Quick Answer
If a health insurer denied your claim in North Dakota, you have appeal rights under federal law. Most plans must give you at least 180 days from the denial to file an internal appeal (your denial letter states your exact deadline). After a final internal denial you generally have up to 4 months to request an external review by an independent reviewer — and that decision is binding on the insurer. File your appeal, and file a complaint with North Dakota Insurance Department (linked below). AppealArmor drafts a citation-backed appeal letter plus the state complaint in about 60 seconds, free.
Last updated: 2026-07-01 · Source: AppealArmor · About the authors
North Dakota Insurance Appeal Guide
North Dakota residents are protected by federal appeal rights: an internal appeal, then an independent external review whose decision binds your insurer. Here's how the process works and where to file.
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Federal law (the Affordable Care Act's internal-claims-and-appeals and external-review rules, 45 CFR 147.136) guarantees a consistent appeal process for most health plans nationwide. North Dakota may layer additional protections on top — but these federal steps are your floor.
Ask your insurer, in writing, to reconsider. Most non-grandfathered plans must allow you at least 180 days from the denial notice to file. Plans must decide within roughly 72 hours for urgent care, 30 days for a pre-service claim, and 60 days for a post-service claim. Include your denial letter, supporting medical records, and a letter of medical necessity from your provider.
If the internal appeal is denied, you can request an external review by an independent organization with no ties to your insurer. After a final internal denial you generally have up to 4 months (120 days) to request it, and the reviewer's decision is binding — if they overturn the denial, your plan must pay. Depending on your plan, this runs through a North Dakota-administered process or the federal HHS-administered process.
When a delay could seriously jeopardize your health, you can request an expedited internal appeal and external review at the same time. Urgent external reviews are typically decided within 72 hours.
The 180-day and 4-month windows above are the federal baseline. Your specific deadline can differ depending on your plan type (fully-insured, self-funded employer/ERISA, Medicaid, or Medicare) and on North Dakota rules. Two sources always control: the exact deadline printed on your denial letter, and the current guidance from North Dakota Insurance Department. When in doubt, verify before you file — missing a deadline can forfeit your appeal.
In North Dakota, consumer complaints about health insurers are handled by North Dakota Insurance Department. Filing a complaint alongside your appeal creates regulatory pressure on the insurer.
Regulators track complaint patterns and can intervene when an insurer breaks the rules. AppealArmor automatically generates a state complaint letter as part of your appeal packet, so you can submit it to North Dakota Insurance Department at the same time as your appeal.
Contact details and complaint forms change over time. Always confirm the current process on North Dakota Insurance Department's official site before filing.
45 CFR 147.136 · PHS Act §2719
Guarantees your right to a full internal appeal and an independent, binding external review for non-grandfathered plans.
29 CFR 2560.503-1
Sets the appeal rules and timelines for most employer-sponsored (including self-funded) health plans, overseen by the U.S. Department of Labor.
Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act
Requires plans to cover mental-health and substance-use treatment no more restrictively than medical/surgical care — a frequent basis for overturning behavioral-health denials.
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021
Protects you from most surprise out-of-network and balance bills for emergency care and certain in-network-facility services.
AppealArmor assembles all of this into a professional appeal packet automatically, tailored to your denial reason.
Each denial reason calls for a different appeal strategy. AppealArmor tailors your North Dakota appeal to the specific reason on your letter.
The most common denial type — often overturned by showing the treatment meets clinical guidelines.
Network-adequacy rules and the No Surprises Act can require coverage or block balance billing.
External reviewers frequently overturn "experimental" labels when the treatment meets accepted medical standards.
Insurer-specific and denial-specific appeal walkthroughs.
Under federal law (the Affordable Care Act, 45 CFR 147.136), most non-grandfathered health plans must give you at least 180 days from the date of the denial notice to file an internal appeal. Some plan types (self-funded employer plans, Medicaid, Medicare) and some state rules set different windows. Check the exact deadline printed on your denial letter and confirm the current process with North Dakota Insurance Department.
External review is an independent review of your insurer's denial by a reviewer with no ties to your plan. Federal law guarantees external review for non-grandfathered plans nationwide: after you receive a final internal denial, you generally have up to 4 months (120 days) to request it, and the external reviewer's decision is binding on the insurer. North Dakota residents access this either through a state-administered process or, where a state process does not apply, the federal HHS-administered process. Confirm which applies to your plan with North Dakota Insurance Department or at HealthCare.gov.
You can file a consumer complaint with your state insurance regulator, North Dakota Insurance Department, using its official website (linked on this page), or through the NAIC national complaint portal. Filing a complaint at the same time as your internal appeal adds regulatory visibility. AppealArmor generates a state complaint letter as part of your appeal packet.
Yes. AppealArmor generates an evidence-based appeal letter that cites the federal protections that apply nationwide (ACA internal-appeal and external-review rights, ERISA rules for employer plans, the No Surprises Act, and mental-health parity) and points you to North Dakota Insurance Department for state-specific filing. It's free and needs no account.
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