Many patients use the words "grievance" and "appeal" interchangeably, but in health insurance, they are two distinct processes with different purposes, timelines, and outcomes. Filing the wrong one — or not understanding which applies — can cost you time and potentially the resolution you need. This guide explains both clearly and helps you determine which to file.

The Core Distinction

AppealGrievance
What it addressesA denial of coverage, service, or paymentAny dissatisfaction that is NOT a coverage denial
What you're asking forReversal of an adverse benefit determinationInvestigation and resolution of a complaint
TriggersEOB denial, prior auth denial, service terminationPoor service, billing problems, access issues, quality concerns
OutcomeDenial upheld or reversed; coverage restoredInvestigation; may lead to apology, correction, policy change
Legal frameworkACA §2719, ERISA, state insurance lawACA §2719, ERISA, state insurance law (separate process)

What Is a Health Insurance Appeal?

An appeal is a formal challenge to an adverse benefit determination — a decision by your insurer that:

The goal of an appeal is always to reverse the denial and obtain coverage. Appeals have defined timelines — insurers must decide internal appeals within specific windows (typically 30 days for pre-service, 60 days for post-service). If you need your denied care reversed, you must file an appeal. A grievance will not reverse a denial.

For a comprehensive guide to the appeal process, see our guide to writing a strong appeal letter or use our free appeal letter generator.

What Is a Health Insurance Grievance?

A grievance (sometimes called a complaint) is a formal expression of dissatisfaction with any aspect of your health plan that does not involve a denial of coverage. Examples of grievance situations:

The confusion zone: When it's both

Some situations involve both an appeal and a grievance. If your insurer denied your claim AND the customer service representative was unhelpful and gave you wrong information about your appeal rights, you have both an appeal (for the denial) and a grievance (for the service failure). File both separately. The grievance won't reverse the denial, but it creates a record of the service problem that can be referenced in regulatory complaints.

ACA Requirements for Both Processes

The ACA requires non-grandfathered plans to maintain both appeal and grievance processes meeting minimum federal standards:

RequirementAppealsGrievances
Written process requiredYesYes
Response timeline (standard)30 days (pre-service) / 60 days (post-service)30 days
Expedited option72 hours for urgent pre-service72 hours for urgent
Written decision requiredYes, with reasons and further rightsYes, with outcome explanation
External review optionYes (IRO review)No external review requirement

How to File an Appeal

Appeal filing is documented extensively on this site. The key steps:

  1. Obtain your denial in writing (EOB or denial notice)
  2. Identify the specific denial reason and appeal deadline
  3. Gather supporting documentation (physician letter, clinical evidence)
  4. Submit a written appeal to the insurer's appeals department before the deadline
  5. If denied: request external review within 4 months

How to File a Grievance

Grievance filing is generally simpler than appeals:

  1. Identify the specific concern (what happened, when, who was involved)
  2. Call your insurer's member services line and ask to file a formal grievance
  3. Follow up in writing with a grievance letter stating the facts clearly
  4. Keep records of all communications
  5. If the grievance is not resolved satisfactorily, escalate to your state insurance department

Medicare-Specific Terminology

Medicare uses slightly different terminology that can cause additional confusion:

For the full Medicare appeal process, see our Medicare appeal guide.

Using Both Processes Strategically

In complex cases — particularly ongoing disputes with an insurer — using both the appeal and grievance process simultaneously is a legitimate and effective strategy:

For tracking and managing your insurance disputes, our appeal success rates guide provides context on what strategies work best across different types of cases.

Sources: ACA Section 2719 (appeals and grievances) · CMS appeals and grievances guidance · NAIC complaint filing guidance. Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only. Grievance and appeal procedures vary by plan type and state. Last updated: March 2026.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between a grievance and an appeal?

An appeal is a formal request to reverse an adverse benefit determination — a claim denial, prior authorization denial, or service termination. A grievance is a formal complaint about any aspect of your health plan that is NOT a coverage denial — such as poor customer service, access issues, or quality of care concerns. Both processes are important but separate.

Can I file both a grievance and an appeal at the same time?

Yes. If you have a denied claim (appeal issue) AND concerns about how you were treated during the process (grievance issue), you can file both simultaneously. They go to different departments and are resolved on separate timelines. Filing a grievance does not substitute for an appeal — if you want a claim denial reversed, you must file a formal appeal.

How long does an insurance grievance take to resolve?

Under ACA rules for most health plans, non-urgent grievances must be resolved within 30 days. Expedited grievances — for urgent situations — must be resolved within 72 hours. Medicare Advantage plans must resolve standard grievances within 30 days and expedited grievances within 24 hours.