National medical credentialing & payer enrollment
ProCred

Best Medical Credentialing Companies

How do you actually pick the best medical credentialing company when every one of them calls itself the best? You cannot, not from the marketing. So here is the honest version, the way I would lay it out for a practice manager who called and asked me straight. There is no single best company. There is the company that fits your provider count, your payers and your timeline, and there is a short list of things that reliably separate the good ones from the ones that cost you billing days. This guide gives you that framework, the questions to ask, and the red flags to walk away from.

Free, itemized quote. No obligation.
What to look for
A credentialing partner should offer
  • Transparent, itemized pricing — no surprises
  • A dedicated credentialing specialist
  • Primary source verification to NCQA standards
  • Regular, proactive status reporting
  • Recredentialing & expiry tracking
  • Experience with your payers and specialty

We do not publish a ranking on this page, and we will get to why. What you get instead is a way to judge any credentialing company you are looking at, including ours.

What the best medical credentialing companies actually do

Before you compare anyone, get clear on what the work even is. A lot of weak vendors quietly do only half of it.

A real credentialing company runs the full file. That means verifying a provider's licenses, education, training, work history and malpractice record through primary source verification, building and attesting the CAQH profile, then enrolling the provider with each payer they need. Enrollment splits into Medicare through PECOS and the CMS 855 forms, Medicaid through the state program, and commercial plans like Aetna, Cigna, UnitedHealthcare, Humana and Blue Cross Blue Shield. They set up the NPI through NPPES if needed, chase the payers, and keep you live with recredentialing and revalidation on the two to three year cycle most networks run. For the full picture, here is what medical credentialing is.

The best ones own that whole chain. The weak ones submit a form and go quiet.

How to choose a medical credentialing company: 8 criteria

This is the part worth bookmarking. Strip away the logos and the testimonials, and the companies worth hiring score well on these eight things.

1
Track record with your kind of practice. A company that credentials solo therapists all day is not the same as one that onboards thirty provider groups. Ask what they actually do most.
2
Payer coverage. Confirm they handle the specific plans you need, not just the big nationals. Medicaid and regional commercial plans are where weak vendors fall down.
3
Turnaround and a written timeline. Credentialing typically runs 90 to 120 days, sometimes longer for Medicare. A good company gives you a realistic window in writing and explains what drives it. Nobody honest promises 30 days for everything.
4
Transparency and reporting. You should see where every application stands without chasing anyone. Ask how often they report and what the report looks like.
5
A dedicated specialist. You want a named person or small team who knows your file, not a ticket queue where you start over every call.
6
An NCQA aligned process. Primary source verification done to recognized standards is what keeps you compliant and keeps payers from kicking files back.
7
Pricing clarity. A clean per provider or per payer quote with no surprise fees beats a vague monthly retainer you cannot pin down.
8
Data security. They are handling Social Security numbers, licenses and provider data. HIPAA aware handling and secure document exchange are not optional.

Hit most of these and you have a real partner. Miss several and you have a liability.

Good versus weak: a side by side

Same eight criteria, the quick scannable version.

CriterionA strong companyA weak company
ScopeVerification, CAQH, enrollment, renewals end to endSubmits forms, drops the rest
Payer coverageMedicare, Medicaid and the commercial plans you nameBig nationals only
TimelineRealistic 90 to 120 day window in writingVague, or promises that sound too fast
ReportingRegular status updates you can seeYou chase for answers
OwnershipNamed specialist who knows your fileA rotating ticket queue
StandardsNCQA aligned primary source verificationUnclear process
PricingClear per provider or per payer quoteHidden fees, fuzzy retainer
SecurityHIPAA aware, secure document exchangeEmail a spreadsheet and hope

In house versus outsourced credentialing

Half the people reading this are really deciding whether to hire a credentialing company at all, or just do it inside the practice. Fair question.

In house gives you control and someone down the hall. It also means a salaried specialist, software, training, and the risk that when they leave, your institutional knowledge walks out with them. A single provider joining five plans can eat a full workweek of staff time, and self managed applications get sent back for rework more often than people expect.

Outsourcing trades that for a known fee and a team that does this every day across many payers. For a solo provider or a small group, the math usually favors outsourcing. You are not carrying a full salary to credential a handful of people a year. A large system credentialing dozens of providers a month might justify an in house team. Most practices sit in between and are better off handing it to a service. To see how an outsourced engagement runs, here is how our process works.

In-house vs outsourced
In-house
Staff hours, salary and software — plus the cost of missed deadlines.
vs
Outsourced
One predictable per-provider fee and specialists who track every date.

How credentialing companies price the work

You cannot compare two companies until you know they are quoting the same thing. There are four models.

Per payer. You pay for each insurance network you join. Clean when you only need a handful of plans.
Per provider flat fee. One price covers a provider across a standard set of payers. Predictable per new hire.
Bundle. A package covering the top networks, with the per payer cost dropping on volume.
Monthly maintenance. A recurring fee that keeps you live: tracking expirables, attesting CAQH, watching recredentialing and revalidation dates.

For the actual dollar ranges, and what pushes a quote up or down, see credentialing services cost. Treat any number a company gives you as a quote on your specific mix, not a fixed list price.

Questions to ask before you sign

Bring these to the call. The answers tell you more than any brochure.

Which exact payers will you enroll us with, and have you done them recently?
What is the realistic timeline for our specialty and state, in writing?
Who is our point of contact, and how often will we get status updates?
How do you handle a payer that sits on an application or denies it?
Is pricing per provider, per payer, or a retainer, and what is not included?
How do you exchange and store our documents securely?
What happens at recredentialing time, and is that included?

Red flags to walk away from

Some signals should end the conversation.

A guarantee of approval, or a guaranteed 30 day timeline. No one controls the payers.
No written timeline or scope.
No reporting, or you chase for every update.
Fees that appear after you sign.
Vague answers about who actually does the work.
No clear answer on data security.

Where our service fits

So where do we land? We are a national US credentialing and payer enrollment service. We run the full file: primary source verification, CAQH, Medicare and Medicaid enrollment, commercial payer contracting, and ongoing recredentialing, with a named contact and status reporting so you are not chasing us. We quote per engagement based on your providers, payers and specialty, itemized, so you see what each piece costs. Browse our credentialing services to see what an engagement can include.

We are handing you the criteria to judge us by the same standard as anyone else. That is the point. company specific proof — years in business, providers credentialed, turnaround averages, client names and testimonials are shown only where verified, never invented.

A note on this guide

You will notice there is no "Top 10" ranking here. That is deliberate. Honest rankings need verified data on every company listed, and most of the lists you will find do not have it. We would rather hand you a framework you can apply yourself than add another unverifiable list to the pile. Judge every company, including this one, against the eight criteria above.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

It handles the work of getting a provider verified and enrolled with insurance networks. That covers primary source verification of licenses, education and history, building and attesting the CAQH profile, enrolling the provider with Medicare through PECOS, with Medicaid, and with commercial payers, then keeping the provider live through recredentialing and revalidation.

Judge each one against a fixed set of criteria: track record with practices like yours, the specific payers they cover, a realistic written timeline, transparent reporting, a dedicated point of contact, an NCQA aligned verification process, clear pricing, and HIPAA aware data security. The best company is the one that scores well on those for your situation, not the one with the loudest marketing.

For solo providers and small groups, outsourcing is usually more cost effective than carrying a salaried credentialing specialist, since a single provider joining several plans can take a full workweek of staff time. Large systems credentialing many providers each month may justify an in house team. Most practices land in between and are better served by an outsourced service.

Pricing follows four models: per payer, per provider flat fee, a bundle of top networks, or monthly maintenance. The number depends on how many providers and payers you bring and your specialty. See our credentialing services cost page for general market ranges and what drives them.

Ask which exact payers they will enroll you with and how recently they have done them, the realistic written timeline for your specialty and state, who your point of contact is and how often you will get updates, how they handle a stalled or denied application, exactly how pricing works and what is excluded, and how they store your documents securely.

Industry typical timelines run about 90 to 120 days per payer, and Medicare can take longer. A good company gives you a realistic window in writing up front. Be skeptical of anyone promising approval in 30 days, since the payers control the clock.

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*ProCred — national medical credentialing and payer enrollment for providers, groups and facilities across the United States.*

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