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Neonatology Billing Experts

Neonatology Medical Billing Services

Specialized billing for neonatology and NICU practices. We manage critical care coding (99468-99476), per-diem intensive care billing, ventilator management codes, and the unique payer rules governing newborn and infant services.
Neonatology Medical Billing Services
97%

First-Pass Clean Claim Rate

$3.4K

Avg. Daily NICU Revenue Protected

3.5%

Client Denial Rate

19 Days

Average Days to Payment

Overview

Protecting Revenue Across Every NICU Day

Neonatology billing is among the most complex in all of medicine. The distinction between initial and subsequent critical care (99468 vs. 99469), the transition from critical to intensive care (99477-99480), and the rules governing same-day admission and transfer scenarios require coding precision that directly impacts revenue for every NICU patient encounter.

Our neonatology billing team handles the full range of NICU coding, from initial critical care and transport (99466-99467) through stabilization, daily intensive care management, and discharge planning. We ensure accurate capture of separately billable procedures including umbilical catheter placement (36510), endotracheal intubation (31500), surfactant administration, and ventilator management. With NICU stays generating charges that can exceed $3,000 per day, proper coding of each day’s service level and every billable procedure is essential to your practice’s financial performance.

Protecting Revenue Across Every NICU Day
Challenges

Common Neonatology billing Challenges We Solve

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

Critical vs. Intensive Care Level Assignment

Distinguishing between critical care (99468-99469) and intensive care (99477-99480) on each NICU day requires careful evaluation of the infant's clinical status. Incorrect level assignment leads to underbilling or audit exposure.

Same-Day Admission and Transfer Rules

When a neonate is born, transferred, and admitted to the NICU on the same calendar day, specific coding rules govern which provider can bill what services. Coordination between delivering physician, transport team, and neonatologist billing is essential.

Procedure Bundling in the NICU

Many NICU procedures are bundled into the daily critical or intensive care code. Identifying which procedures are separately billable (umbilical catheter placement, chest tube insertion, lumbar puncture) and which are included requires NICU-specific bundling knowledge.

Payer Variability for Newborn Coverage

Newborn coverage rules vary significantly across payers. Some plans cover the infant under the mother's policy for a set period, while others require separate enrollment. Eligibility verification and timely enrollment are critical to avoiding claim denials.

Services

Complete Neonatology billing Services

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

Neonatal critical care coding (99468-99476) with daily level-of-care assessment

NICU per-diem intensive care billing (99477-99480) with documentation support

Transport and stabilization coding (99466-99467, 99485-99486)

Separately billable procedure capture (umbilical lines, intubation, surfactant, ventilator management)

Newborn eligibility verification and payer enrollment coordination

Denial appeals for NICU level-of-care downgrades and medical necessity disputes

Coverage

Serving Neonatology 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 Neonatology billing

Neonatology billing is among the most complex in all of medicine. The distinction between initial and subsequent critical care (99468 vs. 99469), the transition from critical to intensive care (99477-99480), and the rules governing same-day admission and transfer scenarios require coding precision that directly impacts revenue for every NICU patient encounter.

Our neonatology billing team handles the full range of NICU coding, from initial critical care and transport (99466-99467) through stabilization, daily intensive care management, and discharge planning. We ensure accurate capture of separately billable procedures including umbilical catheter placement (36510), endotracheal intubation (31500), surfactant administration, and ventilator management. With NICU stays generating charges that can exceed $3,000 per day, proper coding of each day’s service level and every billable procedure is essential to your practice’s financial performance.

Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions About Neonatology billing

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

What is the difference between neonatal critical care and intensive care codes?

Critical care codes (99468 for initial, 99469 for subsequent days) apply when the neonate is critically ill and requires constant physician attention. Intensive care codes (99477-99480) apply for infants who need intensive but not critical-level monitoring. The clinical documentation must support the level billed each day.

Which NICU procedures can be billed separately from daily care codes?

Separately billable procedures include umbilical artery and vein catheterization (36510, 36660), endotracheal intubation (31500), chest tube insertion (32551), lumbar puncture (62270), and central line placement. Routine monitoring, feeding support, and standard assessments are bundled into the daily care code.

How do you handle billing when a neonate transfers between NICUs?

Transfer scenarios require careful coordination of billing between the sending and receiving facilities. The sending neonatologist bills for care provided before transfer, while the receiving neonatologist bills a subsequent day code. Transport codes apply separately when the neonatologist accompanies the patient.

What are common reasons for NICU claim denials?

The most frequent denial reasons include level-of-care downgrades (critical to intensive), missing or delayed newborn enrollment with the payer, insufficient documentation of medical necessity for extended NICU stays, and bundling errors for separately billable procedures.

How do you verify newborn insurance eligibility?

We initiate eligibility verification within 24 hours of NICU admission, checking whether the infant is covered under the mother's plan or requires separate enrollment. For Medicaid cases, we coordinate with the hospital's financial counseling team to ensure timely application submission.

What documentation supports proper NICU daily billing?

Each NICU day requires documentation of the infant's clinical status (vital signs, ventilator settings, feeding tolerance), all procedures performed, physician decision-making, and the rationale for the assigned level of care. We provide daily documentation checklists aligned with payer audit criteria.

Comparison

How We Compare for Neonatology 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

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