Orthopedic Billing Services That Protect Revenue on Every High-Value Claim
Austin, Texas-based AAPC-certified coders. 99% clean claim rate. We handle global period compliance, implant charge capture, laterality modifiers, and the surgical bundling rules that cost orthopedic practices thousands every month.
Clean Claim Rate
Avg Revenue Increase
First-Pass Acceptance
Denial Turnaround
Why Orthopedic Billing Costs Practices More
Than Almost Any Other Specialty
Orthopedic billing combines three of the most denial-prone elements in all of medical billing: high-value surgical procedures with 90-day global packages, complex implant and hardware charge capture, and strict laterality requirements where a single missing modifier kills the entire claim. One global period violation, one missing RT or LT modifier, one unbundled hardware code triggers an automatic denial on a claim worth thousands of dollars.
In our work auditing orthopedic practices, the AAOS identifies global period non-compliance, implant charge capture failures, and modifier errors on bilateral or multi-site procedures as the three primary drivers of orthopedic revenue loss. We see all three on nearly every new client’s account in the first 30 days. They are structural, not incidental. General billing teams without orthopedic-specific training produce them reliably.
The 2026 CMS Physician Fee Schedule Final Rule (CMS-1832-F) initiated a formal comment process specifically on improving global surgery payment accuracy. That regulatory signal means modifier compliance on 90-day global packages faces heightened scrutiny this cycle. Practices still running manual global period tracking are building audit exposure with every claim.
Docscare is a boutique medical billing company headquartered in Austin, Texas. Our coders do not rotate between orthopedics and unrelated specialties. They work orthopedic accounts, train on orthopedic CPT logic, and stay current with AMA CPT updates and CMS Local Coverage Determinations for musculoskeletal procedures. That specialization is what pushes our clean claim rate to 99%.
Global Period Violations
Every major orthopedic surgery carries a 90-day global surgical package. CMS bundles all routine post-operative care into the surgical fee for that window. Billing E/M visits during the global period without modifier 24 (unrelated visit) or modifier 79 (unrelated procedure) triggers automatic denials. These account for 15 to 20% of orthopedic E/M denials and most are preventable with proper flagging in your practice management system.
Laterality Modifier Failures
Modifiers RT (right) and LT (left) are mandatory for all unilateral orthopedic procedures. Missing or mismatched laterality is the single highest-volume cause of automatic orthopedic claim denials. A total knee replacement on the left knee coded without modifier LT comes back denied. We verify laterality on every orthopedic claim before submission, not after denial.
Implant and Hardware Charge Capture
Joint replacement, spine surgery, and trauma fixation procedures involve implants and hardware that require separate charge capture. Hardware removal (CPT 20680) bundles into revision arthroplasty codes when performed at the same operative session. Billing it separately on the same claim is an NCCI edit failure and a guaranteed denial. Capturing implant charges completely without triggering bundling violations requires orthopedic-specific coding knowledge.
Open vs. Arthroscopic Code Mismatches
Billing the open rotator cuff repair code (CPT 23412) when the operative report documents an arthroscopic procedure (CPT 29827) creates an overpayment risk and a denial when the payer audits the chart. The reverse also happens: undercoding arthroscopic procedures when the complexity warrants a higher-reimbursement open code. Both cost money. Both require coders who read operative reports, not just charge tickets.
Orthopedic CPT Codes We Handle Every
Day
High-volume orthopedic CPT codes span six procedure families: office visits and injections (99202 to 99215, 20600 to 20611), fracture care (27750 to 27848), arthroscopy (29827, 29881), joint replacement (27447, 27130, 23472), spine surgery (22551, 63047), and trauma fixation (27244, 27245). Each carries 90-day global period implications and distinct modifier requirements that determine whether a claim pays at full value or denies.
The table below covers the procedures our team codes most frequently for orthopedic practices. These are also the highest-value and highest-denial-risk codes in musculoskeletal billing. We cross-reference AAPC orthopedic coding standards on every surgical claim before submission.
| Procedure | CPT Code | Key Denial Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Total knee replacement, primary | 27447 | Missing LT/RT modifier; pain code used as primary ICD-10 instead of structural |
| Total hip replacement, primary | 27130 | Site-of-service authorization missing; global period E/M billed without modifier |
| Total shoulder replacement | 23472 | Revision vs. primary code mismatch with operative report |
| Arthroscopic rotator cuff repair | 29827 | Open code 23412 billed instead; arthroscopy documentation incomplete |
| Arthroscopic knee, meniscectomy | 29881 | Diagnostic vs. therapeutic code mismatch; modifier 59 missing for bilateral |
| Spinal fusion, anterior cervical | 22551 | Hardware add-on codes unbundled incorrectly; modifier 62 missing for co-surgeons |
| Lumbar laminectomy | 63047 | Global period violation; add-on 63048 billed without primary |
| ORIF femur fracture | 27244 / 27245 | Fracture code type mismatch; ICD-10 encounter suffix wrong |
| Fracture care, closed treatment with manipulation | 27752 / 27762 | Global period visits billed without modifier 24 or 79 |
| Hardware removal | 20680 | Billed separately when bundled into same-session revision arthroplasty |
| Joint injection, small joint | 20600 | Fluoroscopic guidance billed without documentation of imaging use |
| Office visit, established patient | 99213 / 99214 | Modifier 25 missing on procedure-same-day visits; global period violation |
We also code ICD-10 diagnoses with the correct structural codes for joint replacements: primary osteoarthritis of the knee (M17.11 right, M17.12 left), hip (M16.11, M16.12), and shoulder (M19.011, M19.012). Pain codes such as M25.561 cannot serve as the primary diagnosis on a joint replacement claim. Payers deny those automatically for lack of medical necessity. We get the ICD-10 hierarchy right the first time.
How We Manage Your Orthopedic Revenue
Cycle Management
Docscare manages every step from the surgical schedule to the deposit in your account: pre-authorization tracking, charge capture with orthopedic-specific coding review, global period monitoring, clean claim submission within 24 hours, and denial appeal within 72 hours of any rejection.
Pre-Authorization and Site-of-Service Verification
We verify authorization requirements for every surgical procedure before it gets scheduled. For joint replacements, we confirm site-of-service approvals against payer criteria and catch authorization issues before the surgery date.
Surgical Charge Capture and Coding Review
We read the operative report, not just the charge ticket. Our coders verify procedure type, laterality, implant capture, modifier logic, and ICD-10 structural code selection before the claim leaves.
Global Period Monitoring
We flag every surgical case with its global period end date. Any E/M visit billed during the 90-day window triggers review, and modifiers 24 or 79 are applied only when appropriate.
Clean Claim Submission Within 24 Hours
We submit scrubbed claims within 24 hours of receiving complete documentation. High-value surgical claims get the same fast turnaround as office visits.
Denial Management and Appeals Within 72 Hours
When a denial comes back, we categorize it by root cause and file a corrected claim or formal appeal within 72 hours while tracking every open denial to resolution.
What Docscare's 99% Clean Claim Rate Means for a High-Value Orthopedic Practice
Competitors in orthopedic billing claim 10 to 15% average revenue increases. Our clients average 30%. The difference comes from three places: fewer denied surgical claims on first submission, faster reimbursement cycles on high-value procedures, and recovered accounts receivable on aging claims that in-house billing teams stopped pursuing after the first denial.
In 2026, payer AI tools now identify modifier patterns across 24 months of claims history and audit retroactively. A single repeated modifier error on a high-volume procedure code like CPT 27447 does not just produce one denied claim. It builds audit exposure across every similar submission in the prior two years. We correct the pattern at source, not after the audit letter arrives.
Clean Claim Rate
Avg Revenue Increase
Claim Submission
Denial Turnaround
Orthopedic Practices We Serve
Docscare works with solo orthopedic surgeons, group practices, and multi-specialty groups that include orthopedics. We cover every subspecialty and practice setting.
We also handle billing for specialties that overlap with orthopedic care. Explore our other specialty billing pages:
Why Orthopedic Surgeons Choose Docscare Over Larger Billing Companies
Austin, Texas Headquarters
We are US-based, US-staffed, and US-accountable. Our team understands American payer systems, Texas Medicaid policies, and the compliance requirements that offshore billing companies miss on high-value surgical claims. You can reach a real person during your business hours.
AAPC-Certified Orthopedic Coders
Our coders hold AAPC certifications and train specifically on orthopedic surgical coding, global period rules, NCCI bundling logic, and payer-specific documentation requirements for joint replacement, arthroscopy, spine, and trauma procedures.
Operative Report Review on Every Surgical Claim
We read the operative report before we code the procedure. We do not code from charge tickets alone. Open vs. arthroscopic mismatches, implant documentation gaps, and laterality errors all show up in the operative report, not the charge ticket.
Global Period Tracking Built In
Every surgical case gets flagged with its global period end date on intake. Any E/M or procedure billed during the 90-day window triggers a modifier review before submission. Global period violations do not leave our system.
Transparent Monthly Reporting
You receive monthly reports on claim status, denial rates by category, collection totals, and days in A/R. You know exactly where your surgical revenue stands and where it is stuck every month.
10 to 14 Day Transition
Most practices complete the switch in 10 to 14 days. We handle credentialing verification, EHR integration, and payer setup without disrupting your surgical schedule or cash flow during the transition.
Not Sure Where Your Orthopedic Revenue Is Leaking?
We audit your global period compliance, modifier patterns, implant charge capture, and days in A/R,
then show you in dollars what fixing those gaps is worth.
No obligation. No hard sell.
Or call us at (214) 646-1606 to speak with our Credentialing specialist today.
Frequently Asked Questions About Orthopedic Billing
Services
If your question is not answered here, contact our billing team directly. Most questions
get a same-day response.
What makes orthopedic billing more complex than other specialties?
Orthopedic billing combines three elements that each carry high denial risk on their own. First: 90-day global surgical packages that require strict modifier compliance for every post-operative visit and procedure. Second: high-value implant and hardware charge capture with complex bundling rules. Third: mandatory laterality modifiers (RT and LT) on every unilateral procedure where a single missing modifier produces an automatic denial on a claim worth thousands of dollars.
The 2026 CMS Physician Fee Schedule Final Rule initiated a formal comment process specifically on global surgery payment accuracy, signaling heightened payer scrutiny on modifier compliance this cycle.
What is a global surgical period and why does it cause denials?
A 90-day global surgical period means CMS bundles all routine post-operative care into the surgical fee for 90 days after a major procedure. Any E/M visit billed during that window without modifier 24 (unrelated visit) or modifier 79 (unrelated procedure) comes back denied automatically. These violations account for 15 to 20% of orthopedic E/M denials.
We flag every surgical case with its global period end date on intake. Any billing during the 90-day window triggers a modifier review before the claim leaves our system.
How does implant charge capture work and what goes wrong?
Joint replacement, spine surgery, and trauma fixation procedures involve implants and hardware that require separate charge capture on top of the surgical CPT code. The most common NCCI edit failure in orthopedic billing is billing hardware removal (CPT 20680) separately when the surgeon performs hardware removal at the same operative session as a revision arthroplasty, because the revision code already bundles it.
We review every surgical claim for implant documentation and verify which hardware codes are separately billable versus bundled under the primary procedure before submission.
Why are laterality modifiers so important in orthopedic billing?
Modifiers RT (right) and LT (left) are mandatory for all unilateral orthopedic procedures. Missing or mismatched laterality is the single highest-volume cause of automatic orthopedic claim denials. A total knee replacement on the left knee coded without modifier LT comes back denied regardless of how accurate the rest of the claim is. We verify laterality on every orthopedic claim against the operative report before submission.
Which ICD-10 diagnosis codes should not be used as primary on joint replacement claims?
Pain codes such as M25.561 (pain in right knee) cannot serve as the primary diagnosis on a joint replacement claim. Payers deny those automatically for lack of medical necessity. The primary ICD-10 code must reflect the structural condition: M17.11 or M17.12 for primary osteoarthritis of the right or left knee, M16.11 or M16.12 for hip osteoarthritis, and M19.011 or M19.012 for shoulder osteoarthritis. Pain codes can appear as secondary diagnoses only.
How does Docscare's 99% clean claim rate benefit an orthopedic practice?
On orthopedic surgical claims worth $15,000 to $30,000 each, the difference between a 94% and 99% clean claim rate is not a rounding error. For a practice performing 20 joint replacements monthly, moving from 94% to 99% removes approximately 1 denied claim per month versus 6. At average surgical values, that gap represents $90,000 to $180,000 in claims requiring rework, resubmission, or appeal every month.
Does Docscare handle prior authorization for orthopedic surgeries?
Yes. We verify authorization requirements for every surgical procedure before scheduling and confirm site-of-service approvals for elective joint replacements against payer-specific clinical criteria. Most major commercial payers publish policies that deny inpatient stays for certain joint replacements when specific clinical factors are absent. We catch those during pre-authorization, not after the surgical claim comes back denied.
How long does switching to Docscare for orthopedic billing take?
Most practices complete the transition in 10 to 14 days. We handle credentialing verification, EHR integration, and payer setup. Your surgical schedule continues without disruption during the switch.
Get Your Free Orthopedic Revenue Cycle Audit
We review your global period compliance, modifier patterns, implant charge capture, and days in A/R, then show you in dollars exactly what fixing those gaps is worth in recovered surgical revenue. No obligation. Most audits complete in 48 hours.
Or call us at (214) 646-1606 to speak with our Credentialing specialist today.