CARC 262 Active

OA-262: Pharmaceutical Delivery Cost Adjustment

TL;DR

Delivery cost adjustment is an other adjustment. Check if a secondary payer should cover the delivery charge.

Action
Verify & Resubmit
Who Pays
Depends
Appeal
Yes
Patient Impact
Indirect
Disclaimer
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute professional billing advice. Always verify information against your payer contracts and current coding guidelines. Consult a certified billing specialist for specific claim issues.

What Does OA-262 Mean?

OA-262 indicates the delivery cost adjustment does not fall into standard contractual or patient responsibility categories, typically appearing in coordination of benefits situations. The primary payer may be signaling that the delivery cost should be evaluated by a secondary payer.

When CARC 262 appears on a remittance, the payer has specifically adjusted the delivery cost component of a pharmaceutical claim. This code exists exclusively for pharmaceutical billing and signals that the charges associated with physically delivering medication to the patient — courier fees, transportation costs, or specialized handling charges — were not reimbursed at the billed amount. The payer may have reduced the delivery charge to a lower allowed amount or denied it entirely.

This adjustment is distinct from CARC 263 (shipping), 264 (postage), and 265 (administrative) — all of which also apply only to pharmaceuticals. CARC 262 targets the actual delivery logistics cost. Specialty pharmacies, home infusion providers, and mail-order pharmacies encounter this code most frequently because delivery is a core part of their service model. For traditional retail pharmacies, this code is less common since patients typically pick up medications in person.

Under Group Code CO, the delivery cost adjustment is a contractual write-off that cannot be passed to the patient. This is the most common scenario — the payer's contract either excludes delivery charges or caps them at a specific rate. Before writing off the amount, verify that the correct delivery charge codes were used and that the payer applied the right fee schedule. If your contract explicitly covers delivery costs and the payer adjusted them in error, you have grounds for appeal or reprocessing.

Common Causes

Cause Frequency
Delivery costs not covered by the plan The patient's insurance plan does not include reimbursement for pharmaceutical delivery charges, or the payer considers delivery a non-billable ancillary service Most Common
Billing errors in delivery cost calculation The delivery charges submitted on the claim contain calculation errors, use incorrect billing codes, or are not properly separated from the drug cost Common
Missing delivery documentation Insufficient supporting materials such as delivery invoices, proof of delivery, or documentation justifying the delivery charge amount Common
Delivery cost exceeds allowable amount The billed delivery charge exceeds the payer's maximum allowable rate for pharmaceutical delivery services Occasional
Non-covered medication The pharmaceutical product being delivered is not on the plan's formulary, so associated delivery costs are also denied Occasional

How to Resolve

Verify whether delivery costs are covered under your payer contract, correct any coding errors, and resubmit or write off the adjustment.

  1. Identify secondary payer coverage Check the patient's records for secondary insurance that may cover pharmaceutical delivery costs.
  2. Forward the claim to the next payer Submit the delivery charge to the secondary payer with the primary remittance attached showing the OA-262 adjustment.
  3. Post the final balance appropriately After all payers have adjudicated, post any remaining balance per your contract terms.

How to Prevent OA-262

General Prevention

Also Filed As

The same CARC 262 may appear with different Group Codes:

Related Denial Codes

Sources

  1. https://www.mdclarity.com/denial-code/262
  2. https://x12.org/codes/claim-adjustment-reason-codes
  3. Codes maintained by X12. Visit x12.org for official definitions.