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Orthopedic
Medical Billing Services

Orthopedic billing is one of the most technically demanding specialties in U.S. healthcare — high surgical claim volume, strict NCCI bundle edits, 90-day global periods, and workers' compensation cases all running in parallel. Xecta's AAPC-certified team was built for exactly this complexity.

AAPC CPC & CPMA Certified NCCI Bundle Expertise Global Period Tracking Workers' Comp Billing Free Practice Audit
Quick Answer

What is orthopedic medical billing?

Quick Answer
What makes orthopedic billing different from other medical specialties?

Orthopedic medical billing involves coding and submitting claims for musculoskeletal procedures ranging from office-based joint injections to complex multi-level spinal fusions and joint replacement surgeries. It differs from other specialties in four specific ways: (1) NCCI bundle edits are pervasive — many orthopedic procedure components are bundled together under CMS policy and cannot be separately billed without a valid modifier; (2) the 90-day global surgical period bundles all routine post-operative follow-up visits into the surgical payment, meaning separate E/M claims for standard post-op visits will be automatically denied; (3) multiple procedure reductions (Modifier 51) apply when multiple surgeries are performed in the same session — secondary procedures are reimbursed at 50%, and modifier stacking must be precise; and (4) workers' compensation cases, which are common in orthopedics, operate under state-specific fee schedules and carrier-specific billing rules entirely separate from Medicare and commercial insurance. Errors in any of these areas result in systematic underpayment or compliance exposure.

The Revenue Problem

Six Reasons Orthopedic Practices Lose Revenue on Every Surgical Case

Each orthopedic case carries multiple billing failure points that general billing companies and undertrained in-house staff routinely miss.

Challenge 01

NCCI Bundling — Unbundling Penalties

CMS National Correct Coding Initiative (NCCI) edits define hundreds of procedure pairs that cannot be billed together because one is a component of the other. In orthopedics, this affects surgical approaches, closure codes, and procedure combinations frequently performed together. Incorrectly unbundling a procedure creates both a denial and an overpayment liability. Conversely, failing to use modifier 59 (or X-modifiers) when procedures are genuinely distinct means leaving reimbursement on the table. Getting this right requires current NCCI edit knowledge and clinical understanding of what was actually performed.

Challenge 02

Global Surgical Period Denials

Major orthopedic surgeries carry a 90-day global surgical period. Any E/M visit billed within that window for routine post-op care will be automatically denied — it is included in the surgical payment. The critical exceptions are modifier 24 (unrelated visit during global period), modifier 25 (significant, separately identifiable E/M on the same day as a procedure), and modifier 79 (unrelated procedure during global period). Modifier 78 applies to a return to the OR for complications. Practices that do not track global periods per patient and per procedure routinely generate preventable denials across their post-op visit volume.

Challenge 03

Multiple Procedure Reductions

When two or more surgical procedures are performed in the same operative session, Medicare and most commercial payers apply the multiple procedure reduction rule (Modifier 51): the highest-value procedure is paid at 100%, the second at 50%, and additional procedures at 25% or less. Modifier 51 must be applied to all secondary procedures — except add-on codes (+codes), which are exempt. Modifier 51 Exempt procedures require no reduction. Failure to stack modifiers correctly in the correct sequence triggers payment calculation errors, either underpaying or overclaiming and creating audit risk.

Challenge 04

Bilateral Procedure Billing

Bilateral orthopedic procedures — bilateral total knee replacement, bilateral shoulder repairs — can be billed using Modifier 50, or with LT/RT modifiers on separate claim lines, depending on payer requirements. Medicare processes Modifier 50 claims at 150% of the single procedure rate, but some commercial payers pay 100% + 50% on two separate lines with LT/RT instead. Using the wrong billing approach for the wrong payer leads to either underpayment (if the payer requires a specific format) or improper billing. Xecta maintains payer-specific bilateral billing rules for all major payers your practice contracts with.

Challenge 05

Surgical Prior Authorisation

Virtually every elective orthopedic surgery requires prior authorisation, and the clinical criteria vary significantly by payer and procedure. Total joint replacements commonly require: documentation of failed conservative treatment (typically 3–6 months of PT), functional outcome scores, weight-bearing X-rays, and sometimes BMI thresholds. Some payers require step therapy — the patient must fail specified conservative interventions before surgery is covered. PA denials most often occur not because the surgery is unnecessary, but because the clinical documentation submitted did not specifically address all of the payer's criteria.

Challenge 06

Workers' Compensation Billing Rules

Workers' compensation cases are disproportionately common in orthopedics. WC claims bypass health insurance entirely — they are submitted to the employer's WC carrier under state-specific fee schedules that often differ substantially from Medicare rates. WC billing requires injury case numbers, specific form requirements, separate prior authorisation processes, and claims must be filed within state-mandated timelines. Mixing WC claims into standard insurance billing workflows — or applying Medicare fee schedules to WC cases — creates systematic underpayment and delayed reimbursement.

Clinical Coding Reference

Orthopedic CPT Codes, Modifiers & ICD-10 Reference

The most frequently billed orthopedic codes with billing notes. Modifier selection is as critical as procedure code selection in orthopedic billing.

CPT / Code Description Key Billing Notes
JOINT INJECTIONS & ASPIRATIONS
20600 Aspiration/injection; small joint or bursa (finger, toe) Requires documentation of joint involved, laterality, and injected substance. Fluoroscopic guidance billed separately if used.
20605 Aspiration/injection; intermediate joint (wrist, ankle, olecranon bursa) Cannot be billed with 20600 for same joint in same session. Document injection substance and volume.
20610 Aspiration/injection; major joint or bursa (knee, hip, shoulder) Highest-level joint injection code. Ultrasound guidance (76942) may be separately billed with modifier 59.
20611 Aspiration/injection; major joint with US guidance and permanent recording Includes ultrasound guidance. Do not bill 20610 + 76942 when 20611 is appropriate — NCCI bundle.
KNEE PROCEDURES
27447 Arthroplasty, knee, condyle and plateau; medial and lateral compartments with or without patella resurfacing (total knee replacement) 90-day global period. Requires PA from virtually all payers. Document failure of conservative treatment, functional scores, and imaging.
29880 Arthroscopy, knee, surgical; with meniscectomy (medial or lateral, including any meniscal shaving) Cannot bill 29880 + 29881 for same knee. Use 29880 for complete meniscectomy; 29881 when limited shaving only.
29881 Arthroscopy, knee, surgical; with meniscectomy (medial or lateral) including any meniscal shaving NCCI bundle with 29880 — only one billable per knee. Verify laterality is documented and matches claim.
29882 Arthroscopy, knee, surgical; with meniscus repair (medial or lateral) Higher RVU than 29880/29881. Requires suture or staple repair documentation. Cannot bill with 29880 for same meniscus.
29877 Arthroscopy, knee, surgical; debridement/shaving of articular cartilage Limited commercial payer coverage for isolated debridement. Medical necessity documentation critical. Often denied as not medically necessary without supporting ICD-10.
SHOULDER PROCEDURES
29827 Arthroscopy, shoulder, surgical; with rotator cuff repair Highest-volume shoulder arthroscopy code. Full-thickness vs partial-thickness must be documented. PA required; failure of PT typically needed.
29826 Arthroscopy, shoulder, surgical; decompression of subacromial space with partial acromioplasty Add-on code (+) to other shoulder arthroscopy codes. Do not bill as standalone. No Modifier 51 (exempt as add-on).
29823 Arthroscopy, shoulder, surgical; debridement, extensive NCCI bundle with 29827 — cannot separately bill debridement if performed during rotator cuff repair without modifier 59 and distinct documentation.
HIP PROCEDURES
27130 Arthroplasty, acetabular and proximal femoral prosthetic replacement (total hip arthroplasty) 90-day global period. Highest-value common orthopedic code. Prior auth requires failure of conservative management, Harris Hip Score, BMI documentation with many payers.
27125 Hemiarthroplasty, hip, partial (femoral head prosthesis) Lower RVU than 27130. Typically used for femoral neck fractures. Document why total replacement is not indicated.
KEY MODIFIERS
50 Bilateral procedure Medicare: 150% of single procedure rate. Some commercial payers require LT + RT on separate lines instead. Verify per payer.
51 Multiple procedures (same session) Append to all secondary procedures. Exempt: add-on codes (+), modifier 51 exempt codes. Primary = highest RVU. Secondary = 50%. Third+ = 25%.
59 Distinct procedural service Overrides NCCI bundle when procedures are genuinely separate. Only use when clinically justified. Do not use as a routine "get paid" modifier.
22 Unusual procedural complexity Documents that the procedure required substantially greater time/effort than typical. Must include operative note explaining complexity. Payers may request records.
24 / 25 / 78 / 79 Global period exception modifiers 24: unrelated E/M during global; 25: significant E/M same day as procedure; 78: return to OR for complication; 79: unrelated procedure during global period.
COMMON ICD-10 DIAGNOSES
M17.11 / M17.12 Primary osteoarthritis, right/left knee Required primary diagnosis for total knee replacement and knee arthroscopy claims. Specificity to laterality is mandatory.
M16.11 / M16.12 Primary osteoarthritis, right/left hip Primary diagnosis for total hip arthroplasty. Document radiographic grade (Kellgren-Lawrence) for PA submissions.
M75.100 / M75.101 Rotator cuff syndrome, unspecified/right shoulder Use for rotator cuff pathology. Document full vs partial thickness on MRI and operative note to support 29827.
S83.200A Tear of anterior cruciate ligament, initial encounter ACL tear — initial encounter. Use for acute injuries. Switch to 'D' subsequent or 'S' sequela as appropriate.
M54.5 Low back pain Non-specific; use a more specific lumbar code (M47.816, M51.16) when documented. Payers increasingly require specificity for spinal procedure authorisation.

Note: Orthopedic CPT codes, NCCI edits, and global period assignments are updated annually by CMS. Modifier rules also vary by payer. Xecta monitors all updates and applies current coding guidelines to every claim. Contact us for guidance on a specific payer's orthopedic billing requirements.

Our Services

What Xecta Does for Orthopedic Practices

End-to-end surgical billing support with orthopedic-specific expertise at every step of the revenue cycle.

Surgical Claim Coding & Modifier Accuracy

Every surgical claim is reviewed against the operative note to confirm the correct CPT code, correct modifier stack (50, 51, 59, 22, LT/RT), and correct sequencing. We do not code from charge tickets alone — we read the op note. This eliminates undercoding, prevents NCCI violations, and maximises legitimate reimbursement on complex multi-procedure cases.

Prior Authorisation Management

We submit complete PA packages for all elective orthopedic procedures 72 hours before scheduling. For joint replacement submissions, we include functional outcome scores, conservative treatment history, imaging reports, and any payer-specific clinical criteria. When PA is denied, we escalate immediately to peer-to-peer review rather than accepting the denial.

NCCI Bundle Compliance Review

Before submission, every multi-procedure surgical claim is run against current NCCI procedure-to-procedure (PTP) edits. We identify which code pairs require modifier 59 or X-modifiers, which are hard bundles that cannot be overridden, and which are correctly billable as separate services. This prevents both improper unbundling and under-billing of legitimate distinct procedures.

Global Period Tracking

We maintain a per-patient global period tracker for all surgical procedures. Post-op E/M visits scheduled within the global window are flagged before claim submission, and the correct exception modifier (24, 25, 78, or 79) is applied where applicable. This eliminates the wave of preventable denials that follows high-volume surgical months at most orthopedic practices.

Workers' Compensation Billing

WC claims are processed through a separate workflow: state fee schedule is applied, injury case number and employer information are verified, claims are submitted to the correct carrier on the correct form, and filing timelines are monitored per state. We do not cross-contaminate WC cases into the standard insurance queue. If a case involves both WC and group health (coordination of benefits), we handle that billing sequence as well.

Orthopedic Denial Management & Appeals

Surgical denials are triaged within 48 hours and categorised: PA failure, NCCI bundle violation, global period conflict, medical necessity, or modifier error. Each category gets a targeted appeal — we attach operative notes, conservative treatment records, and imaging when required. We track every appeal to resolution and report denial root causes monthly so the same errors are not repeated.

Right Fit

Who This Service Is For — and Who It Is Not

This service is for:
  • Orthopedic surgery practices (single surgeon to large groups)
  • Sports medicine physicians performing surgical and non-surgical MSK care
  • Joint replacement centres and ambulatory surgical centres
  • Spine surgery practices (neurosurgery-orthopedic crossover)
  • Fracture care and trauma orthopedic practices
  • Multi-specialty groups with orthopedic/musculoskeletal component
  • Practices experiencing high denial rates on surgical or post-op claims
This service is not for:
  • Standalone physical therapy practices without a physician component (see our PT billing page)
  • Chiropractic-only practices (see our chiropractic billing page)
  • Pain management practices without surgical orthopedic procedures
  • Out-of-country providers without a U.S. NPI and active payer credentialing
Side by Side

Xecta vs. In-House Billing vs. Generic Billing Company

Orthopedic billing mistakes are expensive. The table below reflects what most practices experience when their billing isn't orthopedic-specific.

Capability In-House Team Generic Biller Xecta
Operative note review before coding Sometimes ✓ Every claim
NCCI PTP edit compliance check per claim If trained
90-day global period tracker per patient ✗ Rarely ✓ Automated
Multiple procedure modifier stack (51, 50, 59) Inconsistent Basic only ✓ Full sequence
Prior auth for all elective surgeries If staffed Varies ✓ 72-hr advance
Workers' compensation separate workflow ✓ State-specific
Bilateral procedure payer rule matrix
Surgical denial appeals (48-hr triage) If capacity Inconsistent ✓ Guaranteed
AAPC CPC & CPMA credentials ✓ Verified
Free practice audit before commitment ✓ Always free
Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

The billing questions orthopedic practices ask most before switching to a specialised RCM partner.

What CPT codes are used for orthopedic surgery billing?
Orthopedic billing spans a wide CPT code range: 20600–20611 for joint injections and aspirations; 27447 for total knee arthroplasty; 27130 for total hip arthroplasty; 29827 for arthroscopic rotator cuff repair; 29880–29882 for knee meniscus procedures; and 22530–22634 for spinal fusion codes. Modifier selection is equally important: Modifier 50 (bilateral), 51 (multiple procedures), 59 (distinct service), 22 (unusual complexity), and the global period modifiers 24, 25, 78, and 79. Getting the modifier stack right on a complex multi-procedure case can mean the difference between full payment and a 30–50% underpayment.
How does the global surgical period affect post-op billing?
The global surgical period bundles routine post-operative follow-up visits into the surgical payment. Major orthopedic surgeries (total joint replacements, major spinal fusions) carry a 90-day global period. Any standard E/M visit billed within that window for the surgical condition will be automatically denied. The exceptions are: Modifier 24 for an E/M visit that is unrelated to the surgery; Modifier 25 for a separately identifiable significant E/M service on the same day as a procedure; Modifier 78 for an unplanned return to the operating room for a complication; and Modifier 79 for an unrelated procedure performed during the global period. Without a per-patient global period tracker, these denials are common and preventable.
What is NCCI bundling and does it affect orthopedic claims?
NCCI (National Correct Coding Initiative) bundling is pervasive in orthopedic surgery. CMS PTP (procedure-to-procedure) edits define which CPT code pairs cannot be billed together because one is considered a component of the other. Examples common in orthopedics: billing joint debridement separately when it is performed as part of a primary arthroscopic procedure, or billing separately for components of a single total joint replacement. Some NCCI bundles have a modifier indicator of “1”, meaning they can be overridden with modifier 59 or an X-modifier (XE, XS, XP, XU) when the procedures were genuinely separate and distinct events. Bundles with indicator “0” cannot be overridden. Incorrect use of modifier 59 to override non-overridable bundles is both a denial risk and a compliance risk. See our denial management services for how we handle NCCI-related denials.
How are multiple procedures billed when performed in the same surgery?
When multiple procedures are performed in the same operative session, the multiple procedure reduction rule applies. The highest-RVU procedure is listed first and paid at 100%. All secondary procedures receive Modifier 51 and are reimbursed at 50% (Medicare; commercial rates vary). Add-on codes (+codes) and Modifier 51 Exempt codes do not receive the reduction and are paid at 100% regardless of position. Bilateral procedures using Modifier 50 are typically paid at 150% of the single procedure rate under Medicare, though commercial payers may require LT/RT on separate lines instead. The critical skill is correctly ranking procedures by RVU, applying the right modifier to each line, and knowing which codes are exempt — errors at any step cause systematic underpayment on multi-procedure cases.
Does Xecta handle workers' compensation orthopedic billing?
Yes. Workers' compensation is handled through a completely separate billing workflow at Xecta. WC claims are submitted to the employer's insurance carrier (not a health plan), using the injury case number, the appropriate WC form, and the state-specific WC fee schedule — which is often different from the Medicare fee schedule. WC prior authorisation, filing timelines, and appeal procedures vary by state and carrier. We maintain state-specific knowledge for all 50 states and track filing deadlines to prevent timely filing denials, which are non-recoverable in workers' comp. If a case involves both WC and group health (after maximum WC coverage), we manage the coordination of benefits sequence.
What documentation does prior authorisation require for joint replacement?
PA requirements for total joint replacements vary by payer but typically include: documented failure of conservative treatment (physical therapy, NSAIDs, injections — usually 3–6 months); functional outcome scores (Knee Society Score, Harris Hip Score, WOMAC); weight-bearing radiographs within the past 12 months showing joint space narrowing; and physician notes documenting the severity of functional limitation. Some payers also require BMI documentation and comorbidity assessments. The most common reason for PA denial is not lack of medical necessity, but incomplete documentation — specifically, failing to address each criterion the payer uses to evaluate the request. Xecta prepares the complete clinical package upfront, reducing first-pass PA denials and peer-to-peer escalations. See our full insurance verification and prior auth service.

Losing Revenue on Surgical Claims or Post-Op Visits?

Start with a free orthopedic billing audit. Xecta reviews your denial patterns, NCCI compliance, modifier accuracy, global period management, and workers' comp workflow — then delivers a written report with dollar-impact estimates. No obligation.