Chiropractic CPT Reference

Chiropractic CPT Codes and Reimbursement Rates

Chiropractic CPT codes for CMT 98940-98942, extraspinal manipulation 98943, therapeutic exercise 97110, manual therapy 97140, and Medicare billing rules.

Reviewed by MMBS Billing Review Team Last updated Jun 1, 2026 Published Apr 20, 2026
Chiropractic CPT Codes and Reimbursement Rates
01

98940, 98941, and 98942 depend entirely on the number of spinal regions documented

02

Medicare Part B covers spinal manipulation, but not extraspinal manipulation for chiropractors

03

97110 and 97140 need timed documentation under the eight-minute rule

04

The AT modifier drives whether Medicare pays or denies a chiropractic manipulation claim

Overview

Why Chiropractic 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 Chiropractic teams.

Why Chiropractic CPT Codes Teams Need a Better Workflow
Challenges

Common Chiropractic CPT Codes Challenges We Solve

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

98940, 98941, and 98942 depend entirely on the number of spinal regions documented

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

Medicare Part B covers spinal manipulation, but not extraspinal manipulation for chiropractors

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

97110 and 97140 need timed documentation under the eight-minute rule

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

The AT modifier drives whether Medicare pays or denies a chiropractic manipulation claim

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 Chiropractic CPT Codes

Quick answer

Chiropractic CPT codes for CMT 98940-98942, extraspinal manipulation 98943, therapeutic exercise 97110, manual therapy 97140, and Medicare billing rules.

Chiropractic CPT Code Framework

Chiropractic billing depends on a compact CPT code set, but the payer rules attached to those codes are more restrictive than most outpatient specialties. Chiropractic manipulative treatment uses CPT code 98940 for one to two spinal regions, 98941 for three to four spinal regions, and 98942 for all five spinal regions. Medicare Part B covers these spinal manipulation codes when documentation supports active treatment of a diagnosed subluxation. Most commercial payers follow the same structure, but each payer applies its own visit limits, prior authorization thresholds, and bundling edits.

Revenue in chiropractic practices comes from a mix of spinal manipulation, adjunctive therapies, examinations, and workers compensation or personal injury claims. That means code selection has to match not only the service performed, but also the rules of the specific payer. A claim can be technically correct in CPT terms and still deny if the payer does not cover that therapy for chiropractors, if the AT modifier is missing, or if the visit count has been exhausted. Accurate CPT use protects both reimbursement and compliance.

Chiropractic Manipulative Treatment Codes 98940 Through 98942

CPT code 98940 reimburses about $28 to $38 for one to two spinal regions. CPT code 98941 reimburses about $32 to $45 for three to four spinal regions. CPT code 98942 reimburses about $38 to $52 for all five spinal regions. The region count must come directly from the treatment note. Cervical, thoracic, lumbar, sacral, and pelvic are the recognized spinal regions. If the chiropractor documents only three regions treated, billing 98942 overstates the work and creates audit risk. If five regions were treated and only 98940 is billed, the practice loses revenue on every visit.

Medicare covers only manual manipulation of the spine to correct subluxation, so 98940 through 98942 are the core chiropractic codes for Medicare beneficiaries. Use diagnosis coding and treatment documentation that show why active treatment is medically necessary. Payers reviewing these claims look for region-specific findings, functional limitations, and progress toward measurable goals.

Extraspinal Manipulation and Therapy Codes

CPT code 98943 covers extraspinal chiropractic manipulative treatment for regions such as the shoulder, elbow, wrist, hip, knee, ankle, head, or temporomandibular joint. Commercial payers sometimes reimburse 98943 at roughly $18 to $32, but Medicare does not cover it for chiropractors. Therapeutic exercise 97110 typically reimburses about $28 to $40 per timed unit, and manual therapy 97140 often falls in the $26 to $38 range per unit. Mechanical traction 97012 and electrical stimulation codes vary widely by payer, and many plans bundle or exclude them when billed by chiropractors.

These codes create revenue only when documentation supports a distinct, separately billable service. If the practice bills 97140 on the same body region and in the same time span as a spinal manipulation code, some payers will bundle the line or deny it as inclusive. To preserve payment, the note should identify the body region, the hands-on technique, the time spent, and the therapeutic purpose of the service.

Initial Evaluation and Re-Evaluation Codes

Chiropractors may use office E/M codes such as 99202 through 99204 for initial evaluations and 99212 through 99214 for medically necessary follow-up visits when the payer allows them. Medicare generally does not pay chiropractors for office E/M services unless the chiropractor has a separate provider type or the payer contract specifically permits it. Commercial plans are more variable. Some plans reimburse the initial examination but not routine re-evaluations. Others require the evaluation to be billed only on the first visit or at a documented change in condition.

The evaluation note should include history, examination findings, assessment, treatment plan, and measurable objectives. When E/M is billed with chiropractic manipulation, the payer must see that the evaluation work goes beyond the pre-adjustment assessment already built into the treatment visit.

Modifier and Unit Rules That Affect Reimbursement

The AT modifier is the most important chiropractic modifier because Medicare uses it to distinguish active treatment from maintenance care. If the chiropractor is correcting a subluxation and the patient is still improving functionally, append AT to 98940, 98941, or 98942. If the patient is in maintenance care, Medicare denies the claim. Modifier 25 may apply when a significant and separately identifiable E/M service is performed on the same day as manipulation. Modifier 59 or XS may be needed for therapy codes when payer edits would otherwise bundle them, but only when documentation supports a distinct service.

Timed therapy codes such as 97110 and 97140 follow the eight-minute rule. One unit generally requires at least eight minutes of documented service. Two units usually require at least twenty-three minutes. Missing time documentation is one of the fastest ways to lose otherwise valid charges.

How MMBS Uses Chiropractic Code Strategy

MMBS maintains a 98.2% clean claim rate across all specialties by matching CPT selection to payer rules, modifier rules, and visit-limit logic before claim submission. For chiropractic practices, that means tracking the spinal regions documented on each visit, validating AT modifier use under Medicare Part B, and identifying when adjunctive therapies are likely to deny so the practice can collect appropriately or adjust the treatment workflow. Accurate coding is not just a reimbursement issue. It is the foundation of a cleaner denial rate, faster remittance posting through ERA files, and fewer surprises when EOBs arrive.

Common Chiropractic CPT Codes

CPT Code Description Typical Reimbursement
98940 Chiropractic manipulative treatment, 1 to 2 spinal regions $28 - $38
98941 Chiropractic manipulative treatment, 3 to 4 spinal regions $32 - $45
98942 Chiropractic manipulative treatment, 5 spinal regions $38 - $52
98943 Extraspinal chiropractic manipulative treatment $18 - $32
97110 Therapeutic exercise, per 15 minutes $28 - $40
97140 Manual therapy, per 15 minutes $26 - $38

Official sources

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

Common Questions

Chiropractic CPT Codes FAQ

Answers to the questions practice owners ask most often.

Count the spinal regions treated and documented in the note. Use 98940 for one to two regions, 98941 for three to four regions, and 98942 for all five spinal regions. The record should name the regions clearly so the CPT code matches the actual treatment.

No. Medicare covers manual manipulation of the spine to correct subluxation, but it does not cover extraspinal chiropractic manipulation. Some commercial payers reimburse 98943, but Medicare generally denies it for chiropractors.

Yes, when the payer contract allows it and the documentation supports a separate timed service. The note should identify the body region, the technique used, the time spent, and the therapeutic purpose so the claim can survive bundling edits and medical necessity review.

The AT modifier tells Medicare that the chiropractic manipulation is active treatment rather than maintenance care. Without it, or when the documentation does not support it, Medicare denies the claim even if the CPT code itself is correct.

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