OLD AR AND LEGACY AR

Legacy AR Recovery That Converts Aged Balances Into Cash

Every practice has AR that stopped being actively worked at some point — balances that aged past the point of routine follow-up, were moved to a write-off queue, or accumulated during a billing system transition. This legacy AR represents real revenue that was generated but never collected, and in many cases, it is still recoverable.

QWay Healthcare specializes in legacy AR recovery — systematic analysis of aged balance portfolios, collection probability scoring, and targeted recovery workflows that convert aged balances into cash before they expire permanently.

The question is not whether the AR is old. The question is how much of it is still collectible, and whether anyone is working it.

The Financial Risk of Unworked Legacy AR

Claim collectibility declines predictably with age.

Claims in the 91-to-120-day range have an average collection probability of 50-70% 

Claims beyond 180 days drop to 20-40% 

Beyond 365 days, the majority of commercial balances are past timely filing and legally uncollectable 

For a practice with $400,000 in AR over 120 days, working even 40 percent of that portfolio to resolution recovers $160,000 that would otherwise become a write-off. The cost of recovery is consistently lower than the alternative of writing off balances that still had collection potential.

Industry Benchmarks for AR Age Distribution

Well-managed AR portfolios maintain:

AR over 90 days: under 15% of total AR

AR over 120 days: under 10% of total AR

AR over 180 days: under 5% of total AR

Write-off rate: under 1% of net patient revenue

Days to appeal submission: under 30 days from denial receipt

Practices with AR portfolios significantly exceeding these distributions have recoverable revenue in their aged balances.

Where the Problem Starts

Legacy AR accumulates when routine follow-up stops. Common triggers include billing system migrations, staff turnover, denial volume spikes that push current work ahead of aged balances, and practice acquisitions where the acquiring organization inherits an unknown AR portfolio.

The secondary problem is the assessment of the collection probability. Without a systematic analysis of which aged balances have realistic recovery potential, teams either attempt to work everything — wasting effort on uncollectable claims — or write off entire portfolios without identifying what was still recoverable.

How QWay Healthcare Controls AR

Legacy AR Portfolio Analysis

The full aged AR inventory is analyzed by payer, claim type, age, and collection probability to identify the recoverable segment.

Collection Probability Scoring

Each balance is scored based on timely filing status, payer adjudication history, and claim type to determine the likelihood of recovery before work is assigned.

Payer-Specific Recovery Workflows

The recovery strategy is matched to each payer’s appeals and resubmission process, applying the appropriate path to each balance.

Timely Filing Research

Balances near the timely filing limits are flagged for priority action. Exceptions and circumstances that extend filing windows are researched and applied.

Self-Pay Legacy Balance Handling

Patient balances in the legacy portfolio are segmented for appropriate collection pathway — payment plans, financial hardship review, or write-off determination.

AI-Assisted Recovery Prioritization

Machine learning tools score the AR portfolio by recovery potential, directing recovery effort toward the balances most likely to produce cash.

Old AR and Legacy AR

Revenue Exposure Categories Addressed

  • Aged commercial claims
  • Medicare and Medicaid aged balances
  • Self-pay legacy balances
  • Billing system transition AR orphans
  • Post-acquisition AR portfolios