As we move deeper into 2025, the healthcare landscape continues to shift toward collaboration and consolidation, making group practice billing more critical than ever.
Group practices—whether multi-specialty or single-specialty—are on the rise, and with that growth comes a need for smarter, scalable revenue cycle strategies.
Group practice billing isn’t just about managing a higher claim volume; it’s about aligning clinical, administrative, and financial operations across multiple providers and locations. In this article, we explore what’s working in 2025, where the pitfalls are, and how group practices can position themselves for stronger financial outcomes.
Why Group Practices Need Specialized Billing Strategies
Group medical practices face unique challenges that differ from solo providers or hospital systems. These include:
- Multi-provider coordination
- Centralized billing and reporting
- Diverse specialty-specific coding
- Complex payer contracts across sites
- Credentialing at scale
A one-size-fits-all billing approach simply doesn’t cut it anymore. Success in group practice billing now relies on customized RCM strategies, dedicated account management, and real-time performance analytics.
What’s Working in Group Practice Billing in 2025
1. Centralized Billing Infrastructure
Centralization is key. Group practices that consolidate their billing operations across all locations see better consistency in data, cleaner claims, and fewer compliance issues. A centralized approach also makes it easier to:
- Standardize charge capture processes
- Unify reporting dashboards
- Monitor provider-specific performance
2. Data-Driven Revenue Cycle Management (RCM)
In 2025, leading group practices are using predictive analytics and real-time reporting to make informed decisions. Whether it’s spotting coding trends or identifying payer delays, data visibility is driving outcomes—not just operations.
3. Dedicated Billing Teams for Multi-Site Practices
Working with a billing partner that assigns Dedicated Account Managers ensures every location gets the attention it needs. These teams know your workflows, your specialties, and your KPIs—and they don’t just manage billing, they improve it.
4. Credentialing and Payer Management at Scale
Group practices can’t afford to let payer enrollment delays stall growth. Efficient credentialing services and proactive payer contract management are essential to keeping new providers billable and revenue flowing.
5. Flexible Pricing Models
2025 has shown us that RCM partnerships must be adaptive. Whether your group practice is expanding, merging, or changing specialties, your billing solution should offer flexible pricing models that scale with your needs—not lock you in.
Key Outcomes Group Practices Can Expect with the Right Billing Partner
- Reduction in claim rejections and denials
- Faster reimbursement cycles
- Better cash flow predictability
- Improved provider satisfaction
- Actionable insights for operational planning
At MBC, our tailored approach to group practice billing helps clients go beyond basic collections. We focus on outcomes that improve clinical operations and financial stability across the board.
Frequently Asked Questions
To set up group practice billing, you need a centralized billing system, provider credentialing across payers, and integrated workflows across locations and specialties. Outsourcing to an experienced RCM partner like MBC ensures a smoother, scalable setup.
Top challenges in 2025 include:
Managing multi-provider credentialing
Claim denials due to inconsistent charge capture
Lack of centralized data reporting
Delays in payer reimbursements across sites
No. Each provider must have their own individual NPI (Type 1), while the group practice has a group NPI (Type 2). Billing must align with both for proper payer identification and compliance.
There’s no one-size-fits-all. The best software depends on your specialties, size, and workflow. Practices often integrate EHRs with billing systems or partner with an RCM vendor who can centralize data and work across platforms like Athenahealth, eClinicalWorks, or NextGen.
For most growing practices, yes. Outsourcing to a billing partner like MBC allows for:
Scalable operations
Expertise in multi-specialty coding
Better denial management
Lower overhead costs compared to in-house billing teams
Pricing varies based on volume, specialty, services provided, and complexity. At MBC, we offer flexible pricing models tailored to your practice’s needs and growth stage, rather than flat percentages.
Billing errors—especially in multi-provider environments—can lead to denials, payment delays, compliance risks, and even audits. That’s why consistent coding, centralized QA, and dedicated billing oversight are critical for group practices.

Catering to more than 40 specialties, Medical Billers and Coders (MBC) is proficient in handling services that range from revenue cycle management to ICD-10 testing solutions. The main goal of our organization is to assist physicians looking for billers and coders, at the same time help billing specialists looking for jobs, reach the right place.