HEALTHCARE FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATION
HFMA CSPR EXAM QUESTIONS WITH 100%
COMPLETE ANSWERS!! 2026/2027
CERTIFIED SPECIALIST PHYSICIAN REVENUE CYCLE -- Official Exam 2026/2027
100 80% CERTIFIED
QUESTIONS PASSING SCORE RECERTIFICATION
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Section 1 Patient Access and Registration Q1-Q20
Section 2 Charge Capture and Coding Q21-Q40
Section 3 Claims Submission and Processing Q41-Q60
Section 4 Payment and Reimbursement Q61-Q80
Section 5 Denial Management and Revenue Recovery Q81-Q100
Instructions: Select the single best answer for each question. This exam is designed for
HFMA Certified Specialist Physician Revenue Cycle (CSPR) preparation. Passing score: 80% (80 questions correct).
HFMA CSPR EXAM QUESTIONS WITH 100% COMPLETE ANSWERS!! 2026/2027 -- 2026/2027 | Passing Score: 80% | Page 1 of 52
, SECTION 1 | Patient Access and Registration | Q1-Q20 | HFMA CSPR EXAM QUESTIONS WITH 100% COMPLETE ANSWERS!! 2026/2027
2026/2027
Q1 Question 1 of 100
A revenue cycle director is conducting a root cause analysis of denials and discovers that a
significant number of medical necessity denials could have been prevented if clinical
documentation had clearly supported the reason for the service. The director should
collaborate with which department to improve documentation specificity?
A. The health information management and clinical documentation improvement teams
B. The marketing department to improve patient communication
C. The human resources department to hire more physicians
D. The facilities department to upgrade examination rooms
Correct Answer: A
Rationale:
Medical necessity denials often result from insufficient documentation specificity. Collaborating with HIM and
CDI teams improves documentation quality at the point of care, ensuring that clinical rationale is clearly
articulated. Marketing, HR, and facilities departments do not directly influence clinical documentation quality.
Q2 Question 2 of 100
A 45-year-old patient presents to a multispecialty clinic for a new patient visit. The front desk
staff collects the patient's demographic information and insurance card. The staff member
notices the insurance card shows a different member ID than what is in the clinic management
system. The most appropriate action is to:
A. Update the system with the current member ID from the card and verify eligibility with the payer
B. Use the member ID already on file to avoid claim delays
C. Ask the patient to contact the insurance company to resolve the discrepancy
D. Proceed with registration and address the discrepancy only if the claim is denied
Correct Answer: A
Rationale:
Using outdated or incorrect member IDs leads to claim denials. The correct action is to update the system with
the current member ID and verify eligibility in real time. Waiting for a denial creates rework and delays
reimbursement.
HFMA CSPR EXAM QUESTIONS WITH 100% COMPLETE ANSWERS!! 2026/2027 -- 2026/2027 | Passing Score: 80% | Page 2 of 52
,Q3 Question 3 of 100
A hospital's patient access department is experiencing a high rate of claim denials due to
eligibility issues. Analysis shows that 35% of denials stem from failure to verify insurance
before the date of service. The most effective strategy to reduce these denials is to
implement:
A. Pre-registration with automated eligibility verification at least 48 hours before service
B. Retroactive eligibility verification after claim submission
C. A policy requiring patients to bring insurance cards to every visit
D. Monthly audits of denied claims to identify eligibility trends
Correct Answer: A
Rationale:
Pre-registration with automated eligibility verification before the date of service allows staff to identify and
resolve coverage issues proactively, preventing denials rather than reacting to them. Retroactive verification
and monthly audits are reactive approaches that do not prevent denials.
Q4 Question 4 of 100
A patient arrives at an outpatient surgery center for a scheduled procedure. During the
registration process, the patient states she recently changed employers and has new
insurance coverage. The prior authorization on file was obtained under the old insurance plan.
The registration specialist should:
A. Proceed with the procedure since prior authorization was already obtained
B. Cancel the procedure and reschedule after obtaining new authorization
C. Obtain a new prior authorization under the new insurance plan before proceeding
D. Bill both insurance plans to ensure at least one will pay
Correct Answer: C
Rationale:
Prior authorization is insurance-specific and non-transferable between payers. The authorization under the old
plan is invalid for the new coverage. A new authorization must be obtained under the current insurance to
avoid a denial. Canceling is unnecessary if the new authorization can be obtained promptly.
HFMA CSPR EXAM QUESTIONS WITH 100% COMPLETE ANSWERS!! 2026/2027 -- 2026/2027 | Passing Score: 80% | Page 3 of 52
, Q5 Question 5 of 100
A medical group is implementing a new patient portal to streamline the check-in process. The
clinic wants to collect patient demographics, insurance information, and consent forms
electronically before the visit. The primary benefit of pre-visit patient engagement through a
portal is:
A. Reducing patient wait times and improving data accuracy before the encounter
B. Eliminating the need for front desk staff entirely
C. Guaranteeing that all claims will be paid on first submission
D. Complying with HIPAA requirements for electronic health records
Correct Answer: A
Rationale:
Pre-visit patient engagement through a portal allows collection and verification of information before arrival,
reducing check-in wait times and improving data accuracy by giving patients time to provide correct
information. It does not eliminate staff, guarantee payment, or constitute a HIPAA requirement.
Q6 Question 6 of 100
A registration specialist is entering a patient's information and the system flags a possible
duplicate record. Two records exist with similar names and dates of birth but different
addresses. The most appropriate action is to:
A. Delete one of the records to avoid confusion
B. Merge the records without reviewing the clinical data
C. Investigate both records thoroughly before merging to prevent data integrity issues
D. Create a third record to start fresh without conflicting information
Correct Answer: C
Rationale:
Merging duplicate records requires careful investigation to ensure clinical and financial data from both records
truly belong to the same patient. Premature merging can corrupt the medical record, while deleting records
violates retention policies and risks losing clinical information. Creating a third record worsens the duplicate
problem.
HFMA CSPR EXAM QUESTIONS WITH 100% COMPLETE ANSWERS!! 2026/2027 -- 2026/2027 | Passing Score: 80% | Page 4 of 52