Medical Licensing and NPI Registration
Here is the part nobody tells a new provider. You cannot enroll with a single payer or bill one clean claim until two things are squared away first: an active state license and the right National Provider Identifier. Get the order wrong, apply for the wrong NPI type, or let a license sit half finished, and everything downstream stalls. Credentialing waits. Enrollment waits. Revenue waits.
We handle medical license and NPI registration end to end, so that bottleneck clears early. It sits at the front of the medical credentialing services we run for individual providers and groups.
License first, then NPI: the order that trips providers up
The sequence matters more than people expect. Your medical license comes from a state board, and it is the credential everything else hangs on. An NPI without an active license behind it does not get you far, because payers verify the license before they enroll you.
So the path runs in one direction. Get licensed in the state you practice in. Register your NPI. Then enroll with payers and get credentialed. Run them out of order and you end up reapplying, which is the delay you were trying to avoid. For the full picture of how the verification side fits together, see what is medical credentialing.
NPI Type 1 vs Type 2: which one you actually need
This is where most of the confusion lives, so here is the clean version.
Own the business and bill under it? Then you need both. Your Type 1 identifies you as the rendering provider, and the Type 2 identifies the organization on the claim. Both are issued free through NPPES, the federal registry CMS runs, and both carry a taxonomy code that tells payers your specialty. Pick the wrong taxonomy and claims bounce, so it is worth getting right the first time.
What we handle: a clean checklist
You supply the documents and the sign offs. We run the rest. Here is the hand off, plainly.
specific proof points — licenses obtained, providers registered, average turnaround
Multi state expansion and the IMLC
Adding states is its own project. A telehealth group treating patients in twelve states needs a license in each of those states, because licensure follows where the patient sits, not where you do. That is a stack of applications, each with its own board, fees and verification.
The Interstate Medical Licensure Compact, the IMLC, exists to make that less painful for physicians who qualify. It is an agreement among participating states, now active in more than forty US jurisdictions, that verifies your credentials once and then distributes them to the states you select. It does not erase the per state fees or approvals, but it cuts the repeated paperwork and duplicate verification. For providers building out a multi state footprint, especially telehealth groups, it is usually the faster road. We manage the compact application and the individual state licenses alongside it.
How long it takes and what we need from you
Plan around real ranges, not wishful ones.
An NPI is fast. A complete online NPPES application is typically issued within one to ten business days. A paper application runs longer, roughly twenty business days. It is the quick part.
A state medical license is the slow part, and the timeline swings hard by board. Industry typical is several weeks to a few months from a complete application, and an incomplete file or a slow primary source verification stretches it. We will not promise to beat a board's calendar we do not control. We keep your file complete and stay on the board so nothing waits on a follow up that never went out.
From you, we need the basics: government ID, your education and training history, current and prior licenses, board certification if you hold it, malpractice history, and your SSN for a Type 1 or your Tax ID for a Type 2. The cleaner that packet, the faster it all moves.
License and NPI are the start, not the finish
Worth saying out loud, because it catches people. Getting licensed and getting an NPI does not let you bill insurance on its own. Both are prerequisites. They unlock the next stage: payer enrollment and credentialing, the work of getting in network and approved to submit claims. The NPI is the identifier on the claim; the license is the credential behind it; enrollment is the contract that gets you paid. Three different things.
So once your license and NPIs are in hand, the next move is provider credentialing services. We carry the file straight through, so you are not re explaining your history to a second team.
Frequently asked questions
Tell us where you practice, whether you bill as an individual, a group or both, and which states you are expanding into. We will tell you exactly which license and which NPI types you need, then run the applications from start to finish.
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*ProCred — national medical credentialing and payer enrollment for providers, groups and facilities across the United States.*
