After more than twenty years prosecuting Florida PIP collections on behalf of chiropractors, MRI facilities, urgent care centers, and orthopedic groups, I have watched the same playbook come around in cycles. Insurance carriers test what they can get away with, providers absorb the losses, and eventually the plaintiffs’ bar drags them back into line.
We are now squarely in the early innings of one of those cycles, and if you treat patients under Florida Statute 627.736, you need to understand exactly what is happening to your accounts receivable right now.
Since the 2023 repeal of Florida Statute 627.428 — the one-way attorney fee provision that for decades made carriers think twice before denying a legitimate medical bill — Progressive, GEICO, State Farm, Allstate, Kemper, and the rest of the usual suspects have grown noticeably bolder. They have correctly calculated that fewer attorneys will take small-dollar PIP files on contingency without that fee-shifting backstop, and they are betting that medical providers will quietly write off the unpaid balances rather than fight.
The single most visible symptom of that strategy is the explosion of Independent Medical Examinations and Peer Reviews being used to terminate benefits, often within the first six to eight weeks of treatment. If this feels familiar, it should. We saw the exact same surge between roughly 2008 and 2014, and it took the better part of a decade of aggressive litigation to beat it back. The fight is on again.
If your practice is seeing more IME cutoffs, peer review denials, delayed payments, or unexplained reductions, the issue may be larger than one patient file.
Fischetti Law Group can review your aged PIP receivables, identify viable claims, and determine which files may need statutory PIP demand letters under Florida Statute 627.736(10).
Request a FREE PIP Audit and find out what may still be collectible.
The statutory hooks the carriers are leaning on are not new. Section 627.736(7)(a) gives the PIP insurer the right to require the insured to submit to a physical or mental examination by a physician of the insurer’s choosing — the Independent Medical Examination Florida providers have come to dread.
Section 627.736(7)(b) then provides that an insurer may not withdraw payment of a treating physician without first obtaining a valid report by a physician licensed under the same chapter as the treating provider, stating that the treatment was not reasonable, related, or necessary. That “valid report” is the peer review denial Florida PIP carriers use to justify the cutoff.
On paper, both tools sound like reasonable cost-containment mechanisms. In practice, they are anything but.
Here is what twenty-plus years in the trenches will teach you. A disproportionately small group of physicians is performing a disproportionately large share of these IMEs and peer reviews — and they are doing it the same way they did a decade ago. We are talking, by my count, about a few dozen doctors statewide who effectively run side practices reviewing files for the carriers.
Their reports are remarkably consistent. The patient was at “maximum medical improvement” the moment the carrier wanted them to be. The treatment plan, whatever it was, was excessive. The diagnostic imaging, whatever it showed, was unnecessary.
I have personally seen IME doctors sign off on cutoffs for patients they spent less than nine minutes examining. I have watched the same doctor produce the same paragraph — comma for comma — across patients who had never met. To put it plainly, a meaningful percentage of these reports are something close to what I describe to my clients as a stick-up robbery in a pair of scrubs. The doctors performing them, in my candid opinion, would sign a peer review against their own mothers if the fax came in before lunch and the insurance company’s check cleared.
Florida medical providers should pay close attention when they see patterns such as:
These are not just billing annoyances. They can become major revenue recovery problems if they are not escalated correctly.
Carriers run actuarial math on every line of business they write, and PIP is no exception. Before the repeal of 627.428, an improper cutoff that ended in a PIP lawsuit that the carriers had to defend was a losing trade for the insurer, because the recoverable attorney fee on a successful plaintiff verdict often eclipsed the underlying medical bill many times over.
That arithmetic disciplined behavior. With 627.428 gone, the carriers have re-run the model and concluded — correctly, in some cases — that many providers will simply absorb the cutoff.
Every cutoff that goes unchallenged is pure margin for the insurer. Every cutoff that does get challenged still gets resolved, in the overwhelming majority of cases, by the carrier backing down or paying out, often before a judge ever sees the file.
That asymmetry is the entire game. The carriers are not betting they will win the cases that get fought. They are betting most cases will never get fought.
Let me make this concrete with three hypothetical scenarios that are composites of files I have personally handled. The names are invented; the patterns are not.
Dr. R is a Broward County chiropractor with a busy practice that sees roughly forty PIP patients a month. In a recent year, he noticed that one carrier in particular was cutting off benefits at the 30-day mark on nearly every claim, citing an IME from the same physician — a retired emergency medicine doctor with no chiropractic licensure or training.
The cutoff letters were boilerplate. The IME reports were boilerplate. Dr. R’s billing manager, exhausted, started simply writing the balances off.
After we ran an audit, we identified roughly $186,000 in unpaid charges over an eighteen-month window. We sent 627.736(10) demand letters on the cleanest forty files. Within sixty days, the carrier paid full balances on thirty-one of them, settled six more for nuisance value, and we filed PIP suit on the remaining three. All three resolved in Dr. R’s favor before trial.
The cutoffs were never going to survive scrutiny. They simply needed to be scrutinized.
An MRI center in Orange County kept receiving “request for additional documentation” letters on completed scans — copies of the order, copies of the radiology report, copies of the assignment of benefits, copies of the prescription, then the order again.
The billing department dutifully resubmitted each time. Eighteen months later, the carrier denied every one of the underlying claims on the basis of an “untimely” or “incomplete” submission, citing a peer review opining that the scans were not medically necessary because the patient had received conservative care for fewer than four weeks.
The facility had been pulled into what I call the resubmission trap — a deliberate paper chase the carrier uses to run out the clock, frustrate billing staff, and create a record that looks, to the untrained eye, like noncompliance.
We sent a single, properly drafted statutory demand. The carrier paid the file in full inside of forty-five days. The resubmissions were never going to produce payment. The demand was.
A large orthopedic group in the Tampa Bay area was being hit with peer reviews from a single physician — one whose CV, when we deposed him in another matter, revealed he had performed more than 1,400 peer reviews in a two-year span and had not seen a patient clinically in nearly a decade.
His standard report ran four pages and cut benefits in essentially every case. The group’s office manager, understandably, believed she had a documentation problem. She did not. She had a peer-review problem.
We took the carrier into deposition discovery on a handful of test cases. The carrier settled the entire portfolio — forty-seven claims — within ninety days.
The lesson, again, is the same. PIP benefits cutoff Florida providers are facing is rarely about the quality of your records. It is about whether anyone is going to make the insurer prove its denial.
IME and peer review denials should not automatically become write-offs. Fischetti Law Group can review your aging report, identify cut-off or denied PIP claims, and determine which files may still be recoverable.
Review your PIP receivables before carrier cutoffs become lost revenue.
An IME or peer review denial does not always mean the claim is dead. In many cases, it means the file needs to be reviewed, organized, and escalated through the proper statutory process.
Fischetti Law Group can evaluate your denied or cut-off PIP claims and identify which files may still be recoverable.
Review your aging report before valid PIP balances become lost revenue.
The single most powerful provision in your favor is Section 627.736(10). Before any PIP suit can be filed, the statute requires a written pre-suit demand specifying the amount owed, the dates of service, and the basis of the claim.
That demand triggers a thirty-day cure window during which the insurer can pay the claim, plus statutory interest and a modest penalty, and avoid litigation entirely.
In my experience, properly drafted statutory demands resolve the substantial majority of disputed claims without a lawsuit ever being filed. The demand letter is not a formality. It is the single most cost-effective weapon a PIP attorney for medical providers has in the toolbox, and it is wildly underused by providers who try to handle collections in-house.
When a demand does not resolve the file, the next step is a PIP lawsuit Florida courts hear every day under the same statute. County court PIP dockets in Miami-Dade, Broward, Palm Beach, Orange, Hillsborough, and Duval are alive and well, and judges in those venues have decades of accumulated familiarity with these carrier tactics.
The overwhelming majority of these cases never see a jury. They settle. They settle because the carrier knows that when an IME or peer review is actually put under oath, it tends not to hold up.
A properly drafted statutory PIP demand can help:
For many providers, the demand letter is the point where a stalled claim finally starts moving.
Good documentation is the floor, not the ceiling, of a successful PIP defense. SOAP notes that actually reflect the patient encounter, treatment plans that connect to a working diagnosis, objective findings that justify continued care — these are the basics every chiropractor, MRI facility, urgent care center, and orthopedic practice should already have nailed down.
If your records are clean, no peer review in the state can credibly impeach them, and a halfway competent Florida no-fault insurance attorney will turn that documentation into a winning case file.
That said, I want to warn you directly about the resubmission trap I described above. Carriers know that providers default to “send the chart again” when a denial or request comes in. Every time you resubmit without a statutory demand attached, you are doing free labor for the insurer and, worse, building a paper trail the carrier may later cite to argue the original submission was deficient.
Resubmission alone is not a legal remedy. Once you have submitted a clean claim and received a denial or a request that looks like a stall, the next document that should leave your office is a 627.736(10) demand letter — not a third copy of the same chart.
Strong provider documentation should include:
Strong records matter. But strong records still need to be paired with the correct legal response when carriers refuse to pay.
The providers who are quietly running profitable, well-collected PIP practices in 2026 have one thing in common. They have an attorney on retainer who audits their PIP accounts receivable on a regular cadence — quarterly, in our shop — and sends statutory demands on every aging, denied, or cut-off file.
That is the single highest-ROI operational change a practice can make. The carriers are counting on you to leave money on the table, and from what I see across hundreds of provider files, the average practice is leaving an ungodly amount of it there.
Fischetti Law Group offers exactly that service. We will conduct a no-obligation quarterly audit of your aged PIP receivables, identify every file with a viable claim under Florida Statute 627.736, send the statutory demands ourselves, and litigate the holdouts.
Whether you run a chiropractic clinic, an MRI facility, an urgent care center, or an orthopedic practice, the math is the same: the carriers will keep cutting off benefits as long as it works, and it will keep working until you make it stop.
A quarterly PIP audit can help Florida medical providers identify:
For medical providers, this is not just a collections process. It is a revenue protection system.
If you are tired of watching legitimate billings disappear behind a one-page IME or a copy-and-paste peer review, call our office.
We have been doing chiropractor PIP collections and provider-side PIP recovery in Florida for over two decades, and we would welcome the chance to show you what your receivables actually look like once they are run through the lens of someone whose only job is to collect them.
You treated the patient. You submitted the claim. Do not let a boilerplate IME or peer review turn valid receivables into write-offs.
Fischetti Law Group helps Florida medical providers pursue unpaid, underpaid, delayed, denied, and cut-off PIP claims under Florida Statute 627.736.
Request a FREE PIP Audit today and find out what may still be collectible.