Enroll in Virginia Medicaid as a Therapist
By George Ruan • July 9, 2026
Last updated: July 9, 2026.
Virginia Medicaid enrollment for therapists starts with DMAS and PRSS, not with a managed-care plan portal. PRSS is where you create or maintain the provider record that lets Virginia Medicaid identify your individual, group, service locations, taxonomy, and enrollment status.
Bottom line: Enroll through PRSS first, then treat Cardinal Care MCO participation as a separate contracting step. Do not assume that a submitted PRSS application, or even an approved provider record, means every Medicaid managed-care plan can be billed immediately.
Sections
Before You Start
NPI and taxonomy. Have the individual NPI, group NPI if applicable, taxonomy, license details, and service-location information ready.
Practice ownership and signing authority. For group practices, know who can sign participation agreements and who should control the provider portal account.
Portal access. Know who the Primary Account Holder will be. If you need help, read the MES/PRSS portal access guide.
Billing lane expectations. Decide whether you are preparing for fee-for-service only, Cardinal Care MCOs, or both.
Enrollment Steps in PRSS
Create or confirm MES access. The provider or organization needs secure portal access before it can work on the provider record.
Start the enrollment or maintenance workflow in PRSS. DMAS directs Medicaid providers to use PRSS for enrollment and maintenance after the MES launch.
Enter provider identifiers and service locations carefully. Most downstream problems start with a mismatch in NPI, taxonomy, license, address, group affiliation, or service-location data.
Attach required documents and attestations. Use the current PRSS prompts and provider-type requirements. Behavioral health and ARTS providers should also check the relevant manuals.
Track the application until the provider record is active. Submitted is not the same as approved, and approved is not the same as participating with every MCO.
What Happens After Approval
Once the state enrollment is active, the practice still has operational work: portal access governance, MCO participation checks, eligibility verification, claim routing, EFT/ERA setup where applicable, and revalidation tracking. If you plan to work with a biller, grant role-based access instead of sharing credentials. Start with How to Give Your Biller Access to Virginia Medicaid MES/PRSS.
Common Enrollment Mistakes
Treating PRSS enrollment as proof that every Cardinal Care MCO will pay claims.
Submitting a group setup without confirming individual clinician enrollment, affiliation, and taxonomy expectations.
Letting an old Primary Account Holder control portal access after the practice manager or owner changes.
Waiting until the first denial to verify eligibility, authorization requirements, or MCO participation.
Action Steps for Providers
Build a checklist for each clinician: NPI, license, taxonomy, service locations, group affiliation, and PRSS status.
Assign a practice-owned access owner and document who will act as the Primary Account Holder.
After approval, check Cardinal Care MCO participation before scheduling Medicaid clients under a plan.
Where Bomi Fits
Bomi helps therapy practices keep Medicaid billing and credentialing workflows organized: enrollment follow-up, portal handoffs, eligibility checks, claims, denials, EOB review, revalidation tracking, payer follow-up, and revenue operations. We still separate access correctly: your practice keeps control of provider accounts, and each user gets the access needed for their role.
Operational note: This post is general operational education, not legal, compliance, or billing advice. Confirm current DMAS, MES/PRSS, Cardinal Care MCO, Acentra/Atrezzo, provider-manual, and contract requirements before submitting enrollment, claims, or service authorizations.
Sources
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