RARC remark code guide

BCBS RARC N179 — Additional information requested from member

What RARC N179 means with BCBS denials, common paired CARCs, evidence checklist, and provider next steps.

Fast answer: Additional information has been requested from the member and charges may be reconsidered after receipt.

How to use RARC N179

RARC N179 should be read with the CARC and group code on the same claim or service line. For BCBS denials, the remark often tells you whether the next move is a corrected claim, attachment response, COB update, authorization proof, or appeal packet.

Common paired CARCs

Recommended workflow

  1. Verify payer order using eligibility, member COB updates, Medicare records, and plan coordination rules.
  2. Attach the primary payer EOB/ERA or explain why BCBS is primary.
  3. Submit secondary claim data with correct CAS segments, paid amount, deductible, coinsurance, and adjustment information.
  4. Ask the member to complete COB updates if the payer requires member response.
  5. Appeal only after payer order and primary adjudication proof are clean.

Evidence checklist

  • Primary payer EOB/ERA
  • COB questionnaire status
  • Eligibility responses
  • Medicare crossover record
  • Accident/workers compensation notes
  • Secondary claim extract

FAQ

What does RARC N179 mean?

Additional information has been requested from the member and charges may be reconsidered after receipt.

Is N179 enough to appeal a BCBS denial?

No. Pair the RARC with the CARC, group code, EOB text, claim line, and plan rule. The RARC explains the missing detail or context; the CARC explains the adjustment reason.

What should I attach for N179?

Start with Primary payer EOB/ERA, COB questionnaire status, Eligibility responses, Medicare crossover record. Add only the records that answer the specific remark code and denial reason.