For patients For clinics
For prior-auth coordinators · $100/month value — free in beta

Catch the denial
before you submit.

Most prior auths don't lose on the rules — they lose because the chart doesn't say it right. WillItClear reads the note the way a reviewer will and flags what's missing — the "significant relief" that should say ≥80%, the PT with no dates, the wrong indication for the procedure — while you can still fix it. Prevent two denials a month and it has paid for itself. Right now, it's free.

🔒 Runs on your computer. Nothing to install, no account — and the note never leaves your browser.
≥80%
The two-block relief wording reviewers look for on an RFA request — "worked great" gets denied; the number gets approved.
2 denials
Prevent two a month and the tool has covered a $100/month price. In beta, it's free — the math only gets better.
30 seconds
Paste the note, pick the procedure and reviewer, and see every gap a reviewer would flag — before the request goes in.
The tools

A second set of eyes, two ways

Both check the request against the same criteria the reviewer will use — eviCore, Carelon, or Medicare — and hand you the exact language to fix what's missing.
Built for interventional pain first — RFA, ESI, and facet/MBB — with reviewer-specific thresholds for eviCore and Carelon, plus Medicare LCDs.
How it works

From note to fixed-before-submitted in four steps

1

Pick the procedure

RFA (initial or repeat), epidural steroid injection, or facet / medial-branch block.

2

Pick the reviewer

eviCore, Carelon, or "not sure" — the thresholds differ, and the check adjusts to the one your request will face.

3

Paste the note

It's read entirely on your device. Deterministic checks — no AI guessing, no data sent anywhere.

4

Fix the gaps

Each flag shows the evidence, why a reviewer cares, and the exact wording that fixes it. Copy the gap summary for the provider.

What it catches

The gaps that actually get requests denied

Every check traces to a published criterion a reviewer scores against — not a guess about what "looks thorough."
"Significant relief" with no % — needs ≥80% Two diagnostic blocks not documented Conservative care with no dates or duration Radicular vs axial mismatch for the procedure Missing laterality or spinal levels No fluoroscopic / CT guidance documented Repeat RFA under the 6-month interval Prior-relief duration below the reviewer's bar eviCore vs Carelon threshold differences Missing imaging correlation
Who it's for

Built for the person who hits submit

Prior-auth coordinators

The last check before the request goes in. Paste, scan the flags, send the gap summary to the provider — instead of finding out in a denial three weeks later.

Interventional-pain practices

RFA is among the highest-volume denials in pain management, and the documentation is formulaic. That's exactly what a deterministic checker is best at.

Providers who do peer-to-peers

The checklist generates a peer-to-peer prep script from the same criteria — so the call starts from the reviewer's own rulebook.

Not a guess. The reviewer's own criteria.

Every threshold in WillItClear traces to a primary source: eviCore's Comprehensive Musculoskeletal guidelines (CMM-200, CMM-201, CMM-208), Carelon's Interventional Pain Management guidelines, and Medicare Local Coverage Determinations. If we can't source a rule, we don't check it.

✓ Verified against eviCore CMM-200 / 201 / 208 · Carelon IPM · Medicare LCDs — last verified July 2026

eviCoreCarelonMedicare LCDsRuns 100% in your browserNo PHI transmitted
Pricing

Simple math, simpler price.

A denied prior auth costs staff hours, a delayed procedure, and sometimes the case. Prevent two a month and a $100/month tool has paid for itself. During beta, you get the whole thing free.
Beta
$100 / month value
$0 while in beta
Everything, free — no signup, no card, no caps.
  • Note auditor — unlimited checks
  • Readiness checklist + chart-note language
  • Peer-to-peer prep scripts
  • eviCore, Carelon & Medicare criteria
  • Runs on your computer — nothing installed, nothing sent
Start free →
FAQ

Good questions

Does the chart note leave my computer?

No. Both tools run entirely in your browser — the note is read on your device and never transmitted or stored anywhere. There's nothing to install and no account to create. Even so, we recommend pasting de-identified notes.

Is it really free?

Yes — it's a $100/month value, free while in beta. No signup, no card, no usage caps. We're trading free access for feedback from real coordinators.

Which procedures and reviewers does it cover?

Interventional pain today: radiofrequency ablation (initial and repeat), epidural steroid injections, and facet joint / medial-branch blocks — with reviewer-specific thresholds for eviCore and Carelon, plus Medicare LCD criteria. More practice areas are planned, prioritized by what clinics in the beta ask for.

Is it AI? Will it hallucinate a rule?

No. The note auditor uses deterministic pattern checks against published criteria — the same check produces the same result every time, and every threshold traces to a primary source (eviCore CMM-200/201/208, Carelon IPM, Medicare LCDs). If it can't source a rule, it doesn't check it. And when it flags something you know is in the note, one click dismisses it — it suspects; you decide.

Is this medical or billing advice?

No. WillItClear is a documentation readiness aid based on payers' published criteria — not medical, legal, or billing advice, and not a guarantee of authorization. Criteria change and vary by plan; always confirm with the member's specific plan.

The next note you submit could clear the first time.

Paste it and see what a reviewer would flag — free, in about 30 seconds.
Try the note auditor →