September 12, 2022 · 2 min read

The Notice of Election (NOE) is more than a clinical administrative task; it is a critical financial trigger. In the hospice revenue cycle, the NOE serves as the formal notification to Medicare that an agency has assumed responsibility for a patient’s care. Failure to file this document within the mandatory window results in permanent, unrecoverable revenue loss.
Medicare regulations require that an NOE be filed within five calendar days after the beneficiary’s hospice admission date. For a filing to be considered legally “timely,” it must meet two specific criteria:
When an NOE is filed late, the financial consequences are immediate. Medicare will not reimburse the agency for the days of care provided from the date of admission until the date the NOE is finally submitted and accepted.
Consider this example of a late filing:
One of the most common drivers of revenue loss is the Return to Provider (RTP) error. If an NOE is submitted within the five-day window but contains errors, it will be sent back for corrections.
It is critical to understand that the resubmission date becomes the new “receipt date” for timeliness purposes. Even if your initial attempt was on day two, if the corrected version isn’t accepted until day ten, the entire period remains non-covered. This is why “clean” initial submissions are just as important as “fast” submissions.
If an agency identifies that an NOE was filed untimely, the subsequent claim must be coded specifically to reflect the non-covered period. This is not optional; failure to code correctly can lead to claim rejections or audits.
To eliminate the risk of late filings, high-performing agencies do not aim for the five-day deadline. Instead, they implement an internal 48-hour submission rule.
By requiring NOEs to be filed within two days of admission, leadership creates a “buffer” to handle unexpected RTP errors or technical issues with the billing software. This proactive operating rhythm ensures that administrative delays never compromise the agency’s financial stability or the clinical team’s ability to focus on patient care.