Prior authorization denials are the single most common type of insurance denial — and according to Kaiser Family Foundation data, they are also among the most winnable. In ACA marketplace plans, over 60% of prior auth appeals result in overturned denials. Understanding why prior authorizations are denied, and knowing the right strategies to challenge them, dramatically increases your odds.

60%+
PA appeals overturned (KFF data)
35M+
PA requests annually
15 days
Insurer must decide PA appeals
72 hrs
Expedited PA decision deadline

What Is Prior Authorization?

Prior authorization (also called pre-authorization, prior approval, or pre-certification) is a requirement that your insurer approve certain treatments, medications, or procedures before you receive them. Insurers use prior authorization to control costs and ensure treatments meet their clinical criteria.

Prior authorization is required for a growing number of services. A 2022 AMA survey found that physicians submit an average of 45 prior authorization requests per physician per week. The most commonly prior-authorized services include specialty medications (especially biologics), MRI and advanced imaging, specialist consultations, inpatient admissions, home health services, durable medical equipment, and certain surgical procedures.

Common Reasons Prior Auth Is Denied

Strategy 1: Challenge the Clinical Criteria

The most powerful prior auth appeal strategy is to directly challenge the clinical criteria used to deny the request. Under 29 CFR §2560.503-1(g)(1)(viii), the insurer must provide you with the specific criteria used. Once you have them, have your physician respond point-by-point, demonstrating how you meet each criterion.

Request the specific guidelines in writing as part of your appeal. If the insurer used Milliman Clinical Criteria (MCG) or InterQual, those criteria are reviewable. Your physician's expert judgment about your specific case can override algorithmic criteria when the case is well-documented.

Strategy 2: Invoke Peer-to-Peer Review

Before filing a formal appeal, ask your doctor to request a "peer-to-peer review" — a direct conversation between your treating physician and the insurer's medical reviewer. This informal process succeeds surprisingly often. According to physician surveys, peer-to-peer reviews overturn initial denials approximately 75% of the time when the requesting physician is persistent and well-prepared.

Your doctor should call the insurer's medical director's office, have the patient's complete clinical records on hand, and be prepared to explain specifically why standard criteria do not account for the patient's unique clinical circumstances.

Strategy 3: Document Medical Necessity with Specificity

Vague letters of medical necessity lose appeals. Winning appeals include:

Strategy 4: Cite Federal Regulations

Your appeal letter should cite the legal framework governing prior authorization:

Critical: Expedited Appeals for Urgent Cases

If your denied treatment is urgent, request an EXPEDITED appeal. Under 45 CFR §147.136(d)(2), insurers must respond to expedited appeals within 72 hours. For urgently needed treatments, a delayed standard appeal can cause irreversible harm. Always clearly label expedited appeals as "EXPEDITED" and document the medical urgency in writing.

Template Language That Works

When writing your appeal, include this type of language in your letter:

"The denial of prior authorization for [treatment] is inconsistent with the current standard of care for [diagnosis] as reflected in [cite guideline]. The clinical criteria used in the denial determination fail to account for [specific clinical circumstances]. Pursuant to 45 CFR §147.136 and the plan's internal appeal process, I respectfully request reversal of this denial. The requested treatment is medically necessary, as documented by [doctor name], and meets all applicable clinical criteria."

For a complete, ready-to-use letter, use our Appeal Letter Generator — scenarios 1 (standard prior auth) and 2 (urgent prior auth) include full regulatory citations.

What to Include With Your Appeal

After Filing: Timelines to Know

Once you submit an internal prior auth appeal, your insurer must decide:

If the insurer violates these timelines, it is considered a "deemed denial" in many states — which you can escalate to external review immediately without waiting for a formal denial.

After Internal Denial: External Review

If your internal appeal is denied, you have the right to request independent external review under ACA §2719. External review organizations are completely independent from your insurer. For prior authorization denials, external review overturns the decision in approximately 40% of cases. Use our External Review Checker to see if you qualify and who handles reviews in your state.