Medical Coding

Orthopedic CPT Codes: Complete Guide for Accurate Medical Billing

Orthopedic billing demands precise CPT code selection across joint replacements, arthroscopic procedures, fractures, and spinal surgery — each with its own modifier rules, NCCI edits, and payer-specific requirements. This guide covers everything your billing team needs to code orthopedic claims accurately.

By Shawn Davis Reviewed by Kyle Wilson March 25, 2026 10 min read

Orthopedic billing is among the most technically demanding areas of medical coding. Procedures range from a brief office visit to a multi-hour spinal fusion, and the CPT code set for musculoskeletal services is highly granular — the right code often depends on laterality, surgical approach, joint compartment, implant type, and whether a prior procedure was performed. A single code selection error on a $50,000 total joint replacement can trigger a claim denial, an underpayment of thousands of dollars, or a compliance flag. This guide covers the orthopedic CPT code set in depth, from E/M visits to complex reconstructive surgery, with the billing nuances your team needs to get claims right the first time.

Key takeaways

  • Orthopedic CPT codes span six CPT sections — primarily Surgery (10004–69990) and E/M (99202–99499) — with hundreds of codes specific to the musculoskeletal system.
  • E/M code selection for orthopedic visits shifted in 2021 to MDM or total time — practices still using the old bullet-point method are miscoding.
  • High-cost procedures (total hip 27130, total knee 27447) are common audit targets; documentation must match the complexity and approach billed.
  • Modifiers 59, LT/RT, 51, 62, and 80 are heavily used in orthopedic surgery billing and are frequently misapplied.
  • Arthroscopic-to-open conversion, staged procedures, and bilateral surgery require specific coding rules that differ by payer.

What Are Orthopedic CPT Codes?

Orthopedic CPT codes are the subset of Current Procedural Terminology codes used to report procedures, evaluations, and treatments involving the musculoskeletal system — bones, joints, ligaments, tendons, cartilage, and associated soft tissues. They are part of the AMA's CPT code set, which is updated annually each January and used by all U.S. payers for reimbursement.

Musculoskeletal procedures fall primarily within the CPT Surgery section (codes 20000–29999), with additional orthopedic-relevant codes in Evaluation & Management (99202–99499), Radiology (70010–79999), and Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation (97000–97799). Understanding how these sections interact — and when to bill codes from each on the same claim — is fundamental to accurate orthopedic billing.

For a foundational understanding of how CPT is structured and maintained, see our complete CPT guide.

E/M Codes for Orthopedic Visits

Every orthopedic practice bills Evaluation and Management codes for office consultations, follow-up visits, and preoperative assessments. Since the 2021 AMA E/M overhaul, code selection is based on Medical Decision-Making (MDM) or total time — not the number of history or exam elements documented.

New Patient Office Visit Codes (99202–99205)

CodeMDM LevelTimeTypical Orthopedic Scenario
99202Straightforward15–29 minNew patient with simple wrist sprain, single problem, minimal workup
99203Low30–44 minNew patient with knee pain, X-ray ordered, prescription medication management
99204Moderate45–59 minNew patient with complex rotator cuff tear, multiple tests reviewed, surgery discussed
99205High60–74 minNew patient with severe multi-joint arthritis requiring complex management decision

Established Patient Office Visit Codes (99211–99215)

CodeMDM LevelTimeTypical Orthopedic Scenario
99211N/A (no MDM)MinimalCast check or suture removal by clinical staff (no physician required)
99212Straightforward10–19 minPost-op follow-up, healing fracture, single stable problem
99213Low20–29 minEstablished patient with chronic low back pain, stable, prescription renewal
99214Moderate30–39 minEstablished patient with worsening knee OA, injection performed, new imaging reviewed
99215High40–54 minEstablished patient with post-op complication requiring complex decision-making

Orthopedic practices frequently underbill E/M codes — defaulting to 99213 for visits that clearly qualify as 99214 based on the complexity of musculoskeletal management. A moderate-level MDM determination — which supports 99214 — typically involves reviewing independent interpretation of imaging, prescribing or adjusting controlled medications, or managing a condition with risk of complications such as post-surgical status.

Orthopedic Surgical CPT Codes by Procedure Type

The following tables organize the most frequently billed orthopedic surgical CPT codes by anatomical area and procedure type. All codes are from the AMA CPT musculoskeletal surgery section (20000–29999).

Joint Replacement (Arthroplasty)

CPT CodeProcedureKey Billing Notes
27130Total hip arthroplasty (THA)Use modifier LT or RT; revision uses 27134–27138 series; add 27236 if separate femoral head fixation
27134Revision THA, both componentsRequires documentation of prior implant; significantly higher RVU than primary 27130
27137Revision THA, acetabular component onlyDistinguish from 27138 (femoral component only) — common undercoding error
27447Total knee arthroplasty (TKA)Most commonly audited orthopedic surgical code; bilateral same-day requires modifier 50 or separate line items per payer preference
27446Arthroplasty, knee, medial or lateral compartmentUnicompartmental (partial) knee replacement — do not confuse with 27447
23472Arthroplasty, glenohumeral joint (total shoulder)Distinguish from 23470 (hemiarthroplasty, humeral head) and 23473/23474 (revision)
24360Arthroplasty, elbow, with implantTotal elbow replacement; less common but high-value — verify implant documentation

Arthroscopic Procedures

CPT CodeProcedureKey Billing Notes
29881Knee arthroscopy with meniscectomy (medial or lateral)If both menisci addressed, bill 29880; NCCI edits prohibit billing 29877 with 29881
29880Knee arthroscopy with meniscectomy, medial AND lateralSingle code covers both; do not bill 29881 twice with modifier 59
29870Knee arthroscopy, diagnostic onlyRarely reimbursed standalone — if treatment was performed, use the appropriate therapeutic code instead
29827Shoulder arthroscopy with rotator cuff repairHigh-volume rotator cuff code; distinguish from 29823 (extensive debridement) and 23412 (open repair)
29806Shoulder arthroscopy with capsulorrhaphyLabral/capsular repair for instability; SLAP repairs use 29807
29822Shoulder arthroscopy with debridement, limitedLower RVU than 29823; verify documentation supports extent of debridement billed
29888Arthroscopically aided ACL repair/augmentationArthroscopic ACL reconstruction; separately reportable graft harvest may add additional codes
29874Knee arthroscopy with removal of loose bodyBundling edits apply — verify CCI edits if billing with additional arthroscopic procedures

Fracture Treatment

CPT CodeProcedureKey Billing Notes
25600Closed treatment, distal radial fracture, without manipulationIf manipulation required, use 25600; 25605 adds manipulation; specify Colles vs. other distal radius
25605Closed treatment, distal radial fracture, with manipulationInclude imaging documentation; anesthesia type (local vs. block vs. sedation) affects billing
25607Open treatment, distal radial fracture, with internal fixationPercutaneous pinning of distal radius; higher complexity — must match operative report
27506Open treatment, femoral shaft fracture, with internal fixationIntramedullary nail fixation of femur; add 27507 for medullary nail with interlocking screws
27244Treatment, intertrochanteric fracture, with internal fixationHip fracture ORIF; distinguish from 27245 (intramedullary nail) — code depends on device used
29505Application of long leg splintE/M must be separately reportable (modifier 25) if billed same-day as E/M visit

Spinal Surgery

CPT CodeProcedureKey Billing Notes
22612Lumbar arthrodesis (spinal fusion), posterior technique, single levelAdd-on code 22614 for each additional level; frequently paired with 63047 (laminectomy)
22630Lumbar arthrodesis, posterior interbody technique (PLIF/TLIF), single levelDistinguish from 22612 (posterior lateral fusion) — approach must match operative report
63047Laminectomy with foraminotomy and facetectomy, single lumbar levelAdd-on 63048 for each additional level; frequently denied without imaging supporting stenosis
22551Anterior cervical discectomy and fusion (ACDF), single levelAdd 22552 for each additional cervical level; separately bill bone graft if applicable
62322Lumbar epidural steroid injection, interlaminar approachRequires fluoroscopy confirmation; bill separately with 77003 (fluoroscopic guidance) per payer policy

Verimedix tip: Spinal surgery coding is one of the highest-risk areas for orthopedic billing compliance. Always map the operative note's approach description (posterior, anterolateral, transforaminal, etc.) to the specific CPT code before submitting. Fusion code mismatches with operative reports are the most common finding in orthopedic RAC audits.

Critical Orthopedic Billing Modifiers

Modifiers in orthopedic billing are not optional — they provide payers with the context needed to process complex, multi-procedure claims correctly. Using the wrong modifier (or omitting one) is a direct path to denial or payment reduction.

ModifierMeaningOrthopedic Context
LT / RTLeft side / Right sideRequired for all unilateral joint procedures (knee, hip, shoulder). Bilateral same-day requires modifier 50 OR two line items per payer rules.
50Bilateral procedureBilateral TKA same-day session; some payers require two separate line items with LT and RT instead
51Multiple proceduresAppended to the second and subsequent procedures in a multi-procedure surgery; primary (highest RVU) procedure is billed without 51
59Distinct procedural serviceUsed to override NCCI edits when two codes are performed on different anatomical sites or in distinct encounters — not a blanket bypass modifier
62Two surgeonsCo-surgery (e.g., two orthopedic surgeons performing different aspects of a complex spinal procedure); each surgeon bills with modifier 62 at 62.5% of allowable
80 / 82Assistant surgeon / Assistant surgeon when qualified resident not availableAssistant at surgery; typically reimbursed at 16–20% of primary surgeon's allowable
22Increased procedural servicesUsed when documented unusual procedural complexity (e.g., revision surgery with severe scar tissue, morbid obesity) warrants additional reimbursement; requires operative note justification
25Significant, separately identifiable E/M service, same day as procedureRequired when billing an office E/M on the same day as an injection or minor procedure; diagnosis should differ or clearly be separate from the procedure indication

Verimedix tip: Modifier 59 is the most abused modifier in orthopedic billing — and the most scrutinized by CMS. Use it only when two procedures genuinely qualify as distinct: different anatomical sites, different sessions, or different encounters. The XS, XE, XP, and XU modifiers (subset of 59) provide more specificity and are preferred by some MACs. When in doubt, consult the NCCI Policy Manual before appending modifier 59.

Common Orthopedic Coding Errors

Orthopedic coding errors follow predictable patterns. Understanding these patterns enables proactive audit prevention:

  • Wrong arthroscopy code for the procedure performed: Billing 29827 (rotator cuff repair) when only debridement (29823) was performed — or billing both on the same claim without CCI edit review.
  • Conversion from arthroscopic to open not coded correctly: When a planned arthroscopic procedure is converted to open, the open code should be billed — but if significant arthroscopic work was performed before conversion, a modifier may be required.
  • Missing laterality modifier: Submitting 27447 without LT or RT on bilateral procedures causes payment confusion and potential duplicate billing flags.
  • Incorrect fracture code: Choosing 25600 (without manipulation) when the operative note documents manipulation — this is both an undercoding error and a documentation mismatch.
  • Unbundling spinal procedures: Billing add-on codes (22614, 63048) without the primary code they are required to accompany.
  • Missing pre-op imaging documentation for medical necessity: Payers require imaging reports (X-ray, MRI) supporting the indication for joint replacement or arthroscopic surgery.

Orthopedic CPT Coding Best Practices

Orthopedic practices that maintain consistently high clean-claim rates follow a disciplined coding process:

  1. Code from the operative note, not the schedule: Pre-operative CPT codes entered during scheduling must be verified and updated after surgery if the procedure changed.
  2. Verify NCCI edits before every multi-procedure claim: The CMS NCCI edit tables identify code pairs that cannot be billed together on the same date of service for the same patient without an appropriate modifier.
  3. Assign the global surgery package correctly: Most orthopedic procedures carry a 90-day global period. Services within the global period (routine follow-up visits, cast changes) cannot be separately billed; services for unrelated problems require modifier 24.
  4. Track payer-specific bilateral surgery policies: Medicare requires bilateral codes on two separate line items with LT and RT; some commercial payers accept modifier 50 on a single line item — confirm before submitting.
  5. Document implant brand and lot numbers: Required for joint replacement and fracture fixation claims; increasingly required for prior authorization as well.

How Verimedix Helps with Orthopedic CPT Coding

Orthopedic billing requires coders with specialty-specific credentials and direct familiarity with musculoskeletal procedures. Verimedix's orthopedic billing team includes Certified Orthopedic Coders (COC) and CPC-certified professionals who review operative reports, assign procedure codes, apply modifiers, and manage the full claim lifecycle through to payment.

  • Operative note review and CPT code assignment for all orthopedic surgical specialties including joint replacement, arthroscopy, spine, trauma, and sports medicine
  • E/M code audit and provider education on the 2021 MDM-based documentation framework
  • NCCI edit management and modifier application — LT/RT, 50, 51, 59, 62, 80
  • Payer-specific bilateral surgery policy management to avoid denial by payer
  • Global surgery package tracking and modifier 24/25/57 compliance
  • Prior authorization coordination for high-cost procedures including total joint replacement and spinal fusion
  • Denial management and appeals for orthopedic coding-related denials with clinical documentation support

Explore our medical coding services or visit our orthopedic specialty hub to learn how Verimedix serves orthopedic practices. Contact us for a complimentary coding review.

Frequently asked questions

The highest-volume orthopedic CPT codes include 99213–99215 (established patient E/M), 99203–99204 (new patient E/M), 27447 (total knee arthroplasty), 27130 (total hip arthroplasty), 29881 (knee arthroscopy with meniscectomy), 29827 (shoulder arthroscopy with rotator cuff repair), and 22612 (lumbar spinal fusion, single level).

99202 covers a new patient visit with straightforward medical decision-making or 15–29 minutes. 99203 covers low MDM or 30–44 minutes — appropriate for new orthopedic patients with a single musculoskeletal problem requiring imaging or medication. 99204 covers moderate MDM or 45–59 minutes — appropriate for complex cases involving multiple imaging studies, surgical planning, or prescription management.

For bilateral same-day joint procedures, Medicare requires two separate line items — one with modifier LT and one with modifier RT. Some commercial payers accept modifier 50 on a single line item. Always verify the payer's bilateral surgery policy before submitting, as incorrect modifier selection is a common denial trigger for bilateral TKA and THA claims.

CPT 27447 describes total knee arthroplasty — replacement of the entire knee joint with prosthetic implants. It is one of the most frequently audited orthopedic surgical codes. Documentation must include the operative report specifying implant type, laterality, prior imaging supporting the indication, and anesthesia records.

Most major orthopedic procedures carry a 90-day global surgery period. Routine post-operative follow-up visits within those 90 days are included in the surgical fee and cannot be billed separately. Services for unrelated problems during the global period require modifier 24 on the E/M code. Services that are not part of normal post-op care — such as treatment of a complication — require modifier 78 or 79.

Orthopedic procedures are among the highest-reimbursed in healthcare — a total knee replacement can be reimbursed at $20,000–$30,000 or more depending on the facility setting and payer. A single coding error (wrong laterality, incorrect approach code, missing prior authorization) can result in full claim denial or significant payment reduction. Because of the high dollar amounts, orthopedic claims are also priority audit targets for Medicare RACs and commercial payer SIU units.

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