How to Get Credentialed with Blue Cross Blue Shield of Kansas City in Kansas
Quick Overview
Timeline
60 - 90 days
CAQH
Required
Re-credentialing
Every 3 year(s)
Delegated
No
Kansas-Specific Requirements
Step-by-Step Enrollment Process
Gather Required Documents
Collect all necessary credentials including your medical license, DEA certificate, malpractice insurance, NPI number, and any state-specific requirements for Kansas.
Complete Your CAQH ProView Profile
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Kansas City requires a current CAQH ProView profile. Create or update your profile at proview.caqh.org and attest within 120 days.
Submit Your Application
Submit your completed enrollment package to Blue Cross Blue Shield of Kansas City.
Track & Follow Up
Credentialing typically takes 60-90 days. Monitor your application status and respond promptly to requests for additional information.
Free Consultation
Need help enrolling with Blue Cross Blue Shield of Kansas City?
Our specialists handle the entire Blue Cross Blue Shield of Kansas City enrollment process: applications, follow-ups, and approvals in Kansas.
Required Documents Checklist
Board Certification
ConditionalRequired if board certified; highly recommended
CV/Resume
5-year work history minimum; gaps > 6 months must be explained
DEA License
ConditionalRequired if prescribing controlled substances
Malpractice Insurance
Medical Degree
Medical License
NPI Certificate
Professional Reference
3 peer references required
Enrollment Forms
CAQH ProView
Universal credentialing application used by most commercial and BCBS payers.
RequiredFree Tools for Your Blue Cross Blue Shield of Kansas City Enrollment
Related Articles
Which Insurance Panels Should You Join First? A Data-Driven Prioritization Guide for New Practices
Do not credential with 12 payers at once. Prioritize by market share, reimbursement rate, and processing speed. Specialt...
Insurance Credentialing for Therapists and Mental Health Providers: How to Get Paneled, Get Paid, and Grow Your Practice
How therapists get credentialed (LPC, LCSW, LMFT, PsyD). Which payers accept each license type, CAQH setup, timelines, a...
Medicaid Credentialing by State: How to Navigate Managed Care Organizations, Dual Enrollment, and State-Specific Requirements
Medicaid requires state FFS enrollment plus each MCO. Timelines: 30-180+ days by state. Panel requirements, retroactive...
Key Credentialing Terms
- CAQH
- The Council for Affordable Quality Health Care, an organization that maintains a universal provider database (CAQH ProVi...
- Credentialing
- The process of verifying a healthcare provider's qualifications, training, licensure, and professional background to ens...
- Effective Date
- The date on which a provider's enrollment or network participation becomes active, allowing them to begin billing a paye...
- Fee Schedule
- A complete listing of fees and reimbursement rates that an insurance payer will pay for specific medical services and pr...
- HMO
- A Health Maintenance Organization is a managed care plan that typically requires members to choose a primary care physic...
- Network Status
- A provider's participation status with a specific insurance payer, indicating whether they are in-network (contracted) o...
- NPI
- The National Provider Identifier is a unique 10-digit identification number issued by CMS to healthcare providers, requi...
- PPO
- A Preferred Provider Organization is a managed care plan that offers a network of contracted providers at lower costs to...
Credentialing Checklist
Make sure you have everything ready before applying to Blue Cross Blue Shield of Kansas City.
View Physician Credentialing Checklist →Contact Information
Provider Credentialing
National1-816-395-2222
Mon-Fri 8am-5pm
Provider Services
National1-816-395-2222
Claims & Billing
National1-816-395-2222
Need Help?
Let PayerReady handle your Blue Cross Blue Shield of Kansas City enrollment in Kansas.
Get Started NowBlue Cross Blue Shield of Kansas City in Other States
Reviewed by the PayerReady Credentialing Team
Our credentialing specialists verify every article against current CMS regulations, NCQA standards, and payer-specific enrollment requirements. See our editorial process.