CO Code

Appealing a Kaiser Permanente CO-11 Denial

A Kaiser Permanente CO-11 denial (diagnosis inconsistent with procedure) is one of the most common claim rejections behavioral health therapists face. This guide explains exactly what caused the denial and the most effective appeal strategy for behavioral health practices.

What this denial means

The payer is saying the diagnosis code (ICD-10) you submitted does not medically justify the procedure code you billed. In behavioral health, this often means the diagnosis category does not match the service type or the code is too unspecified.

Your appeal strategy

Verify that the ICD-10 code is specific enough (5–7 characters where required) and directly supports the billed service. Attach a brief clinical summary explaining the relationship between the diagnosis and the procedure. If the diagnosis was coded in error, submit a corrected claim.

What Kaiser Permanente requires

The details below are best-effort estimates. Verify current appeal addresses and deadlines directly with Kaiser Permanente before filing.
Response Window

30 calendar days (Level-1 appeal)

External Review Deadline

60 days from Level-1 denial

Provider Portal
File online
Kaiser Permanente Parity Notes

Kaiser is a closed-panel HMO — most behavioral health is delivered by Kaiser-employed providers. Appeals go through an internal grievance process; external review is via DMHC (CA) or equivalent state agency. Address varies by region (Northern CA, Southern CA, NW, mid-Atlantic, etc.).

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Frequently asked questions

How long does Kaiser Permanente have to respond to a CO-11 appeal?

Under federal regulations and most state prompt-payment laws, Kaiser Permanente must respond to a Level-1 internal appeal within 30 calendar days. If you receive an adverse determination, you typically have 60 calendar days from the date of the Level-1 denial to request external review. Send the appeal via certified mail or through the payer's portal and keep documentation of the submission date. Note: these timelines are best-effort estimates — verify current deadlines directly with the payer.

Does MHPAEA apply to CO-11 denials?

CO-11 denials are not directly tied to mental health parity protections in most cases — this code is a general adjudication rule that applies equally to all claim types. MHPAEA may still be relevant if the underlying reason for the denial differs for mental health vs. medical/surgical services. When in doubt, include a parity argument in your appeal.

Can I appeal a CO-11 denial more than once?

Yes. Most payers, including Kaiser Permanente, allow at least two levels of internal appeal (Level-1 and Level-2 or "expedited" review). After exhausting internal appeals, you have the right to request an Independent Medical Review (IMR) or external review through your state insurance commissioner. Keep copies of every appeal, submission confirmation, and payer response.

What documentation do I need to appeal a CO-11 denial from Kaiser Permanente?

At minimum: the original Explanation of Benefits (EOB) or Remittance Advice (RA) showing the CO-11 denial, the original claim details (CPT code, date of service, NPI, charge amount), and any clinical documentation supporting medical necessity. Submit everything in one packet with a cover letter citing the specific denial code, the date of service, and the claim number.

Related denial codes