Archy Revenue targets dental billing backlog with AI-powered payment posting
Insurance payment posting sits at the friction point in dental practice cash cycles. San Jose-based Archy moved on Wednesday to automate it with Archy Revenue, a paid upgrade built inside the existing Archy platform that applies AI to process routine insurance remittances and flag exceptions for manual staff review. Paper-check workflows are also replaced in the product's scope.
Insurance payment posting sits at the friction point in dental practice cash cycles. San Jose-based Archy moved on Wednesday to automate it with Archy Revenue, a paid upgrade built inside the existing Archy platform that applies AI to process routine insurance remittances and flag exceptions for manual staff review. Paper-check workflows are also replaced in the product's scope.
What the tool does
Archy Revenue separates the insurance payment queue into two streams: payments the AI can post automatically and exceptions that need a human look. That split is the operational point. Billing teams working through a single mixed queue spend time triaging before they post. The new tool handles that triage automatically.
Paper-check elimination runs alongside the posting automation. Practices receiving insurer remittances by check carry an intake-and-keying burden that digital posting removes at the point of receipt. Archy Revenue addresses both workflows inside the same paid upgrade, sitting on top of the core Archy platform.
The setup
Archy is a private company with no publicly listed shares. The launch announcement disclosed no pricing for the Archy Revenue tier, no current user counts, and no billing-time benchmarks.
The paid-upgrade model carries its own signal. Archy is treating AI automation as a distinct revenue layer rather than folding the capability into the base product. That decision will shape how AI contribution appears in any future financials the company eventually discloses.
What to watch
Adoption figures and pricing disclosure are the next confirmable data points. Customer case studies with time-saved metrics or days-in-accounts-receivable reductions would give the launch claim its first testable foundation.
Related reading
Filed by the macro desk of MarketPR on July 16, 2026. Source: MarketPR. Indicative figures are not investment advice.