insurance, affiliations and payer setup
If CAQH is the piece slowing you down, that profile has to be attested and kept current every 120 days or payers treat it as stale. We set it up and maintain it through CAQH registration and maintenance.
What speeds credentialing up, and what drags it out
Same process, very different outcomes, depending on a handful of factors.
What speeds it up
What drags it out
Most of that first list is in your hands. The delays in the second list carry a real cost, since a provider who cannot bill in network is revenue sitting idle. We break that math down in what credentialing costs.
When to start, and how to keep the clock moving
Start early. Because the full timeline often runs 90 to 150 days, begin as soon as a provider signs, not when they are ready to see patients. Submit to every payer at once rather than one at a time, since the reviews run in parallel. Then follow up on a steady cadence, because applications that sit untouched age out of the verification window and restart.
And do not forget the back end. Most payers require recredentialing every two to three years, and Medicare runs its own revalidation cycle. Miss a deadline and a provider can drop out of network, which means denied claims until it is fixed. See the full menu of all our credentialing services to keep every cycle tracked.
Frequently asked questions
Ready to take the timeline off your plate? We run the submissions, follow up and deadline tracking across Medicare, Medicaid and commercial plans so your providers go live and start billing.
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*ProCred — national medical credentialing and payer enrollment for providers, groups and facilities across the United States.*