COBRA continuation coverage is one of the most important — and most misunderstood — protections in US health insurance. When coverage disputes arise during COBRA, the stakes are especially high: medical bills that were incurred while coverage should have been active can be enormous, and the administrative rules that govern COBRA create specific appeal rights that most people don't know exist. This guide walks through the most common COBRA disputes and how to fight them.
COBRA Basics: What Can Go Wrong
COBRA disputes fall into two main categories:
- Administrative disputes: Problems with enrollment, notice, premium payment processing, or coverage period — the insurer or administrator made an error
- Claim disputes: Your COBRA coverage is active but a specific claim was denied — the same situation as any health insurance denial
These require different responses. Administrative disputes involve ERISA rights and DOL oversight. Claim disputes use the same appeal process as any other insurance denial.
Administrative COBRA Disputes
Failure to Provide Timely Election Notice
Under COBRA, the plan administrator (typically your former employer or a third-party administrator) must provide a notice of COBRA rights within 44 days of the qualifying event (job loss, reduction in hours, divorce, etc.). If you didn't receive notice in time, or received inadequate notice:
- The plan administrator faces civil penalties of up to $110 per day for each day the notice was delayed beyond the deadline
- Courts have allowed retroactive COBRA enrollment in cases where the administrator failed to provide timely, adequate notice
- File a complaint with the Department of Labor's Employee Benefits Security Administration (EBSA) at dol.gov/ebsa or call 1-866-444-3272
- Consult an ERISA attorney if you incurred significant medical bills during the period you should have had COBRA coverage
Document when you received the notice
The 60-day COBRA election period begins from the later of: the date of the qualifying event or the date you received the election notice. If you can establish you received the notice late, your election period is extended accordingly. Keep the envelope showing the postmark date, and note the date you actually received the notice.
Payment Processing Errors
If you made a COBRA premium payment that was not applied to your account, and your coverage was terminated as a result:
- Gather proof of payment: bank statement, cancelled check, wire transfer confirmation, certified mail receipt
- Contact the plan administrator in writing immediately, attaching proof of payment
- Request that coverage be reinstated retroactively to the date of payment
- If the administrator refuses, file an EBSA complaint and consider consulting an ERISA attorney
Incorrect Coverage Period or Premium Amount
COBRA premiums are capped by law at 102% of the actual cost of coverage (the employer's full contribution plus your previous contribution, plus 2% for administrative costs). If you are being charged more than 102% of the plan's actual cost, this is a COBRA violation. Request the plan's documentation showing the actual cost calculation.
Wrongful Denial of COBRA Eligibility
If you were told you are not eligible for COBRA but you believe you should be, your eligibility depends on:
- Your employer has 20 or more employees (federal COBRA); check your state's "mini-COBRA" law if your employer has fewer employees
- You experienced a qualifying event (job loss, reduction in hours, divorce, legal separation, death of covered employee, dependent child aging out)
- You were covered under the group health plan on the day before the qualifying event
If all three apply and you were denied COBRA, file an EBSA complaint and consult an ERISA attorney.
State "Mini-COBRA" Laws
If your employer has fewer than 20 employees, federal COBRA does not apply — but most states have their own continuation coverage laws ("mini-COBRA") that provide similar rights. Coverage periods and premiums vary by state. Contact your state insurance department for mini-COBRA information specific to your state. Our state directory provides contact information for each state's insurance commissioner.
Claim Denials Under COBRA Coverage
When a specific claim is denied under COBRA coverage, the appeal process is identical to any other insurance claim denial. COBRA coverage is the same plan you had as an active employee — the same coverage terms, exclusions, and claims processes apply.
| COBRA Claim Denial Scenario | Appeal Approach |
|---|---|
| Medical necessity denial | Standard internal appeal with physician letter and clinical evidence |
| Service not covered / exclusion | Review plan documents; appeal if exclusion is ambiguous or misapplied |
| Claim denied because coverage was "lapsed" | Provide proof of premium payment; appeal administrative error |
| Out-of-network denial | Standard OON appeal; cite No Surprises Act if emergency care |
| Claim submitted after coverage end date | Verify exact COBRA end date; document if coverage period was longer than indicated |
Retroactive COBRA Enrollment: When Bills Pile Up
One of COBRA's most misunderstood features is the right to elect coverage retroactively. During your 60-day election period, if you get sick or have a medical emergency, you can elect COBRA coverage retroactively back to the date active coverage ended — and submit all bills incurred in the meantime. You will need to pay all premiums back to the start date, but if your medical bills exceed the premium cost, this is financially rational. Key points:
- The retroactive election covers all claims from the first day after active coverage ended
- You must pay all back premiums for the retroactive period at once
- Submit all claims simultaneously with proof of retroactive enrollment
- Providers may need to resubmit claims that were initially denied due to no coverage
The DOL EBSA: Your Regulatory Ally
The Department of Labor's Employee Benefits Security Administration (EBSA) enforces COBRA for employer-sponsored plans. EBSA can:
- Investigate COBRA notice violations
- Pursue civil penalties against non-compliant employers and administrators
- Require plan administrators to provide coverage they improperly denied
- Help you understand your COBRA rights at no cost
Call EBSA at 1-866-444-3272 or submit a complaint online at askebsa.dol.gov. This is a free resource and filing a complaint does not affect your right to also file a private lawsuit.
For standard claim denials under COBRA coverage, use our free appeal letter generator and review our guide on appeal success rates. For disputes about the grievance vs. appeal distinction within your COBRA plan, see our grievance vs. appeal guide.
Sources: COBRA (29 U.S.C. §1161–1169) · ERISA · DOL EBSA COBRA guidance · CMS state mini-COBRA survey. Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only. COBRA rules are complex; consult an ERISA attorney for significant coverage disputes. Last updated: March 2026.