Superbills… and MORE

This builds on my other article about prompt-pay discounts and sliding scales—because this is where a lot of providers unintentionally get themselves into trouble.

First, let’s clear up some common questions:

Why does a provider’s Tax ID need to be on a superbill?

I get this one all the time. Just like your NPI identifies who performed the service, your Tax ID tells the carrier what entity provided it. It’s how they confirm you’re a legitimate billing entity.

Think of a superbill for what it really is—it functions very similarly to a CMS-1500 claim form. If the carrier is going to reimburse the patient, they need essentially the same information they would require if you submitted the claim yourself.

Next question: Why can’t I just put a total on the superbill and apply a prompt-pay discount?

Short answer—you can’t do that.

Ask yourself: would you submit a CMS-1500 with a discounted total at the bottom? No. Claims are line-item specific, and your documentation needs to reflect that same structure.

The correct way to handle this:

Apply your prompt-pay discount for each line item, not the total.

That means:

• Each CPT code has its own fee

• Each line reflects the discounted (prompt-pay) amount

If you’re using an EHR, this usually means configuring:

• Your standard rate (what you bill insurance)

• Your prompt-pay rate (your discounted cash price)

Another concern I hear:

“But what if the carrier sees I charge insurance more than I charge patients?”

You’re not charging patients less—you’re giving a prompt-pay discount. There’s a difference.

If your fee structure is consistent and your prompt-pay discount reasonably reflects administrative savings (commonly around ~20%), you can explain it if needed. In reality, you’ll probably never be asked.

Where this does become a problem…

Let’s say you issue a superbill showing:

• $80 for 2 units (minimum 23 minutes)

The patient submits that for reimbursement (maybe they have a high deductible and prefer your prompt-pay rate).

Then later:

• Another patient with the same insurance comes in

• You bill the carrier $180 for the exact same services

Now you’ve created a discrepancy.

This is not theoretical—I’ve worked with providers in this exact situation. The result?

• Repayments back to the insurance carrier

• Reduced allowable amounts on future claims

Same issue applies to your website pricing

If you list prices publicly, you need to be very clear:

• These are prompt-pay (time-of-service) rates

• They are discounted from your standard fees

And those discounts should be reasonably consistent (again, typically around that ~20% range tied to real cost savings).

Bottom line:

• Superbills should mirror claim-level accuracy

• Discounts must be applied per service—not as a lump sum

• Your fee structure must be consistent across the board

Because once your numbers don’t line up—that’s when the problems start.