General Surgery Billing Experts

General Surgery Medical Billing Services

General surgery billing encompasses hundreds of procedures with varying global periods, bundling rules, and modifier requirements.

General Surgery Medical Billing Services
95%

First-Pass Clean Claim Rate

$34K

Avg. Monthly Revenue Recovered

21 Days

Average Days to Payment

3.4%

Client Denial Rate

Overview

Broad-Spectrum Surgical Billing for Every Procedure in Your Practice

General surgery billing encompasses hundreds of procedures with varying global periods, bundling rules, and modifier requirements. From appendectomies (44950-44960) to hernia repairs (49491-49659) and cholecystectomies (47562-47564), each procedure family has distinct coding nuances. Laparoscopic versus open approach selection affects the code, and conversion from laparoscopic to open during a procedure requires specific documentation and modifier usage.

Multiple procedure discounting applies when several surgeries are performed during the same operative session. The highest-valued procedure is paid at 100%, while subsequent procedures are reduced by 50%. Surgeons must ensure that each additional procedure is documented as medically necessary and not merely a component of the primary surgery.

Broad-Spectrum Surgical Billing for Every Procedure in Your Practice
Challenges

Common General Surgery billing Challenges We Solve

Every General Surgery billing team deals with payer delays, coding nuance, and collection leakage. We tighten those weak points before they turn into write-offs.

Open vs. Laparoscopic Code Selection

Most general surgery procedures have separate CPT codes for open and laparoscopic approaches, with significant reimbursement differences. When a laparoscopic procedure converts to open, the coding rules change entirely. Using the wrong approach code is a common error that affects both reimbursement and audit risk.

Global Surgical Period Management

Major general surgery procedures carry 90-day global periods that include all routine post-operative care. Minor procedures have 10-day globals. Identifying which post-operative services are included in the global package versus which qualify for separate billing (complications, unrelated conditions) requires constant tracking.

Multi-Procedure Sessions and Modifier Sequencing

General surgeons frequently perform multiple procedures in a single session, such as hernia repair with lysis of adhesions. Correct modifier application (51, 59, XS), code sequencing by RVU value, and documentation of surgical necessity for each procedure directly impact reimbursement.

Modifier 22 Documentation for Complex Cases

Complex surgical cases involving extensive adhesions, morbid obesity, or unusual anatomy justify modifier 22 for increased procedural services. However, payers deny modifier 22 claims at high rates without compelling operative note documentation that quantifies the additional work performed.

Services

Complete General Surgery billing Services

Support spans the full revenue cycle, from front-end verification to denial recovery and reporting.

Cholecystectomy and appendectomy coding (47562-47564, 44950-44960)

Hernia repair billing across all types (49491-49659)

Breast surgery coding (19301-19307) with oncoplastic modifiers

Laparoscopic-to-open conversion billing

Global period tracking and post-operative billing management

Modifier 22 documentation review and submission

Coverage

Serving General Surgery billing Teams Nationwide

We support independent practices, multisite groups, and growing provider organizations with flexible workflows.

Independent physician groups

Multi-location practices

Private equity backed platforms

Hospital-owned outpatient groups

Guide

The Complete Guide to General Surgery billing

General Surgery Medical Billing Overview

Your surgical team works hard. You are in the OR at 6 a.m., navigating complex cases, making split-second decisions that change patients’ lives. The last thing you should have to worry about is whether your billing team is capturing everything your practice has earned. General surgery billing is genuinely complicated, and when it is not done right, your practice pays the price. Global surgery periods, assistant surgeon billing, modifier requirements, and payer-specific coverage rules for laparoscopic versus open procedures create a billing environment where small errors compound into significant revenue loss over time. Whether your practice focuses on laparoscopy, colorectal surgery, hernia repair, or trauma cases, the billing challenge is the same: your clinical work deserves accurate, complete reimbursement.

Medicare, Medicaid, BCBS, Aetna, and Cigna all approach surgical billing with their own fee schedules, modifier rules, and global period definitions. Medicare’s global surgery package bundles preoperative visits, the procedure itself, and postoperative care into a single payment for 10-day or 90-day global periods depending on the procedure. Separate billing for services included in the global package results in overpayment recovery requests that can arrive months after the original claim was paid. Knowing what is in the global package and what is legitimately billable outside it is one of the most important skills in general surgery billing, and your team needs to get it right every time.

Common Billing Challenges in General Surgery

  • Global period billing errors: Billing office visits during a 90-day global period without Modifier 24 (unrelated E/M) or Modifier 79 (unrelated procedure) results in bundled claim reduction. Many practices lose 8-15% of postoperative visit revenue to global period bundling that could be legitimately billed with correct modifier application.
  • Assistant surgeon reimbursement gaps: Not all payers cover assistant surgeon fees. UnitedHealthcare and some BCBS plans require documentation that an assistant was medically necessary, not just preferred. Without pre-claim verification and modifier AS or 80 applied correctly, assistant surgeon claims are routinely denied outright.
  • Laparoscopic versus open procedure coding disputes: When a laparoscopic procedure is converted to open, both the attempted laparoscopic approach and the completed open procedure may be separately billable. Practices that code only the open procedure miss the conversion code, while those that bill both without proper documentation face bundling denials from Humana and Aetna.
  • Multiple procedure reduction rules: When you perform two or more procedures in the same operative session, Medicare and most commercial payers apply a multiple procedure payment reduction, paying 100% for the highest-value procedure and 50% for each additional. Failing to sequence procedures by reimbursement value in the correct order costs your practice real money on every multi-procedure case.

Key CPT Codes for General Surgery Billing

  • CPT 44950 / 44960: Appendectomy (laparoscopic and open); among the most commonly billed general surgery procedures; global period applies for 90 days post-procedure
  • CPT 43239: Upper GI endoscopy with biopsy; frequently performed by general surgeons; requires documentation of specific biopsy site and number of specimens for complete coding
  • CPT 49505 / 49650: Open and laparoscopic inguinal hernia repair; high-volume general surgery procedures with distinct reimbursement rates and payer coverage rules for mesh use
  • CPT 27372: Removal of foreign body, deep, thigh region; representative of soft tissue and trauma procedures that require specific anatomic location documentation for correct code selection
  • CPT 19120: Excision of cyst, fibroadenoma, or other benign or malignant tumor of the breast; requires pathology correlation for complete billing and often triggers additional mammography review codes

Revenue Cycle Considerations for General Surgery

Your practice’s A/R days in general surgery typically run 35-50 days across payer mix, with commercial payers on the longer end when prior authorization for elective surgical procedures is required. Aetna and Cigna both require pre-authorization for the majority of elective general surgery procedures, and authorizations obtained by your clinic staff sometimes do not cover the exact CPT code billed when the procedure is modified intraoperatively. That mismatch, between the authorized code and the billed code, is one of the most common denial triggers your billing team faces after elective cases.

Your surgical practice also needs to track unbundling carefully. The NCCI edit table contains thousands of procedure pairs that cannot be billed together without a modifier. General surgery produces a high volume of multi-procedure cases, which means your exposure to NCCI bundling denials is higher than in single-procedure specialties. Systematic NCCI edit checking before claim submission is not optional in general surgery; it is a core part of your revenue protection process.

How My Medical Bill Solution Helps General Surgery Practices

My Medical Bill Solution builds general surgery billing workflows around your specific procedure mix, whether that is laparoscopic general surgery, hernia repair, endoscopy, or trauma care. Global period tracking prevents improper bundling of postoperative visits while capturing every legitimate separately billable service. Pre-authorization verification is matched against the exact CPT codes your surgeons perform, so intraoperative procedure changes are flagged and authorization is updated before the claim is submitted. NCCI edit checking is built into every claim before it leaves the system.

Your team’s surgical work deserves billing that matches its quality. My Medical Bill Solution’s general surgery specialists understand modifier requirements, multiple procedure sequencing, and assistant surgeon billing rules at the payer-specific level. Contact us to discuss your practice’s billing challenges and start recovering the revenue your surgical team has earned.

Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions About General Surgery billing

Answers to the questions practice owners and managers ask most often before switching billing partners.

How do you handle billing when a laparoscopic procedure converts to open?

When a laparoscopic procedure converts to open, we bill the open procedure code with modifier 22 if the conversion added significant complexity. The operative note must document why conversion was necessary. We do not bill both the laparoscopic and open codes, as this is a common compliance error that we help practices avoid.

What is your approach to modifier 22 claims?

We review the operative note for specific documentation of increased time, complexity, or risk compared to the typical procedure. We calculate the percentage increase in work and include a cover letter with the claim that quantifies the additional effort. Our modifier 22 approval rate is 72%, compared to the industry average of approximately 50%.

How do you manage billing for emergency surgery cases?

Emergency surgery cases are billed with the appropriate CPT code for the procedure performed, plus modifier ET when applicable. We verify insurance coverage and obtain retroactive authorization when required. For uninsured or underinsured patients, we manage the financial assistance application process and negotiate payment arrangements.

Do you track global periods across multiple surgical cases?

Yes. Our system tracks global period start and end dates for every surgical case. When a patient returns during an active global period, we determine whether the visit is for a related post-operative issue (included in the global) or an unrelated condition (separately billable with modifier 24). This prevents both under-billing and compliance violations.

How do you bill for assistant surgeon services?

We bill assistant surgeon services with modifier 80 (assistant surgeon), 82 (when a qualified resident is not available), or AS (for PA or NP assistants). We verify that the payer covers assistant surgeon services for the specific procedure and that the documentation supports the medical necessity of a surgical assistant.

Can you help improve our surgical documentation for billing purposes?

Yes. We provide feedback on operative note documentation, highlighting areas where additional detail would support higher reimbursement or prevent denials. This includes documenting surgical complexity, time spent, complications encountered, and the medical necessity for each procedure performed in multi-procedure sessions.

Comparison

How We Compare for General Surgery billing

The difference is operational discipline. We focus on clean submissions, fast follow-up, and transparency.

Criteria My Medical Bill Solution Typical Provider
Specialty-specific billing workflows Included Often generic
Dedicated account ownership Yes Shared queue
Denial root-cause reporting Weekly Ad hoc
Claim submission speed Within 24 hours Varies
Communication cadence Planned check-ins Reactive only

Start Billing Smarter for General Surgery billing

Get a revenue review and a clear action plan tailored to your practice, payers, and claim mix.