Credentialing is the single biggest bottleneck for new telehealth providers. The process determines whether insurance companies will pay you for services, and getting it wrong can delay your launch by months. This guide walks through the exact steps to get credentialed with Medicare, Medicaid, and commercial payers as a solo telehealth provider.
What is provider credentialing?
Credentialing is the process of verifying your education, training, licensure, and work history so that insurance companies will add you to their provider panel. Once credentialed, you can bill that payer for patient services and receive reimbursement.
Without credentialing, you are limited to cash-pay patients only. For most telehealth practices, insurance reimbursement makes up the majority of revenue.
Before you start: what you need ready
Gather these before submitting any applications. Missing documents are the number one cause of delays.
- Active state license for every state where you will see patients
- NPI number (Type 1 for individual, Type 2 if you have a group practice)
- Tax ID or EIN for your business entity
- DEA registration (if applicable to your specialty)
- Malpractice insurance certificate with coverage dates
- CAQH profile completed and attested
- Diploma, board certifications, and training documentation
- Work history for the past 10 years with no gaps
Step 1: Complete your CAQH profile
CAQH ProView is the centralized database that most commercial payers pull from when processing your application. Think of it as the single source of truth for your credentials.
Go to proview.caqh.org and create your profile. Fill in every section completely. Upload all supporting documents. Then attest the profile, which is CAQH's term for certifying that the information is accurate.
Critical detail: you must re-attest every 120 days or your profile goes inactive. Set a calendar reminder. If your profile lapses, payers cannot process your application and you will not know until you follow up weeks later.
Common CAQH mistakes that cause delays
- Leaving gaps in work history. If you took time off, note it as "not employed" with dates.
- Uploading expired documents. Check every expiration date before submitting.
- Not attesting after completing the profile. The profile is not active until attested.
- Using a personal address instead of your practice address.
Step 2: Apply for Medicare (PECOS)
Medicare enrollment happens through the PECOS system (Provider Enrollment, Chain, and Ownership System) at pecos.cms.hhs.gov. You will need your NPI, CAQH ID, and practice details.
For telehealth, your enrollment type matters. Solo practitioners typically enroll as a "sole proprietor" or through their LLC/PLLC. If you have a group practice, you will also need a Type 2 NPI and group enrollment.
Medicare processing takes 60-90 days on average. You cannot bill retroactively before your effective date, so submit this application as early as possible. Some states allow a 30-day retroactive billing window, but do not count on it.
Step 3: Apply for Medicaid
Medicaid credentialing is state-specific. Each state has its own portal, its own forms, and its own timeline. Some states process in 30 days. Others take 90+.
Check your state's Medicaid provider enrollment portal. You will need the same core documents as Medicare, plus any state-specific forms. Many states also require a site visit or attestation of your telehealth setup.
If you plan to practice across multiple states, you will need to credential with Medicaid in each state separately.
Step 4: Apply to commercial payers
After CAQH is complete, apply to the commercial payers you want to accept. Start with the top 3-5 payers in your state by market share. For behavioral health, this typically includes Blue Cross Blue Shield, Aetna, Cigna, UnitedHealthcare, and your state's dominant regional payer.
Each payer has its own application process, but most pull directly from your CAQH profile. Turnaround is typically 60-120 days per payer.
How to prioritize which payers to apply for
- Check which plans your target patients are likely to carry
- Research reimbursement rates in your area for your most common CPT codes
- Start with payers that have open panels. Some are closed to new providers in certain regions.
- Apply to all target payers simultaneously. Do not wait for one to finish before starting the next.
Step 5: Track and follow up
This is where most providers fail. They submit applications and then wait. Credentialing applications stall constantly: missing documents, internal payer backlogs, applications sitting in the wrong queue.
Follow up every 2 weeks with each payer. Document every call: who you spoke with, what they said, the reference number. If an application has not moved in 30 days, escalate to a supervisor.
The TelemedLaunch SOP template includes a credentialing tracker with smart flags that auto-detect overdue applications and items stuck for 30+ days. It tracks every payer, every status change, and every follow-up date. See the full system.
Timeline: what to expect
From first application to fully credentialed with multiple payers, expect 90-120 days. Here is a realistic breakdown:
- CAQH setup and attestation: 1-2 days
- Medicare (PECOS): 60-90 days
- Medicaid: 30-90 days depending on state
- Commercial payers: 60-120 days each
The key is to run these in parallel. Submit everything in week 1-2, then manage the follow-up process while you build out the rest of your practice.
What to do while you wait
Credentialing takes time, but that does not mean your launch stalls. While applications process, you can set up your EHR, build your intake workflow, configure your telehealth platform, create your consent forms, and start marketing your practice. Some providers also see cash-pay patients during this window to start generating revenue immediately.
Skip the guesswork
The Telehealth Practice Launch Kit includes a complete credentialing walkthrough, a tracker with smart flags for every payer, and the exact follow-up cadence that prevents stalled applications.
Get the Launch System: $299