Physical Therapy Billing in New York City Overview
If your physical therapy practice is in New York City, you already understand that getting paid for the care you provide is not simple. You have patients with MetroPlusHealth Medicaid coverage, patients with Empire BlueCross BlueShield commercial plans, patients with Oxford Health group coverage, Medicare patients processed through Palmetto GBA, and workers compensation cases governed by the New York State Workers Compensation Board. Each of those payer systems has its own prior authorization rules, its own documentation requirements, and its own appeal pathways when claims are denied. Managing all of them at once while running a clinical practice is genuinely difficult, and the practices that do it best have made deliberate decisions about how their billing processes are structured.
New York City is the largest physical therapy market in the United States. The five boroughs together support thousands of outpatient PT practices, from solo practices in residential neighborhoods to multi-site groups affiliated with the city’s major health systems. Patient volume is driven by orthopedic injuries from the city’s high density and active population, post-surgical rehabilitation from NYU Langone, Mount Sinai, and New York-Presbyterian, sports injury care for both professional and recreational athletes, and a large workers compensation caseload from the construction, transit, and service industries that are central to the city’s economy. Your billing process needs to work for all of those patients and all of those payers, not just the ones that are easiest to bill.
New York Payer Landscape for Physical Therapy Practices
NY Medicaid covers outpatient PT through managed care plans in all five boroughs. The major NYC Medicaid MCOs for PT include MetroPlusHealth, Fidelis Care, Molina NY, and HealthFirst. NY Medicaid PT benefits require prior authorization after the initial evaluation, with authorization renewal periods that vary by MCO. MetroPlusHealth typically authorizes 10-visit blocks for outpatient PT. HealthFirst applies 30-day authorization episodes. Fidelis Care uses a visit-count-based renewal trigger. On the commercial side, Empire BlueCross BlueShield is the dominant payer for PT in the NYC metro, applying functional limitation medical necessity criteria and conducting post-payment audits in the New York market. Oxford Health (UnitedHealthcare) and Aetna are the next largest commercial PT payers in the city. New York workers compensation PT claims are governed by the New York State Workers Compensation Board Medical Fee Schedule, with dispute resolution through the New York State Workers Compensation Board.
Common Billing Issues for New York City Physical Therapy Providers
- NY Medicaid MCO authorization tracking by plan: Your NYC PT practice may have patients covered by three or four different Medicaid MCOs simultaneously, each with different authorization renewal timelines. MetroPlusHealth’s 10-visit block renewals, HealthFirst’s 30-day episode renewals, and Fidelis Care’s visit-count triggers do not align with each other. A single authorization reminder system for all three MCOs will cause you to miss renewal deadlines for at least one plan. You need payer-specific authorization tracking.
- Empire BlueCross BlueShield post-payment audit exposure: Empire BCBS in New York actively audits outpatient PT practices with high per-patient visit counts. The audits request session notes for up to 36 months of service and compare billed units against documented service time and medical necessity indicators. NYC PT practices with documentation that records total session time rather than time-per-service-code consistently receive recoupment demands from Empire audits.
- New York WC Board fee schedule compliance: NYC has one of the highest PT workers compensation caseloads in the country, particularly from the construction and transit sectors. New York WC PT claims must be billed at the New York State Workers Compensation Board Medical Fee Schedule rates, which differ from commercial PT rates. Billing WC claims at commercial rates results in underpayments that WC carriers mark as paid in full at the correct WC schedule rate.
- Palmetto GBA Medicare timed code documentation: Palmetto GBA processes New York Medicare Part B PT claims and applies active pre-payment review for certain timed PT codes in the NYC market. The review requires session-specific documentation with time-per-service-code. NYC PT practices with documentation that bundles service time into a total session narrative fail Palmetto pre-payment review and receive pre-payment suspension on future claims until documentation is corrected.
Key CPT Codes for Physical Therapy in New York
- CPT 97110: Therapeutic exercises. The primary timed PT code in NYC commercial and Medicaid billing. Document actual time per exercise activity. Empire BCBS and Palmetto GBA both require that billed units correspond to documented minutes at the 8-minute rule threshold. A session note that says therapeutic exercise: 30 minutes without breaking down time by specific exercise activity does not satisfy Empire or Palmetto documentation requirements.
- CPT 97530: Therapeutic activities. Functional task-specific training. MetroPlusHealth and HealthFirst cover this code under Medicaid when documentation identifies the specific functional task being trained and its relationship to the patient’s measurable rehabilitation goal. Vague functional training documentation fails both NYC Medicaid and commercial medical necessity review.
- CPT 97161-97163: PT evaluation, low/moderate/high complexity. Used for initial evaluations and re-evaluations. The New York WC Board Medical Fee Schedule uses these evaluation codes with WC-specific rates. Make sure your billing system applies the correct fee schedule for each evaluation claim: commercial rate for commercial, Medicaid rate for NY Medicaid, and WC schedule rate for workers compensation.
- CPT 97140: Manual therapy techniques. A high-value code for NYC orthopedic and sports injury PT practices. Oxford Health and Aetna apply NCCI editing that restricts same-day billing of 97140 with 97530 without documentation of separate clinical necessity. Document each service’s rationale independently in your session note, not as a combined narrative.
- CPT 97035: Ultrasound. Empire BlueCross BlueShield has specific clinical coverage criteria for therapeutic ultrasound in PT. Billing 97035 without a supporting diagnosis that meets Empire’s ultrasound coverage criteria results in categorical denial. The New York WC Board fee schedule includes a specific rate for 97035 that you should apply on all WC PT claims.
Revenue Cycle for Physical Therapy Practices in New York City
Strong revenue cycle performance in your NYC PT practice depends on three things: accurate authorization tracking by payer, timed code documentation that matches payer audit standards, and a separate A/R workflow for workers compensation cases. The most costly gap in NYC PT billing is authorization-related: a Medicaid MCO authorization expires at visit 10, the practice submits claims 11 through 14 before catching the lapse, and those sessions go unpaid with no retroactive remedy under most NYC MCO contracts. New York WC cases require a dedicated case tracking log with monthly review, as WC Board dispute timelines are strict and cases that age past filing windows cannot be recovered.
How My Medical Bill Solution Helps New York City Physical Therapy Providers
My Medical Bill Solution works with NYC PT practices on NY Medicaid MCO prior authorization tracking, Empire BCBS audit documentation, New York WC Board fee schedule compliance, Palmetto GBA Medicare timed code requirements, and PTA CQ modifier application. Contact My Medical Bill Solution today to schedule a physical therapy billing assessment for your New York City practice.