Expert Revenue Cycle Management for Orthopedic Practices

Orthopedic billing requires specialized expertise in musculoskeletal procedures, fracture care, joint replacements, sports medicine, spine treatments, pain management, and payer-specific reimbursement guidelines. ProvidaRCM helps orthopedic surgeons, orthopedic clinics, sports medicine specialists, spine surgeons, and musculoskeletal care providers reduce claim denials, accelerate reimbursements, and maximize collections through specialty-focused medical billing and revenue cycle management services.

ortho

99%
First-Pass Claim Rate

Industry avg. is 95%

500+
Providers Nationwide

Across all 50 states

24
Avg. A/R Days

Down from 52+ for most clients

20% to 25%
Avg. Revenue Increase

Within 90 days of launch

Orthopedic Specialties We Support

Every orthopedic subspecialty has its own CPT structure, global period rules, and modifier requirements. Select your specialty to see how ProvidaRCM addresses your specific billing challenges.

Select Specialty
General Orthopedics
Joint Replacement
Spine Surgery
Sports Medicine
Hand Surgery
Foot & Ankle
Trauma Surgery
ASC & Clinics
General Orthopedic Surgery
CPT 27000–28899

Office E/M visits, fracture management, joint injections, and musculoskeletal imaging interpretation form the high-volume core of general orthopedic practices. Each service carries specific documentation requirements, global surgery period rules, and modifier combinations that determine whether claims pay on first submission or generate unnecessary denials.

Key Billing Complexity
Fracture care global periods (0, 10, 90-day) require tracking across every patient. Post-operative visits without modifier 24 or 25 are systematically bundled and denied.
Common Error
E/M billed same-day as injection without modifier 25, payer bundles the office visit into the injection fee, eliminating the E/M payment entirely.
How We Fix It
Global period tracking automated per patient. Every same-day E/M and procedure combination reviewed for modifier 25 application before submission.
Revenue Impact
In a high-volume practice, correctly billing post-op visits and same-day E/M services recovers significant monthly revenue that would otherwise be written off silently.
Key CPT Codes20610 · 20550 · 99213 · 99214 · 29125 · 97597
Joint Replacement Surgery
CPT 27130 / 27447 / 23470

Total hip arthroplasty, total knee arthroplasty, partial knee replacement, shoulder arthroplasty, and revision procedures generate among the highest per-claim values in orthopedic billing. Every case involves prior authorization, implant cost documentation, and 90-day global period management, any gap in these processes represents a significant revenue loss.

Authorization Requirement
Conservative treatment failure documentation required by most commercial and Medicare Advantage payers, PT history, injection records, functional assessment scores, and radiographic evidence of OA severity.
Implant Billing
Implant cost submitted with invoice, lot number, and device description. ASC pass-through vs. facility-owned equipment rules applied by payer. Underpayments disputed with formal cost documentation.
Common Error
Bilateral TKA billed without modifier 50 or staged with modifier 58. Revision procedures coded as primary arthroplasty, missing revision-specific CPT code and higher reimbursement.
How We Fix It
Pre-auth package assembly matched to payer criteria. Implant invoice tracking integrated into billing workflow. Bilateral procedure modifier hierarchy validated on every case.
Key CPT Codes27447 · 27130 · 27438 · 27487 · 23472 · 27134
Spine Surgery
CPT 22100–22899 / 63001–63746

Discectomy, fusion, laminectomy, and spinal instrumentation procedures involve the most complex billing in orthopedics. Multi-level procedure coding, per-level add-on code structures, instrumentation and bone graft add-on codes, and payer-specific fusion criteria create multiple points where revenue is lost by billers without spine specialty expertise.

Multi-Level Complexity
Each fusion level billed with the correct add-on code (22614 per additional lumbar level). Failure to capture every level documented in the operative report leaves revenue uncaptured on every complex spine case.
Add-On Code Structure
Instrumentation (22840–22842), bone graft (20930–20938), and interbody cage (22851) are separately billable when documented. Billers unfamiliar with spine surgery miss these routinely.
Authorization Scrutiny
Spine fusion is among the most heavily scrutinized procedures. Failed conservative care, neurological deficit documentation, and MRI correlation are required. Multi-level fusion requires stronger justification than single-level.
How We Fix It
Operative report reviewed for level count, instrumentation, and bone graft type before every spine claim. Add-on code checklist applied to every case. Authorization package prepared with MRI findings and neuro exam documentation.
Key CPT Codes22612 · 22614 · 63047 · 63048 · 22840 · 20938
Sports Medicine & Arthroscopy
CPT 29800–29999

ACL reconstruction, rotator cuff repair, meniscectomy, labral repair, and cartilage restoration each have specific CPT pathways with add-on code structures that generalist billers consistently miss. Arthroscopic procedures performed in combination, such as rotator cuff repair with biceps tenodesis and subacromial decompression, require correct primary and add-on code selection to capture the full value of the surgical session.

Add-On Code Gaps
Shoulder arthroscopy: 29827 (rotator cuff repair) + 29828 (biceps tenodesis) + 29826 (subacromial decompression). Billing only 29827 loses the additional procedure reimbursement entirely.
Knee Arthroscopy
29881 (meniscectomy) + 29879 (abrasion chondroplasty) must each be documented and billed. NCCI edits require correct parent-add-on code hierarchy to justify separate payment.
Auth Requirements
ACL reconstruction and rotator cuff repair require MRI confirmation and functional deficit documentation. Non-acute presentations require failed conservative therapy evidence for most payers.
How We Fix It
Every arthroscopic operative report reviewed for all procedures performed. Add-on code checklist specific to knee and shoulder applied to every case. NCCI edit compliance verified before submission.
Key CPT Codes29827 · 29826 · 29828 · 29881 · 29879 · 29888
Hand & Upper Extremity Surgery
CPT 25000–26989

Carpal tunnel release, trigger finger, tendon repair, nerve decompression, and wrist arthroscopy each carry specific laterality requirements, bilateral procedure modifier rules, and distinction between open and endoscopic approaches that affect CPT code selection and reimbursement. Hand surgery billing errors are particularly common when bilateral procedures are performed or when multiple hand procedures occur in the same session.

Bilateral Procedure Rules
Bilateral carpal tunnel release requires modifier 50 or separate RT/LT claims. Medicare requires site-specific modifiers. Failure to apply bilateral modifiers results in only one side being paid.
Open vs. Endoscopic
Open carpal tunnel (64721) vs. endoscopic (29848), code selection must match the operative approach documented. Incorrect approach coding is one of the most common hand surgery billing errors.
Multiple Procedure Rules
Trigger finger release (26055) for multiple fingers in the same session requires modifier 51 on secondary procedures and documentation of each finger treated.
How We Fix It
Operative approach verified against CPT code before submission. Bilateral modifier hierarchy applied for every bilateral hand procedure. Multiple trigger finger cases reviewed for correct modifier 51 application.
Key CPT Codes64721 · 29848 · 26055 · 25115 · 25111 · 64726
Foot & Ankle Surgery
CPT 27600–28899

Bunionectomy, Achilles tendon repair, ankle arthroscopy, and flatfoot reconstruction each have distinct coding pathways where billing complexity intersects with laterality requirements, procedure complexity distinctions, and sometimes the distinction between podiatric and orthopedic coding pathways for the same anatomical structure.

Bunionectomy Complexity
Simple exostectomy (28111) vs. bunionectomy with osteotomy (28296–28299) vs. with implant (28293), code selection depends on operative technique and must match documentation exactly.
Laterality Requirements
All foot and ankle procedures require RT/LT modifiers. Bilateral Achilles repair, bilateral bunionectomy, and bilateral ankle arthroscopy require modifier 50 per Medicare and most commercial payer guidelines.
Ankle Arthroscopy
Ankle arthroscopy with debridement (29894) vs. with loose body removal (29895) vs. with synovectomy (29892), each requires specific documentation of arthroscopic findings and interventions performed.
How We Fix It
Operative report reviewed for specific technique and findings before foot/ankle code selection. Laterality modifiers applied to every claim. Arthroscopic procedure add-on code checklist applied for ankle cases.
Key CPT Codes28296 · 27650 · 29894 · 28111 · 27695 · 29895
Trauma Surgery
CPT 25600–27823 / ORIF

Open reduction internal fixation, external fixation, and complex trauma reconstruction require managing urgent authorization timelines, workers' compensation billing pathways, and 90-day global period tracking across potentially multiple fracture sites treated simultaneously. Trauma billing is often handled reactively in orthopedic practices with high emergency case volumes, a pattern that generates timely filing and authorization failures.

Urgent Authorization
Emergency fracture procedures require notification within payer-specific timelines, even for emergency cases, retroactive authorization is not guaranteed. Notification submitted same-day when pre-auth is not possible.
Workers' Comp Billing
WC trauma cases require separate credentialing, state-specific fee schedule application, and different documentation standards than commercial billing. WC claims routed to wrong payer are commonly lost.
Global Period Tracking
Multiple trauma sites treated simultaneously create overlapping 90-day global periods. Subsequent procedures during any active global period require correct modifier 79 (unrelated) or 78 (related complication).
How We Fix It
Trauma authorization workflow with same-day notification submission. WC claims routed with state-specific documentation. Global period calendar maintained across all active trauma patients.
Key CPT Codes27236 · 25607 · 27814 · 25600 · 27792 · 27823
Ambulatory Surgery Centers
ASC Facility Billing

ASC facility billing follows a completely different payment system than professional billing, with CMS ASC payment rates, device pass-through billing requirements, ASC-specific NCCI edits, and implant cost reporting rules that differ entirely from physician fee schedule billing. General medical billers applying professional billing rules to ASC facility claims generate systematic underpayments and denials.

ASC Payment System
Medicare ASC payment rates are grouped into payment groups, not individually priced like physician fee schedule. Multiple procedures performed in the same session follow specific ASC multiple procedure reduction rules.
Implant Pass-Through
Device cost pass-through billing requires invoice documentation, device lot number, and manufacturer information on every claim. Missing documentation results in implant cost denial even when the procedure itself is paid.
Commercial Payer Rules
Commercial payers often negotiate ASC rates differently from Medicare, some pay percentage of charges, some use ASC-specific contracted rates, others apply percentage of hospital outpatient rates.
How We Fix It
ASC billing managed under ASC-specific workflows, separate from physician billing. Device pass-through documentation integrated into claim preparation. Commercial ASC rate verification applied at payment posting.
Billing SystemASC Fee Schedule · HOPPS · Device Pass-Through · Multiple Procedure Rules

Why Orthopedic Billing Requires Specialists

Each challenge below represents a systematic revenue leak that generalist billing teams create without realizing it. ProvidaRCM addresses every one with documented processes applied on every claim.

01
Global Surgery Period Complexity
Orthopedic procedures carry 0, 10, or 90-day global periods. Post-operative services during these periods, office visits, cast changes, suture removal, are bundled into the surgical fee unless protected with modifier 24 (unrelated E/M) or 79 (unrelated procedure). Incorrectly billing these services generates immediate denials and potential overpayment recovery demands.
Revenue Risk
Every unbilled or improperly billed post-op visit in a 90-day global period is revenue either denied or written off. High surgical volumes amplify this loss significantly each month.
02
Joint Implant Billing Risk
Joint replacement implants cost $5,000 to $25,000 per procedure. Whether the implant is billed as a pass-through, bundled into the global surgical fee, or separately invoiced depends on payer-specific rules that vary significantly between commercial plans, Medicare, and ASC settings. Incorrect implant billing results in either lost revenue or compliance exposure.
Revenue Risk
A $15,000 knee implant paid at $9,000 without dispute represents thousands in losses on each case. Multiply across a high-volume joint replacement program and the annual impact is substantial.
03
NCCI Bundling in Orthopedics
The National Correct Coding Initiative contains extensive orthopedic-specific edits. Arthroscopic procedures have complex add-on code rules. Spine surgery multi-level procedures follow specific per-level code structures. When bundling edits are not navigated with appropriate modifiers, revenue is lost without a denial notice, the lesser-valued code is silently bundled into the primary code payment.
Revenue Risk
Silent bundling is the most insidious orthopedic billing failure, the claim pays, but at a fraction of what was earned. The loss is invisible without systematic post-payment audit.
04
Prior Authorization Complexity
Elective orthopedic surgery, joint replacement, spine fusion, arthroscopic reconstruction, almost universally requires prior authorization. Authorization failures for high-dollar orthopedic procedures result in losses of thousands per case with limited retroactive options, particularly when intraoperative upgrades expand the scope beyond what was initially authorized.
Revenue Risk
A single joint replacement denied for authorization failure represents $3,000 to $8,000 in professional fees. Authorization management is the single highest-value front-end billing function in orthopedics.
05
Modifier Dependency
Orthopedic billing requires mastery of modifiers 50, 51, 58, 59, 76, 79, RT, and LT. A missing modifier 50 on a bilateral procedure means only one side is paid. Modifier 51 hierarchy applied incorrectly on multiple procedures results in incorrect multiple procedure reductions. Each error affects reimbursement on every claim where it occurs.
Revenue Risk
Modifier errors are systematic, they affect every claim of the same type. In a practice performing bilateral procedures regularly, modifier 50 errors alone can generate significant monthly revenue losses.
06
Workers' Compensation Complexity
Orthopedic practices commonly treat high volumes of workers' compensation patients. WC billing follows state-specific fee schedules, different medical necessity standards, and requires separate credentialing. Standard billing platforms are not designed for WC, practices submitting WC claims through commercial billing workflows generate systematic errors and missed revenue.
Revenue Risk
WC claims submitted to the wrong payer or under incorrect fee schedules are either denied outright or paid at wrong rates. State-specific WC billing expertise is required for correct reimbursement.

High-Value Orthopedic Billing Insights

Orthopedic surgery generates some of the highest per-procedure reimbursements in outpatient medicine. That makes billing accuracy critical, the same error that costs $50 in primary care can cost $5,000 on a spinal fusion or joint replacement claim.

Most orthopedic billing failures fall into three categories: revenue that was never billed, denials that were preventable with correct front-end processes, and underpayments that were accepted without audit. ProvidaRCM addresses all three on every claim, every month.

The Compounding Effect

In orthopedic billing, errors are rarely isolated. A biller who misses arthroscopic add-on codes misses them on every arthroscopic case. A biller who does not track global periods generates unbilled post-op visit losses on every surgical patient. These systematic errors compound monthly and are often not visible until a full audit is conducted.

Revenue Opportunities
Revenue You Are Not Capturing
Most orthopedic practices have untapped billable revenue in services performed but not correctly coded or billed.
Arthroscopic add-on codes missed in multi-procedure cases
Multi-level spine code-per-level underbilling on complex cases
Implant costs not submitted or accepted below contracted rates
Bilateral procedures billed unilaterally, second side never paid
Preventable Denials
Denials That Should Never Reach Your Desk
The majority of orthopedic denials stem from predictable front-end failures that systematic processes eliminate before a claim is filed.
Authorization confirmed before every elective procedure
Global period modifiers applied before every post-op service
ICD-10 and CPT alignment verified against operative documentation
Underpayment Risks
Payments Below What You Are Owed
Payers systematically underpay orthopedic claims through multiple procedure reductions applied incorrectly, implant costs paid below invoice, and bilateral reduction rules misapplied.
ERA payment audited against contracted fee schedule before posting
Implant payments compared to submitted acquisition cost
Bilateral procedure payments verified against contractual entitlement

Every Orthopedic Denial Type. Every Fix.

Click any denial type to see why it happens, the financial impact, and exactly how ProvidaRCM prevents and resolves it.

AuthorizationPrior Authorization Denials, Joint Replacement and Spine
Why It Happens
Authorization not obtained before elective procedure. Authorization number not included on claim. Procedure performed intraoperatively exceeded authorized scope. Conservative treatment documentation insufficient to meet payer criteria.
Revenue Impact
Complete claim denial on procedures worth $3,000 to $8,000 in professional fees. Retroactive authorization rarely approved. High-dollar surgical cases denied without any recovery pathway when authorization management is reactive.
ProvidaRCM Fix
Authorization obtained before every elective procedure as prerequisite for scheduling. Auth numbers verified on every claim. Intraoperative scope changes tracked and amended authorizations requested same-day. Peer-to-peer reviews coordinated proactively.
Global PeriodGlobal Period Bundling Denials, Post-Op E/M and Services
Why It Happens
Post-operative E/M visit billed without modifier 24 (unrelated condition during global period) or modifier 25 (separate significant E/M). Staged procedure billed without modifier 58. Unrelated surgery during global period billed without modifier 79.
Revenue Impact
Post-op visit bundled into global period fee with no separate payment. For a high-volume surgical practice, unprotected global period services create a monthly revenue loss that accumulates invisibly without a clearly identifiable denial pattern.
ProvidaRCM Fix
Global period tracked per patient per surgeon across every active surgical case. Post-op visits reviewed for relatedness before billing. Modifier 24, 25, 58, or 79 applied based on clinical relationship to original procedure with documentation support.
Modifier ErrorModifier Errors, 50, 51, 59, RT/LT Misapplication
Why It Happens
Bilateral procedure billed without modifier 50 or RT/LT, payer pays one side only. Multiple procedures missing modifier 51, incorrect reduction applied. Modifier 59 used without sufficient documentation to justify distinct service identification.
Revenue Impact
Bilateral procedure reimbursed at 50% of what is contractually owed. Modifier 59 misuse creates audit risk in addition to the immediate claim impact. These modifier errors affect every claim of the same type across the entire practice volume.
ProvidaRCM Fix
Every orthopedic claim reviewed for modifier 50, 51, 59, RT, and LT application before submission. Bilateral documentation confirmed in operative report. Modifier 51 hierarchy applied correctly across multiple same-day procedures by value ranking.
NCCI BundlingNCCI Bundling, Arthroscopy Add-Ons and Spine Multi-Level Codes
Why It Happens
Arthroscopic add-on code billed without the required parent procedure. Spine add-on codes (22614) billed at wrong level count. Open and arthroscopic procedures at the same joint billed together without modifier identifying the distinct surgical approach.
Revenue Impact
Add-on procedures denied and bundled into primary surgical payment. Revenue lost on legitimate additional work performed and documented in the same operative session. Pattern denials across all arthroscopic or spine cases generate significant cumulative losses.
ProvidaRCM Fix
Current NCCI orthopedic edit tables maintained and applied to every surgical claim. Arthroscopic and spine add-on codes verified against parent code requirements. Modifier 59 applied with documentation support where distinct services require separate identification.
Implant CostImplant Cost Denials, Documentation and Rate Disputes
Why It Happens
Implant cost submitted without required invoice, lot number, or device description documentation. ASC bills implant as pass-through without required supporting information. Payer applies a payment cap below the submitted acquisition cost without dispute.
Revenue Impact
Implant cost denied or paid below actual acquisition cost, directly reducing surgical margin on high-implant cases. A $15,000 knee implant paid at $9,000 without dispute represents a $6,000 loss per case, multiplied across the entire joint replacement volume.
ProvidaRCM Fix
Implant invoice, lot number, and device description submitted with every applicable claim. Implant payment audited against submitted cost and contracted rates. Underpayments formally disputed with complete cost documentation within payer timelines.
Medical NecessityMedical Necessity Denials, Elective Orthopedic Surgery
Why It Happens
ICD-10 diagnosis codes do not reflect the conservative treatment failure required by payer criteria. Functional limitation documentation insufficient for elective surgical authorization. Imaging reports not correlated to diagnosis codes in clinical documentation.
Revenue Impact
High-dollar surgical claim denied requiring clinical appeal. For joint replacement and spine surgery, medical necessity denials trigger extensive appeal processes with uncertain outcomes when underlying documentation is insufficient to support the surgical indication.
ProvidaRCM Fix
ICD-10 codes validated against payer LCD criteria before submission. Conservative treatment failure documentation reviewed in clinical record before filing. Clinical appeal packages assembled with functional assessment scores and imaging documentation linked to diagnosis codes.
DocumentationDocumentation Gap Denials, Operative Report Insufficiency
Why It Happens
Payer requests records and operative report does not document findings that support the CPT code billed. Arthroscopy report does not specify procedures performed at each anatomical structure. Spine operative report does not document number of levels fused to justify multi-level coding.
Revenue Impact
Claim denied or downgraded to a lower-valued procedure code. High-value surgical claims downgraded to simpler procedure codes on audit represent significant per-case revenue losses that, when applied across a date range, generate substantial recoupment demands.
ProvidaRCM Fix
Operative reports reviewed against CPT criteria before submission. Gaps identified and clinical staff notified before claims are filed. Medical record review responses assembled within payer deadlines with clinical annotations specifically linking documentation to each billed procedure code.
Fracture CareFracture Care Coding Errors, Type, Treatment, and Global
Why It Happens
Closed fracture treatment with manipulation billed as without manipulation. Casting billed separately when it is included in the fracture care global fee for the specific code. Same-day E/M billed with fracture care code without modifier 25 documenting a separately significant evaluation.
Revenue Impact
Fracture care denial or E/M bundled into fracture care global fee. In a trauma-heavy orthopedic practice, systematic fracture care coding errors generate significant cumulative monthly revenue losses across a high volume of cases.
ProvidaRCM Fix
Fracture care codes selected based on documented treatment type, casting, manipulation, open reduction. Casting and supply codes checked against fracture care global inclusions for the specific code billed. Modifier 25 applied where same-day E/M is separately documented and medically significant.

Common Orthopedic CPT Codes

Every orthopedic CPT code is reviewed against operative documentation, modifier requirements, and payer-specific criteria before submission. Below is a reference of the most commonly billed orthopedic procedure codes.

Billing Tip

Correct CPT selection in orthopedics requires reading the operative report, not just the superbill. The difference between CPT 63047 (laminectomy) and 63030 (hemilaminotomy) is in the operative documentation, not the scheduled procedure name.

CPT CodeProcedure DescriptionBilling Notes
27447Total knee arthroplasty90-day global. Prior auth required. Implant cost submitted with invoice documentation. Bilateral requires modifier 50 or staged with modifier 58. Revision uses distinct codes (27486–27487).
27130Total hip arthroplasty90-day global. Auth required. Implant billing includes acetabular component, femoral stem, and bearing surface. Revision (27134–27138) has distinct coding pathway and higher reimbursement.
29827Arthroscopy, shoulder; rotator cuff repairAdd-on codes apply when additional procedures performed: 29828 (biceps tenodesis), 29826 (subacromial decompression), 29807 (SLAP repair). Each requires specific documentation in the operative report.
29881Arthroscopy, knee; meniscectomyAdd-ons for chondroplasty (29879), loose body removal (29874), and lateral release (29873). Documentation must specify which meniscus treated, procedure type, and any additional therapeutic work.
22612Arthrodesis, posterior lumbar technique, single levelPer-level code. Each additional level billed with 22614. Instrumentation (22840–22842) and bone graft (20930–20938) billed separately. Pedicle screw placement billed per-segment.
63047Laminectomy, facetectomy, foraminotomy; lumbarDecompression per spinal segment. Add-on 63048 for each additional level. Must be distinguished from hemilaminotomy (63030) based on operative documentation of extent of decompression performed.
25600Closed treatment, distal radial fracture; without manipulation90-day global period. Includes all related follow-up visits. E/M same day requires modifier 25. Manipulation billed as 25605. Casting supply codes separately billable under appropriate HCPCS supply codes.
27236Open treatment, femoral neck fracture; internal fixationHigh-value trauma code. 90-day global. Implant billing applies for hip fixation hardware. Workers' comp billing pathway may apply. Contralateral procedures during global require modifier 79.
64721Neuroplasty, median nerve at carpal tunnelOpen approach. Endoscopic is 29848. Code selection must match documented operative approach. Bilateral requires modifier 50 or RT/LT on separate claims. Modifier 25 for same-day E/M.
20610Arthrocentesis/injection, major joint or bursaCannot be billed with same-day E/M without modifier 25. Imaging guidance (76942 ultrasound or 77002 fluoroscopic) billed separately when documented. TC/26 split applies for facility-owned imaging equipment.

Common Orthopedic ICD-10 Codes

ICD-10 code accuracy is fundamental to orthopedic medical necessity. Every diagnosis code must align with clinical documentation and meet payer LCD criteria for the procedure billed.

ICD-10DiagnosisBilling Application Notes
M17.11Primary osteoarthritis, right kneePrimary medical necessity code for TKA. Side-specific (M17.11 right, M17.12 left, M17.0 bilateral) must match surgical site. Radiographic OA severity and functional limitation documentation strengthens auth package.
M16.11Primary osteoarthritis, right hipSupports THA authorization. Side specificity required. Conservative treatment failure, PT, injections, NSAIDs, required by most payer auth criteria alongside imaging confirmation of OA severity.
M47.816Spondylosis with radiculopathy, lumbar regionCommon spine surgery indication. Neurological findings in clinical documentation required to support surgical intervention. MRI correlation essential for decompression and fusion authorization.
M23.61ACL disruption of right kneeACL reconstruction indication. MRI confirmation and functional instability documentation required. Chronic vs. acute distinction affects coding. Side specificity required for bilateral cases.
M75.101Rotator cuff syndrome, right shoulderFull-thickness vs. partial tear (M75.120/M75.130) distinction affects surgical authorization criteria. MRI confirmation required for repair authorization by most payers.
G56.01Carpal tunnel syndrome, right upper limbElectrodiagnostic study (EMG/NCS) results typically required for surgical auth. Bilateral CTS (G56.01 + G56.02) requires bilateral procedure coding with modifier 50 or separate RT/LT claims.
S82.001APatella fracture, right knee, initial encounterEncounter suffix critical: A (initial treatment), D (subsequent encounter), S (sequela). Suffix determines global period and separately billable service analysis for post-fracture care visits.
M48.062Spinal stenosis, lumbar with neurogenic claudicationStrong medical necessity for lumbar decompression. Neurogenic claudication documentation, position-dependent symptoms, walking distance limitation, strengthens surgical necessity determination.
S72.001AFemoral neck fracture, right, initial (closed)Hip fracture requiring ORIF or arthroplasty. Fracture type specificity (displaced vs. nondisplaced) affects procedure code selection and must be reflected in diagnosis coding for correct billing.
M54.51Vertebrogenic low back painDoes not support surgical intervention without additional specific structural diagnoses. Paired with M47.816 or M51.16 when both degenerative disc disease and LBP are documented. Conservative care support code.

Common Orthopedic Billing Modifiers

Modifier accuracy is fundamental to orthopedic revenue cycle management. Incorrect or missing modifiers on bilateral procedures, multiple surgeries, and global period services generate systematic revenue losses that compound across every claim of the affected type.

ModifierDescriptionOrthopedic ApplicationDenial Risk
24Unrelated E/M During Postoperative PeriodApplied to E/M visits during a 10 or 90-day global period when the visit is for a condition completely unrelated to the surgery. Without this modifier, payer bundles the E/M into the global period fee and denies separate billing.Very High
25Significant, Separately Identifiable E/M Same Day as ProcedureRequired when orthopedic surgeon performs both an office visit and a minor procedure (injection, fracture care) on the same date and the E/M is significant and independently documented beyond the decision for the procedure itself.Very High
50Bilateral ProcedureApplied when the same procedure is performed on both sides in the same surgical session, bilateral carpal tunnel, bilateral knee arthroscopy, bilateral hip injection. Without modifier 50, the second side is denied as duplicate or paid at zero.Very High
51Multiple ProceduresApplied to secondary and subsequent procedures when multiple procedures are performed in one operative session. Primary procedure is billed without modifier 51. The modifier determines how payer applies multiple procedure reduction rules across the case.High
58Staged or Related Procedure During Postoperative PeriodApplied when a procedure during the global period was prospectively planned, is more extensive than the original, or is therapeutic following a diagnostic procedure. Resets the global period. Used for staged orthopedic reconstruction planned at time of initial surgery.Moderate
59Distinct Procedural ServiceOverrides NCCI bundling edits when procedures are genuinely distinct, performed at different anatomical sites, during different sessions, or meeting other distinct service criteria. Requires supporting documentation and clinical justification. Overuse creates audit risk.Moderate
76Repeat Procedure by Same PhysicianApplied when the same procedure is legitimately performed again by the same surgeon on the same date, repeat manipulation, repeat injection, repeat cast application. Prevents duplicate claim denial when the repeat procedure is clinically necessary and documented.Moderate
79Unrelated Procedure During Postoperative PeriodApplied when a surgical procedure during another active global period is completely unrelated to the original surgery. Documents that a new global period begins and that the new procedure is not related to the original surgical recovery. Missing this modifier results in global period bundling denial.High if Missing
RTRight SideSite-specific modifier for right extremity procedures. Required by Medicare for all laterality-dependent procedures. Some commercial payers prefer RT/LT instead of modifier 50 for bilateral procedures. Must be applied correctly to prevent site-of-service denial.High, Medicare
LTLeft SideSite-specific modifier for left extremity procedures. Required by Medicare. For bilateral procedures, primary procedure typically billed RT and secondary with LT and modifier 50, depending on payer-specific billing instructions. Consistency is critical across all bilateral claim types.High, Medicare

Prior Authorization in Orthopedic Surgery

Nearly every elective orthopedic procedure requires prior authorization. ProvidaRCM manages the complete authorization workflow, from initial submission through peer-to-peer review, so no high-value procedure is performed without protected reimbursement.

Joint Replacement Surgery
Payers require 3–6 months of conservative treatment failure, PT, injections, NSAIDs, plus radiographic OA evidence and functional scoring before approving THA or TKA.
ProvidaRCM Approach
Complete joint replacement auth packages assembled with conservative treatment history, imaging reports, and functional assessment scores matched to each payer's specific clinical criteria checklist.
Spine Fusion Surgery
Spine fusion is among the most scrutinized procedures. Multi-level fusion requires stronger medical justification than single-level, with MRI correlation, neurological deficits, and conservative care failure documentation required.
ProvidaRCM Approach
Auth submissions include MRI findings, neuro exam documentation, conservative care failure history, and payer-specific criteria alignment. Peer-to-peer reviews coordinated for all initial denials.
Arthroscopic Reconstruction
ACL reconstruction, rotator cuff repair, and labral repair require MRI confirmation and functional deficit documentation. Non-acute presentations require conservative therapy failure evidence for most payers before approving reconstruction.
ProvidaRCM Approach
Authorization submitted with MRI reports, physical exam findings, and functional limitation documentation. Add-on procedures identified at initial auth to prevent intraoperative authorization gaps.
Fracture Fixation (ORIF)
Emergency notification requirements vary by payer. Failure to notify within required timelines, even for emergency trauma cases, can result in denial. Same-day notification processes must be in place before a fracture program can bill effectively.
ProvidaRCM Approach
Urgent authorization and payer notification submitted within required timelines. Post-procedure notification filed same-day when pre-procedure auth is not obtainable for emergency interventions.
Revision Arthroplasty
Revision surgery carries more intensive authorization scrutiny than primary replacement. Payers require failed primary implant documentation, aseptic loosening or periprosthetic infection evidence, and often second-opinion confirmation.
ProvidaRCM Approach
Revision auth packages assembled with implant failure documentation, imaging evidence (loosening, osteolysis), infection workup results, and records demonstrating clinical necessity for revision vs. conservative symptom management.
Spinal Decompression
Laminectomy and discectomy authorization requires neurological findings, MRI confirmation, and non-surgical management failure. Multi-level decompression requires specific medical necessity documentation for each additional level beyond the first.
ProvidaRCM Approach
Decompression auth includes nerve root compression imaging evidence, neurological exam findings, and conservative care failure for each specific level being decompressed addressed individually in the submission.
Revenue Leakage

Eight Ways Orthopedic Practices Lose Revenue Without Knowing It

Each leakage point below represents systematic, recurring revenue loss that accumulates monthly. ProvidaRCM closes every one of these gaps as part of standard orthopedic billing management.

01
Missed Authorization
Elective orthopedic procedures performed without required prior authorization result in complete claim denial. On a joint replacement case, a single missed authorization represents thousands in forfeited professional fees with very limited retroactive recovery options.
02
Global Period Unbilled Services
Post-operative visits for unrelated conditions billed without modifier 24 are bundled into the global period and denied. Staged procedures during global periods billed without modifier 58 generate unnecessary delays and denials on services that are legitimately separately billable.
03
Arthroscopy Add-On Code Gaps
Billing only the primary arthroscopy code when debridement, meniscectomy, and chondroplasty were all performed leaves the add-on procedure reimbursement entirely uncaptured. This error affects every multi-procedure arthroscopy case in the practice.
04
Implant Cost Losses
Joint replacement and spine surgery implant costs not submitted with required documentation, or accepted below payer-contracted rates without audit or dispute. ASC implant pass-through billing done without required invoice and device identification results in systematic implant cost denials.
05
Bilateral Procedure Revenue Lost
Bilateral procedures billed as unilateral, missing modifier 50 or RT/LT on bilateral carpal tunnel release, bilateral knee arthroscopy, or bilateral shoulder procedures. The second side is either denied or paid at zero with no recovery attempted and no denial visible in standard reports.
06
Multi-Level Spine Underbilling
Spine fusion and decompression procedures billed at fewer levels than the operative report documents. Failing to capture each additional level with the correct add-on code results in systematic underpayment across every multi-level spine case performed.
07
Workers' Comp Revenue Misdirected
WC trauma claims submitted to the commercial insurance carrier instead of the workers' comp payer, or submitted to WC without required state-specific documentation formats. Claims denied at wrong payer with no timely recovery pathway to the correct WC carrier.
08
Unappealed High-Dollar Denials
Joint replacement and spine surgery denials accepted without appeal because in-house billing teams lack the clinical documentation expertise to prepare effective orthopedic surgical appeals. High-dollar denials written off represent permanently forfeited revenue that was often fully recoverable.

Complete Orthopedic Billing Services

ProvidaRCM manages the entire orthopedic revenue cycle, from eligibility verification before the procedure to analytics after payment. Every service delivered by billers trained specifically in musculoskeletal surgery.

Eligibility Verification
Patient coverage verified within 48 hours of every scheduled orthopedic procedure, including active coverage, surgical deductible, co-insurance, referral requirements, and benefit year reset dates.
Coverage confirmed before every case
Surgical deductible and OOP tracked
WC eligibility checked separately
Authorization Management
Prior authorization obtained for every orthopedic procedure requiring payer approval. Auth numbers confirmed on every surgical claim. Peer-to-peer reviews coordinated proactively when initial requests are denied.
Auth obtained before procedure scheduling
Intraoperative upgrade tracking
Peer-to-peer coordination included
Orthopedic Coding
Specialty-specific CPT selection, modifier validation, global period tracking, implant code management, and NCCI compliance review by coders trained in musculoskeletal surgery. Every code reviewed against the operative report.
Operative report review before coding
Multi-level spine level count verification
Arthroscopy add-on code checklist
Claims Submission
Clean electronic claim submission within 48 to 72 hours of charge capture. Real-time clearinghouse tracking with immediate correction and resubmission of rejected claims before timely filing windows are at risk.
48–72h submission turnaround
Clearinghouse rejection correction
Timely filing deadline tracking
Denial Management
Every orthopedic denial worked through the complete appeal process. Clinical appeals prepared with operative documentation. Root-cause analysis corrects systemic denial patterns across CPT categories and payers.
Every denial appealed within deadline
Operative documentation assembled
Systemic root-cause correction
A/R Follow-Up
Active follow-up on every open orthopedic claim. Aging reports reviewed weekly. High-value joint replacement, spine surgery, and trauma cases prioritized for same-week resolution across all payers.
Weekly A/R aging review by payer
High-value surgical case prioritization
WC lien management included
Payment Posting
ERA and EOB posting with payment accuracy review. Every payment compared to contracted rates. Implant cost submissions audited against payments. Underpayments identified and disputed before acceptance.
ERA audited against contracted rates
Implant payment verification
Underpayment dispute management
Reporting and Analytics
Monthly orthopedic-specific reporting, first-pass rate by procedure category, denial breakdown by CPT and payer, global period metrics, A/R aging, and collection trends. Custom reporting available for multi-surgeon groups.
Orthopedic-specific KPIs monthly
Global period tracking metrics
Custom reports for multi-surgeon groups
Workers' Comp Billing
Workers' compensation and personal injury billing managed under state-specific fee schedules with correct documentation formats, lien filing, and coordination with WC adjusters across all active WC jurisdictions.
State-specific WC fee schedules applied
WC lien filing and tracking
WC adjuster coordination

Orthopedic Provider Credentialing

Why Credentialing Matters

You Cannot Bill a Payer You Are Not Credentialed With

Every new orthopedic surgeon joining a practice, every new ASC contract, and every new commercial payer relationship requires credentialing before a single claim can be submitted. ProvidaRCM manages the complete credentialing and enrollment process, from application to active billing status, so your providers are paid from the first case.

Timeline Note

Commercial payer credentialing typically takes 60 to 120 days. Proactive enrollment before a surgeon's start date prevents billing gaps. ProvidaRCM initiates credentialing 90 days before expected practice start for new providers.

Medicare Enrollment (PECOS)
PECOS enrollment for orthopedic surgeons, sports medicine physicians, and mid-level providers. New enrollment and revalidation managed from application through active status with MAC-specific processing tracking.
Medicaid Enrollment, All 50 States
State Medicaid and managed Medicaid credentialing in all 50 states. Orthopedic coverage and authorization requirements tracked by state. Managed Medicaid plan enrollment where required for the provider's patient population.
Commercial Payer Enrollment
Credentialing with BCBS, Aetna, UHC, Cigna, Humana, and regional health plans. Active payer follow-up to minimize enrollment timelines. Timeline tracking with alerts 30 days before expected completion dates.
CAQH Management
CAQH ProView profile creation and ongoing maintenance. Most commercial payers require complete CAQH attestation before initiating credentialing. Profiles kept current and complete to prevent enrollment delays across the entire payer panel.
Group and ASC Enrollment
Group NPI enrollment and management. ASC facility credentialing separate from physician credentialing, ASC contracts require separate negotiation and enrollment processes that differ from professional billing enrollment.
Workers' Comp Credentialing
WC billing requires separate credentialing processes in most states. ProvidaRCM manages WC provider enrollment, state-specific fee schedule credentialing, and billing setup for orthopedic WC panels across all active WC jurisdictions.

Why Generic Billing Companies Struggle With Orthopedic Claims

Orthopedic billing requires expertise that takes years to develop. The errors generalist billers make on orthopedic claims are systematic, they affect every claim of the same type and compound monthly without a clearly visible pattern until a full audit reveals the cumulative loss.

Generic Medical Billers
Do not track surgical global periods, post-operative E/M visits billed without modifier 24, generating bundling denials and payer recoupment demands on previously paid claims
Miss arthroscopic add-on codes, billing only the primary arthroscopy code when multiple procedures were performed results in systematic underbilling on every multi-procedure surgical case
Handle implant billing incorrectly, joint replacement implant costs not submitted with required documentation, or accepted below acquisition cost without audit or dispute
Apply modifier 50 and RT/LT inconsistently, bilateral procedure reimbursement lost on bilateral carpal tunnel, bilateral knee arthroscopy, and bilateral shoulder procedures
Cannot read operative reports to verify CPT selection, spine fusion level counts wrong, arthroscopy add-ons missed, fracture care type incorrectly coded from superbill alone
Workers' compensation claims submitted to commercial insurance, WC revenue lost when claims reach the wrong payer and timely refiling to the correct WC carrier is no longer possible
Authorization failures treated as expected losses rather than managed proactively, high-dollar surgical denials written off without peer-to-peer review or retroactive appeal
ProvidaRCM Orthopedic Team
Global period tracking maintained for every surgical patient, post-op visits reviewed and protected with correct modifiers 24, 25, 58, or 79 based on clinical relationship to the original procedure
Every arthroscopic operative report reviewed for all procedures performed, add-on code checklist applied for knee and shoulder arthroscopy to capture every billable therapeutic procedure
Implant costs submitted with complete documentation on every case, invoice, lot number, device description, and payments audited against submitted costs and contracted rates
Bilateral and multiple procedure modifier hierarchy validated before submission, modifier 50, 51, RT, and LT applied correctly on every surgical claim before it is filed
Operative reports reviewed against CPT criteria before code selection, spine level counts verified, arthroscopic taxonomy confirmed, fracture care type matched to documented treatment
Workers' compensation claims routed correctly by state with applicable fee schedules applied and required WC-specific documentation formats submitted on every WC claim
Prior authorization obtained before every elective procedure, peer-to-peer reviews coordinated proactively, not reactively after thousands in surgical revenue have already been denied
How It Works

Orthopedic Revenue Cycle Process

A structured, orthopedic-specific process built around the unique requirements of musculoskeletal surgery billing, from pre-procedure eligibility through reporting and continuous optimization.

1
Eligibility
Coverage confirmed 48h before every scheduled procedure
2
Benefits
Surgical deductible, co-ins, and referral requirements identified
3
Authorization
Prior auth obtained before every elective procedure is scheduled
4
Coding
CPT, modifier, implant, and global period review per operative report
5
Submission
Clean electronic filing within 48–72h with clearinghouse tracking
6
Payment Posting
ERA audited vs. contracted rates with implant payment verification
7
Denial Management
Every denial appealed with operative documentation and root-cause fix
8
Reporting
Monthly orthopedic KPIs, payer trends, and revenue roadmap

In-House Billing vs. ProvidaRCM

The true cost of in-house orthopedic billing includes salary, benefits, training, turnover, and the revenue lost to expertise gaps on high-value surgical claims. ProvidaRCM delivers more for less.

CategoryIn-House Orthopedic BillingProvidaRCM
Total CostSalary + benefits + software + training + overhead, fixed cost regardless of volume2.49% of net collections, all-inclusive, no hidden fees, scales with volume
Orthopedic ExpertiseGeneral medical billers without musculoskeletal surgery or ASC billing trainingOrthopedic-specific coders trained in surgical, trauma, spine, and ASC billing
Global Period ManagementPost-op services frequently billed without correct modifiers, silent bundling denialsAutomated global period tracking with modifier review on every post-op service
Implant BillingImplant costs missed, underdocumented, or accepted below contracted rates without auditComplete implant cost submission with invoice documentation and payment audit per case
Staffing RiskRevenue gap when billing staff resign, take PTO, or are on medical leaveTeam-based service, no single point of failure, no revenue gap from staff absence
Denial ManagementDenials often left unappealed, high-dollar surgical claims written off without contestEvery denial worked through complete appeal with operative documentation support
Workers' CompWC claims routed incorrectly or billed without state-specific documentationState-specific WC billing with correct fee schedules and documentation requirements
Auth ManagementAuth failures result in high-dollar surgical claim denials accepted as expected lossesAuth obtained before every procedure, peer-to-peer managed proactively not reactively
ReportingBasic collection reports without orthopedic procedure or global period benchmarkingOrthopedic KPIs, global period metrics, payer trends, implant payment tracking monthly
ScalabilityAdding surgeons requires new hiring, training, and proportional overhead increaseScales immediately as surgeon count and surgical volume grow at no additional fixed cost
Free Revenue Audit

Find Out What Your Orthopedic Practice Is Actually Owed

ProvidaRCM offers a complimentary billing audit for orthopedic practices. We analyze your last 90 days of claims, identify revenue gaps on surgical claims, calculate your true denial and underpayment rates, and show you exactly what specialty orthopedic billing can recover for your practice.

No commitment. Results within 5 business days.

What Your Free Audit Includes
Denial Pattern Analysis
Top denial types by CPT category, payer, and reason code
A/R Aging Review
Surgical claim recovery potential by payer and age bucket
Revenue Leakage Report
Global period gaps, missed add-ons, implant underpayments identified
Recovery Opportunity Estimate
Projected revenue improvement based on your practice data

Orthopedic Billing Case Studies

Three examples of how specialty orthopedic billing expertise translates to measurable revenue improvement, without fabricated numbers.

Case Study 01
Joint Replacement Practice, 5 Orthopedic Surgeons
Challenge
A five-surgeon joint replacement practice was experiencing persistent post-operative visit denials. The in-house billing team was billing E/M services during 90-day global periods without modifier 24 for unrelated conditions. Additionally, joint replacement implant costs were being submitted without required invoice documentation, resulting in implant payments consistently below acquisition cost that were being accepted without dispute.
Solution
ProvidaRCM implemented surgical global period tracking for every patient. Post-operative E/M visits were reviewed for relatedness to the index procedure and protected with modifier 24 or 25. Implant billing was restructured with complete invoice, lot number, and device description documentation. Historical implant underpayments within dispute windows were formally challenged with cost documentation.
Outcome
Post-operative E/M denial rate dropped significantly within the first billing cycle. Implant payment recovery on disputed historical claims generated meaningful revenue within 60 days. Ongoing implant payment accuracy improved through systematic ERA audit against submitted costs on every subsequent case.
Case Study 02
High-Volume Sports Medicine and Arthroscopy Group
Challenge
A high-volume sports medicine group performing arthroscopic knee and shoulder surgery was systematically underbilling by failing to capture arthroscopic add-on codes. When surgeons performed rotator cuff repair alongside biceps tenodesis and subacromial decompression in the same session, only the primary rotator cuff code was billed. Knee arthroscopy cases combining meniscectomy with chondroplasty were similarly billed as single-procedure cases.
Solution
ProvidaRCM implemented operative report review as a mandatory pre-billing step for all arthroscopic cases. A pre-submission checklist was developed specifically for shoulder and knee arthroscopy to identify each distinctly performed therapeutic procedure and apply the correct primary and add-on code combination from the operative documentation.
Outcome
Per-case reimbursement increased across both shoulder and knee arthroscopy procedure categories through correct add-on code capture. The improvement was achieved without generating new payer scrutiny, all added codes were supported by operative documentation that had always been present but was not previously used in code selection.
Case Study 03
Spine Surgery Group, Multi-Level Fusion Program
Challenge
A spine surgery group performing high volumes of multi-level lumbar fusion was consistently underbilling by not capturing all levels in the spine fusion code structure. Single-level codes were being billed for procedures that included two, three, or four documented fusion levels. Bone graft harvesting and spinal instrumentation add-on codes were also not being applied consistently, leaving substantial revenue uncaptured on every complex spine case.
Solution
ProvidaRCM conducted a retrospective review of spine operative reports against submitted claims and quantified the per-level underbilling. A spine surgery coding protocol was implemented requiring operative report review specifically for level count confirmation, instrumentation documentation, and bone graft technique identification before any spine claim was submitted.
Outcome
Revenue per spine surgery case increased meaningfully through correct multi-level code capture and consistent instrumentation and bone graft add-on code application. All captured codes were fully documented in the existing operative reports, the improvement reflected accurate billing of what had already been performed and documented but previously left uncaptured.

Orthopedic Billing Across All 50 States

ProvidaRCM provides orthopedic billing for practices, group clinics, and ASCs in every state, with multi-state credentialing capability, deep Medicare and Medicaid orthopedic experience, and established billing relationships with all major commercial payers and WC programs.

Active orthopedic billing operations in all 50 states with state-specific WC fee schedule knowledge
Deep Medicare experience, NCD and LCD knowledge for joint replacement, spine surgery, and ASC procedures
Medicaid orthopedic billing in all states including managed Medicaid and Medicaid Advantage plans
Established credentialing relationships with BCBS, Aetna, UHC, Cigna, Humana, and regional health plans
Workers' compensation billing managed across all active WC jurisdictions with state-specific documentation
50
States Covered
Active orthopedic billing in all 50 states with WC expertise
200+
Payer Relationships
Medicare, Medicaid, commercial, and WC payers
Medicare
Deep Expertise
NCD and LCD knowledge for all orthopedic procedures
WC/PI
All Jurisdictions
State-specific WC fee schedules and documentation

Orthopedic Billing FAQs

Everything you need to know about outsourcing your Orthopedic billing to ProvidaRCM.

Still have questions?

Our orthopedic billing specialists are ready to help with coding, claims, prior authorizations, denials, and revenue cycle management. We respond to all inquiries within one business day.

Our certified billing specialists accurately code orthopedic procedures using the latest CPT, ICD-10-CM, and HCPCS guidelines. Whether it’s joint replacements, arthroscopy, fracture repairs, spinal procedures, or sports medicine surgeries, we ensure proper documentation, modifier usage, and payer compliance to maximize reimbursement.

Yes. We assist with obtaining prior authorizations for surgeries, MRI and CT imaging, injections, durable medical equipment (DME), and other orthopedic services. Our proactive authorization process helps reduce delays, prevent denials, and improve patient scheduling.

We implement multiple quality control measures before claims are submitted, including coding validation, documentation review, modifier verification, and payer-specific edits. If a claim is denied, our denial management team investigates the root cause, submits timely appeals, and works to recover every eligible dollar.

Absolutely. We have extensive experience billing both surgical and non-surgical orthopedic services, including fracture care, casting, splinting, joint aspirations, corticosteroid injections, PRP therapy (where applicable), office visits, imaging, and follow-up care while ensuring proper global period compliance.

Yes. We work with solo orthopedic surgeons, multi-location practices, sports medicine clinics, spine specialists, hand surgeons, podiatrists, and orthopedic ASCs. Our scalable revenue cycle management solutions support multiple providers, locations, and payer contracts while delivering transparent reporting and consistent cash flow improvements.