Skip to main content

Article

4 ways digital claim payments can save you money

Explore how Optum Financial payment solutions can help you save money today and in the future.

2-minute read

When insurance companies discuss their most compelling reasons for engaging with a fintech partner to accelerate their move to digital claim payments, 2 central themes typically emerge: the urgent need to deliver better, more convenient claim payment experiences and the growing pressure to lower the costs of managing and processing those payments. 

In this second “lowering costs” category, the conversation often revolves around some standard and straightforward benefits that include eliminating the costs of printing and mailing checks, reducing banking and treasury fees, creating an efficient single system or record across payment types, and streamlining claim payment management processes. 

These are all obviously important, and they form the foundation of the electronic payment cost savings argument, but they are far from the only ways the right payment solution can lower your costs. To round out the discussion, here are 4 slightly less obvious (but equally important) ways you can save money by engaging with a digital claim payment partner. 

#1: Lower your support costs with self-service and outsourcing

With the right digital payment solution, you can offer your payees a convenient way to manage their own mobile payment options and preferences through a simple app interface. This type of payment self-service can take a significant bite out of your service and support costs by lowering your call volumes and automating the payment preferencing process. And of course, if you choose a claim payment partner with a full-time support center, you can offload the costs of supporting most claim payments altogether. 

#2: Eliminate check fraud

It’s no secret that paper checks are a popular target for fraud — and that electronic payments are significantly safer. As you transition more payees from checks to electronic payments, the amount of fraud you must deal with, along with the associated remediation costs, will decline as well. 

#3: Reduce claim leakage and lost costs

Electronic claim payments are faster than paper checks — especially as you work toward same-day and instant claim payments. Simply getting claim payments into the hands of claimants and service providers in hours (or days) instead of weeks can have a big impact on storage fees, rental car costs and other claim lost costs. 

#4: Build a more flexible and efficient infrastructure

Most insurers view the move from check payments to electronic payments as a natural opportunity to modernize their payment infrastructure — and adopt a claim payment platform that’s capable of quickly adding new payment technologies as they become available. This can make staying ahead of the payment curve, and delivering the modern claim payment experiences claimants and service providers expect, a much less expensive and resource-intensive undertaking. 

As insurers modernize their payment solutions, many of them are discovering the value and cost savings that come from working with fintech partners, rather than trying to build and maintain their own claim payment platform internally. This outsourced approach makes it possible to offer compelling new electronic payment options more quickly, with minimal IT lift, in a way that delivers a fast and reliable ROI. It also frees internal resources to focus on more strategic and valuable claim-processing initiatives. 

Related healthcare insights

View all

Article

The connection between money and health

The connection between money and health runs deeper than just costs — your employees rely on your benefits strategy for overall wellness.

Article

Boost efficiency with payment optimization

Learn how payment delivery optimization can improve the healthcare financial cycle and bridge the gap between payers and providers.

Case study

Insights in claims payment processing

Thinking about going paperless for claims payments? We commissioned a study of senior health plan executives to hear what’s on their minds.