Before a healthcare claim can be submitted to any payer, the services rendered during a patient encounter must be captured and entered into the billing system accurately. This is the work of a charge entry specialist — the professional who ensures that every diagnosis code, procedure code, modifier, and service date is correctly recorded so that claims can be generated without errors. In the VA Community Care, TRICARE, and CHAMPVA ecosystem, where billing rules differ by payer and coding errors can trigger compliance investigations, charge entry accuracy is the foundation of the entire revenue cycle.
What Does a Charge Entry Specialist Do?
Charge entry specialists receive coded encounter information — typically from medical coders or directly from clinical documentation — and enter it into the practice management system or billing software. Their responsibilities include verifying that diagnosis codes (ICD-10-CM) and procedure codes (CPT/HCPCS) match the clinical documentation, entering charges with the correct date of service, place of service, rendering provider, and referring provider information, applying appropriate modifiers based on payer requirements, verifying patient demographic and insurance information before charge submission, identifying and correcting discrepancies between clinical documentation and coded data, and ensuring charges are entered within the timely filing deadlines established by each payer.
For VA Community Care claims processed through Optum or TriWest, charge entry must reflect the specific authorization number, the CCN-enrolled provider’s NPI, and the correct place-of-service code for telehealth or in-person visits. TRICARE and CHAMPVA each have their own charge capture requirements. A charge entry error at this stage can cascade through the entire billing process — resulting in claim denials, delayed payments, or compliance flags.
Why AI Cannot Replace Charge Entry Specialists
THE HUMAN JUDGMENT FACTOR
AI can auto-populate fields from EHR data and flag missing information, but it cannot resolve discrepancies between what the clinical documentation says and what the billing system requires. When a provider documents a service that does not match the authorization on file, or when a modifier is required by one payer but not another, a human specialist must identify the issue, verify the correct information, and ensure the charge is entered in a way that will result in a clean claim.
Step-by-Step: How to Become a Charge Entry Specialist
1
Understand the Role’s Position in the Revenue Cycle
Charge entry sits between coding and claims submission. The specialist must understand both upstream (clinical documentation and coding) and downstream (claims processing and payer adjudication) to enter charges that will result in clean, payable claims.
2
Complete a Foundation Education Program
A certificate or associate degree in medical billing, health information management, or healthcare administration provides the foundation. Many programs include training on practice management software, ICD-10-CM and CPT code sets, and payer billing requirements. These programs are eligible for VA education benefits.
3
Develop Billing System Proficiency
Experience with practice management systems, EHR platforms, and billing software is essential. Roles in medical office administration, patient registration, or insurance verification provide exposure to the systems and data fields that charge entry requires.
4
Learn Payer-Specific Charge Requirements
Each payer has specific requirements for how charges must be captured. Optum, TriWest, TRICARE regional contractors, and CHAMPVA each have different authorization formats, modifier rules, and place-of-service requirements. Understanding these differences is critical for clean charge entry in the federal payer space.
5
Earn a Professional Certification
The CBCS (Certified Billing and Coding Specialist) from NHA (~$125 exam) provides an entry-level credential. The CPB (Certified Professional Biller) from AAPC (~$399 exam) provides more comprehensive coverage of billing processes including charge capture. Both are recognized across the industry.
6
Understand the Career Pathways Available
Charge entry specialists work in physician practices, hospitals, billing companies, and as remote contractors. The role provides direct pathways into claims processing, denial management, and revenue cycle analyst positions as experience and certification level increase.
Research Your Earning Potential
Charge entry specialist compensation varies by experience, certification, and region. This article does not include earning projections. Use the following third-party resources:
Paying for Your Education: VA Benefits and Scholarship Opportunities
Post-9/11 GI Bill (Ch. 33)
Covers tuition for associate and bachelor degree programs in healthcare administration, health information management, or medical billing and coding. Reimburses approved certification test fees up to $2,000.
VR&E / Chapter 31
Covers full tuition, books, supplies, certification exam fees, and monthly subsistence allowance for eligible veterans.
MyCAA (Military Spouses)
Provides up to $4,000 over two years. Revenue cycle and billing roles qualify as portable careers that can be performed remotely.
Chapter 35 / DEA
Provides up to 45 months of education benefits to eligible dependents of veterans who meet specific service-connected criteria. Contact the VA for current eligibility details.
Additional Scholarship and Funding Sources
NHA and AAPC both offer exam fee assistance programs. The DOD COOL program may support certification costs for active-duty military. Many states offer tuition waivers for veterans and dependents.
WHY THIS MATTERS FOR THE VETERAN COMMUNITY
Charge entry accuracy determines whether claims are paid or denied. When charges are entered incorrectly for a veteran’s VA Community Care visit, the provider may not be reimbursed, the veteran’s care record may be inaccurate, and the downstream billing process is compromised. Charge entry specialists are the professionals who ensure that the first step in the revenue cycle is done right.