Plastic Surgery CPT Codes

Plastic Surgery CPT Codes for Medical Billing: Complete Reference with CMS Reimbursement Rates

Complete reference for plastic surgery CPT codes, 2026 CMS reimbursement rates, common modifiers, and denial reasons for accurate billing.

Reviewed by MMBS Billing Review Team Last updated Jun 1, 2026 Published Apr 15, 2026
Plastic Surgery CPT Codes for Medical Billing: Complete Reference with CMS Reimbursement Rates
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CPT 19318 (reduction mammaplasty) requires documented symptoms and resection weight to avoid CO-50 denials

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Upper eyelid blepharoplasty (CPT 15822/15823) requires visual field test results to establish medical necessity

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Prior authorization is required before most plastic surgery procedures by commercial payers

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ICD-10 diagnosis codes must align with the specific CPT code to prove reconstructive intent

Overview

Why Plastic Surgery Plastic Surgery CPT Codes Teams Need a Better Workflow

This guide breaks the work into the coding, documentation, payer, and collections details that most directly shape reimbursement outcomes for Plastic Surgery teams.

Why Plastic Surgery Plastic Surgery CPT Codes Teams Need a Better Workflow
Challenges

Common Plastic Surgery Plastic Surgery CPT Codes Challenges We Solve

Every Plastic Surgery Plastic Surgery CPT Codes team deals with payer delays, coding nuance, and collection leakage.

CPT 19318 (reduction mammaplasty) requires documented symptoms and resection weight to avoid CO-50 denials

The workflow has to support this issue before claim submission, or it turns into avoidable rework after the payer responds.

Upper eyelid blepharoplasty (CPT 15822/15823) requires visual field test results to establish medical necessity

When this area is inconsistent, denial rate, payment timing, and staff follow-up effort all get worse at the same time.

Prior authorization is required before most plastic surgery procedures by commercial payers

Tight documentation and coding controls here usually improve both reimbursement accuracy and operational speed.

ICD-10 diagnosis codes must align with the specific CPT code to prove reconstructive intent

This is one of the first places revenue leakage shows up when specialty billing habits are not standardized.

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Guide

The Complete Guide to Plastic Surgery Plastic Surgery CPT Codes

Quick answer

Complete reference for plastic surgery CPT codes, 2026 CMS reimbursement rates, common modifiers, and denial reasons for accurate billing.

Plastic surgery billing depends on precise CPT code selection to distinguish cosmetic procedures from those with documented medical necessity. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), the federal agency that administers Medicare and Medicaid reimbursement policy, maintains distinct coverage rules for reconstructive versus elective cosmetic procedures. Coding errors in this specialty carry a high denial risk because payers scrutinize procedure-to-diagnosis alignment on nearly every claim. MMBS achieves a 98.2% clean claim rate for plastic surgery clients by applying the correct CPT codes, matching ICD-10 diagnoses that establish medical necessity, and attaching required modifiers before submission.

Core Plastic Surgery CPT Codes and What They Cover

Plastic surgery spans a wide range of procedures, from flap repairs and breast reconstruction to eyelid correction and scar revision. Each CPT code published by the American Medical Association (AMA) describes a specific surgical technique, site, and extent of work. Using a code that does not match operative report documentation is the leading cause of CO-4 (inconsistent modifier) and CO-16 (missing information) denials in this specialty.

CPT 15734: Muscle, Myocutaneous, or Fasciocutaneous Flap, Trunk

CPT 15734 covers muscle or myocutaneous flap reconstruction of the trunk. CMS reimburses this procedure at approximately $847 under the 2026 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule (MPFS). Medical necessity requires documentation of wound coverage after trauma, oncologic resection, or pressure ulcer treatment. ICD-10 code L89.313 (stage III pressure ulcer of right buttock) commonly supports this claim. Modifier 51 applies when performed with another major procedure on the same date.

CPT 15757: Free Skin Graft, Full Thickness

CPT 15757 describes a free full-thickness skin graft taken from a donor site and applied to a recipient wound. The 2026 CMS rate is approximately $412. Payers require operative report documentation of both the donor and recipient sites. Without separate documentation of donor site preparation, CO-4 denials citing inadequate documentation are common. Modifier 58 applies when this procedure follows a staged surgical plan.

CPT 19318: Reduction Mammaplasty

CPT 19318 covers reduction mammaplasty. CMS reimburses this at approximately $1,247 for covered cases. Coverage hinges on documented symptoms, including chronic back pain, skin maceration, or postural deformity, paired with ICD-10 code N62 (hypertrophy of breast). Most commercial payers require a minimum resection weight threshold, typically 500 grams per side, documented in the operative report. Missing that detail is the primary driver of CO-50 (non-covered service) denials.

CPT 19325: Breast Augmentation with Implant

CPT 19325 covers breast augmentation with a prosthesis. The 2026 CMS rate is approximately $1,089 for covered indications such as breast reconstruction following mastectomy. ICD-10 code Z90.11 (acquired absence of left breast and nipple) supports coverage. Purely elective cosmetic augmentation is not a Medicare benefit, and claims submitted without a covered diagnosis will receive CO-50 denials. Prior authorization is required by most commercial payers before surgery.

CPT 15822: Blepharoplasty, Upper Eyelid

CPT 15822 covers upper eyelid blepharoplasty. CMS reimbursement is approximately $512. Coverage requires documented visual field impairment caused by dermatochalasis. ICD-10 code H02.834 (dermatochalasis of upper left eyelid) paired with visual field test results supports the claim. Without attached functional test data, payers deny these claims under CO-50 as cosmetic. Modifier 50 applies for bilateral procedures performed on the same date.

CPT 15823: Blepharoplasty, Upper Eyelid with Excessive Skin Weighing Down Lid

CPT 15823 applies when excess skin in the upper eyelid causes functional impairment beyond standard dermatochalasis. The 2026 CMS rate is approximately $598. This code is distinguished from 15822 by a more severe degree of ptosis and heavier skin redundancy. Visual field studies showing a reduction of 30% or more in the superior field support medical necessity. Modifier 25 applies if a separate, significant evaluation and management visit occurs on the same day.

Modifier Strategy for Plastic Surgery

Plastic surgery claims require careful modifier attachment. Modifier 51 indicates multiple procedures performed during one session, triggering the multiple procedure payment reduction policy at 50% for secondary procedures. Modifier 59 establishes a distinct procedural service when two codes might otherwise appear to be duplicates. Modifier 22 supports an increased procedural service when operative complexity significantly exceeds the standard procedure, requiring detailed documentation in the operative report. MMBS billing specialists review every plastic surgery claim for modifier accuracy before submission to avoid CO-4 denials.

Prior Authorization Requirements

Prior authorization (PA) is required by most commercial payers for procedures including reduction mammaplasty (CPT 19318), blepharoplasty (CPT 15822, 15823), and breast augmentation for reconstructive indications (CPT 19325). Submitting a claim without an approved PA number is the most preventable cause of CO-29 (the time limit for filing has expired) and CO-50 denials in plastic surgery. MMBS initiates PA requests at scheduling to prevent retroactive denials.

FAQ

What CPT codes are most frequently denied in plastic surgery billing?

CPT 19318 (reduction mammaplasty) and CPT 15822 (upper eyelid blepharoplasty) generate the most denials in plastic surgery billing. Payers deny these claims under CARC CO-50 when ICD-10 codes fail to establish medical necessity or when required supporting documentation, such as visual field studies or resection weight documentation, is missing from the submitted claim.

How does plastic surgery billing distinguish cosmetic from reconstructive procedures?

Plastic surgery billing distinguishes cosmetic from reconstructive procedures through ICD-10 code selection and supporting documentation. A reconstructive procedure uses ICD-10 codes that reflect an underlying medical condition, such as N62 for breast hypertrophy or H02.834 for dermatochalasis. A cosmetic procedure lacks a covered diagnosis. CMS policy, outlined in the Medicare Benefit Policy Manual Chapter 16, excludes cosmetic procedures from Medicare coverage unless they correct a deformity caused by disease, trauma, or surgery.

When should modifier 50 be applied to plastic surgery CPT codes?

Modifier 50 applies to plastic surgery CPT codes when a bilateral procedure is performed on the same date of service. For example, bilateral upper eyelid blepharoplasty (CPT 15822) reported with modifier 50 instructs payers to reimburse both sides at the standard bilateral payment rate. The operative report must clearly document that work was performed bilaterally. Failing to apply modifier 50 results in reimbursement for only one side, reducing payment by approximately 50%.

What documentation is required to support CPT 19318 for reduction mammaplasty?

CPT 19318 requires documentation of chronic symptoms including back pain, shoulder grooving from bra straps, intertrigo, and postural deformity in the medical record. Most payers also require the operative report to document the actual tissue weight removed per side, typically 500 grams or more. ICD-10 code N62 (hypertrophy of breast) must appear on the claim. Without these elements, payers issue CO-50 denials classifying the procedure as cosmetic rather than medically necessary.

Common Plastic Surgery CPT Codes and 2026 CMS Reimbursement Rates

CPT Code Description 2026 CMS Rate
15734 Muscle/myocutaneous flap, trunk $847
15757 Free full-thickness skin graft $412
19318 Reduction mammaplasty $1,247
19325 Breast augmentation with implant $1,089
15822 Blepharoplasty, upper eyelid $512
15823 Blepharoplasty, upper eyelid with excessive skin $598

Official sources

Use these checks with payer policy, coding documentation, and remittance data before changing claim workflows.

Common Questions

Plastic Surgery Plastic Surgery CPT Codes FAQ

Answers to the questions practice owners ask most often.

CPT 19318 (reduction mammaplasty) and CPT 15822 (upper eyelid blepharoplasty) generate the most denials in plastic surgery billing. Payers deny these claims under CARC CO-50 when ICD-10 codes fail to establish medical necessity or when required supporting documentation, such as visual field studies or resection weight documentation, is missing from the submitted claim.

Plastic surgery billing distinguishes cosmetic from reconstructive procedures through ICD-10 code selection and supporting documentation. A reconstructive procedure uses ICD-10 codes that reflect an underlying medical condition, such as N62 for breast hypertrophy or H02.834 for dermatochalasis. A cosmetic procedure lacks a covered diagnosis. CMS policy, outlined in the Medicare Benefit Policy Manual Chapter 16, excludes cosmetic procedures from Medicare coverage unless they correct a deformity caused by disease, trauma, or surgery.

Modifier 50 applies to plastic surgery CPT codes when a bilateral procedure is performed on the same date of service. For example, bilateral upper eyelid blepharoplasty (CPT 15822) reported with modifier 50 instructs payers to reimburse both sides at the standard bilateral payment rate. The operative report must clearly document that work was performed bilaterally. Failing to apply modifier 50 results in reimbursement for only one side, reducing payment by approximately 50%.

CPT 19318 requires documentation of chronic symptoms including back pain, shoulder grooving from bra straps, intertrigo, and postural deformity in the medical record. Most payers also require the operative report to document the actual tissue weight removed per side, typically 500 grams or more. ICD-10 code N62 (hypertrophy of breast) must appear on the claim. Without these elements, payers issue CO-50 denials classifying the procedure as cosmetic rather than medically necessary.

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