Your GLP-1 was denied or dropped
Wegovy, Zepbound, Ozempic, or Mounjaro, refused or pulled after it was working. Often an administrative call, among the more winnable on appeal.
Patient advocacy for insurance denials
Your insurer is counting on you to give up. We don't. AppealIt drafts your insurance appeal for free, grounded in your plan's own coverage rules, with every citation verified. You review, sign, and file it. You stay in control.
Free to draft. Every citation verified before you file.
1 Upload your denial
2 We build the appeal
3 You review, sign, and file.
U.S. market averages (KFF, CMS), not a prediction about your case.
Free for you, always
We draft it; you file it
Grounded in your insurer's own coverage rules
We track every deadline and prep each escalation
We take on denials from every major insurer
Names shown for identification only. AppealIt is independent and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by these companies.
The quiet math of a denial
Insurers issue tens of millions of denials a year. The numbers below are the part they would rather you not sit with.
claims denied each year
of denials are ever appealed
of appealed denials are overturned
Almost no one pushes back. The ones who do tend to succeed far more often than they expected to.
These figures describe the broader U.S. health-insurance market (sources include KFF and federal CMS marketplace data), not a prediction about your specific case. We do not publish a win rate. Outcomes vary by denial type, plan, and the facts of each claim, and we will tell you honestly what we think yours looks like.
Who we help
Different people, the same fight: a denial that should never have stood. If any of these sound familiar, it's worth a free look.
Wegovy, Zepbound, Ozempic, or Mounjaro, refused or pulled after it was working. Often an administrative call, among the more winnable on appeal.
Medicare Advantage denials get overturned far more often than people expect, yet almost no one appeals them. We do, and we track every deadline.
A procedure, a medication, or a plainly wrong bill for your child or your parent. You handle the family. We draft the appeal that fights the denial, and you file it.
How it works
A strong appeal is hours of expert paperwork. That's exactly why most people never file one. You hand us the letter, we draft it, you file it.
Send us your denial letter and a few details. That is the whole ask to get your draft started, and it is free.
We find why it was denied, write the appeal grounded in your plan's own published coverage rules, and verify every citation before you file.
You review your appeal, sign it, and submit it to your plan. We show you exactly where and how, track your deadline so none slips by, and remind you before it lapses. It's free, and you stay in control.
The whole deal
You upload your denial letter and a few details. From there, we do the part that makes people give up: we read the letter, find the real reason it was denied, pull your plan's own coverage rules, and write an appeal that speaks to them, with every citation verified. Then we hand it back to you, ready to sign, and show you exactly how to file it.
You do not chase your insurer, sit on hold, or learn what a prior authorization is. You just review it, sign it, and send it.
We do the hard part. You stay in control. It's free.
GLP-1 coverage denials
Most people never appeal a GLP-1 denial, and many of these are administrative denials, which are among the more winnable on appeal. Coverage that gets pulled, a prior authorization that lapsed, a step-therapy rule you were never told about. We read that fine print so you don't have to.
We draft the appeal for you, grounded in your plan's own coverage rules and with every citation verified, for Wegovy, Zepbound, Ozempic, or Mounjaro. You review, sign, and file it. Free.
A denied GLP-1 can mean paying out of pocket, often $1,000 or more a month, or stopping treatment that was working. Appeals also have deadlines, frequently 60 to 180 days from the denial, so the sooner we look, the more options you have.
Read: how to appeal a GLP-1 denial, step by step ›
One honest note: we appeal the administrative decision. We do not decide whether a medication is right for you. That stays between you and your prescriber.
Why it matters
A denial doesn't just cost you a claim. It interrupts the care you and your doctor chose, and the life you were building around it. We help you fight to get your coverage back, so nothing has to stop.



Free to check
Tell us what was denied. We'll review it and tell you honestly whether it's worth appealing, with no obligation and no cost to find out.
Thanks for reaching out. We'll review what you sent and email you honestly about whether your denial looks appealable, and what the next step would be. No cost, no obligation.
Why AppealIt
We do the hard part and give you a straight answer. It's free, because you are never charged and neither is your insurer.
No fee, no contingency, and nothing taken from what you recover. We are building partnerships that fund the service, and we never take money from your insurer. There is no charge to bury.
A strong appeal is hours of expert work, which is exactly why most people give up. You upload your denial; we draft the appeal and track your deadline; you review, sign, and file it. We do the part that makes most people quit.
Most denials are paperwork problems, not medical arguments. We ground each appeal in your plan's own published coverage rules and verify every citation before you file, so it reads as your specific case, not a generic template an insurer can wave off. In our own testing that has meant zero invented citations across hundreds of held-out cases, where an unguarded AI fabricates roughly one in four.
We tell you up front that it's free, we tell you when you could do it yourself, and we tell you plainly when a case isn't worth fighting. Denials and billing errors, both reviewed honestly under one roof.
You will not be left to figure this out alone. We read the letter, do the work, and tell you in plain language where things stand, what we are filing, and what to expect next. When the first answer is no, we keep going.
What we take on
Denials we overturn, and the proof it's worth it.
Statistics describe the broader U.S. health-insurance market (sources include KFF and CMS), not a prediction about your specific case. We do not publish a win rate.
Real stories
We are early, so we are not going to invent reviews. As real appeals are filed and won, the people behind them will tell you in their own words. This space is theirs.
We will only ever publish stories from real people who agree to share them. No stock quotes, no invented numbers.
Straight answers
It is genuinely free for you. We draft your appeal and you file it yourself, so there is no fee, no contingency, and nothing taken from any money you recover.
We are building partnerships that fund the service, and we never take money from your insurer. If that ever changes, you will see it in writing before anything starts.
No. AppealIt helps you prepare your own administrative appeal, which you then file yourself with your insurer, the same right any patient has to draft and submit an appeal.
We are not a law firm, and we do not provide legal advice. If a case ever needs a licensed attorney, we will tell you plainly rather than pretend we can do something we can't.
No. We do not decide what care you need or give medical advice. That stays between you and your prescriber or doctor.
What we do is appeal the administrative decision. If an appeal needs a new medical-necessity opinion, that comes from a licensed clinician, not from us.
Absolutely, and for some denials you should. The reason most people don't is that a strong appeal is hours of work: finding your plan's actual coverage rules, citing them correctly, hitting every deadline, and escalating if the first answer is no.
We do all of that for free and verify every citation, then you review, sign, and submit your own appeal. We do the part that makes people give up.
We lead with the high-volume, winnable kind: coding errors, eligibility mix-ups, missing or lapsed authorizations, step-therapy issues, out-of-network surprises, and plainly wrong bills. GLP-1 coverage denials are a focus right now.
There is no condition floor and no minimum bill size. Tell us what was denied and we will review it honestly, including telling you if it isn't worth fighting.
The AppealIt promise
Appeals have deadlines, and they pass quietly. It takes a few minutes to find out if yours can still be appealed, and you risk nothing to ask.
Check my denial, free