Mental Health Billing in Miami Overview
Dr. Ana Lucia Fernandez opened her Miami counseling practice in 2019 in Little Havana, serving a community that had long carried its mental health struggles in silence. By 2022, her patient roster had grown to 140 active clients. But her net collections had not grown proportionally. She was working 45 hours per week and collecting 76 cents on every dollar billed. The problem was not her therapy. It was her billing. Sixteen percent of her claims were being denied on first submission. Authorization lapse was the top reason, followed by Medicaid MCO assignment errors on patients who had changed plans at Medicaid renewal without notifying her office.
Dr. Fernandez’s situation is not unusual in Miami. The metro area’s mental health need is substantial and growing. Miami-Dade County ranks among Florida’s highest counties for mental health-related emergency department visits, driven by high rates of depression and anxiety in the immigrant community, a crisis-level housing affordability environment, and the residual effects of pandemic-era social disruption. For mental health providers, the demand for services is clear. Capturing the revenue from that demand requires navigating one of Florida’s most complex payer environments.
Florida Payer Landscape for Mental Health Practices
Florida Medicaid mental health coverage runs through the SMMC-LTC and Managed Medical Assistance (MMA) programs, with behavioral health carved out to specialty plans in some regions. In Miami-Dade, Staywell Health Plan (WellCare), Molina Healthcare of Florida, and UnitedHealthcare Community Plan are the primary Medicaid MMA plans. Behavioral health services under these plans require authorization for ongoing therapy sessions beyond the initial evaluation. Authorization limits vary: Staywell typically authorizes 8 sessions before requiring review; Molina FL authorizes up to 12 sessions with a treatment plan on file; UHC Community Plan requires a functioning clinical assessment tool score documented in the authorization request.
Florida also operates a separate Mental Health Targeted Case Management program and the Baker Act system that generate distinct billing codes and authorization pathways separate from standard outpatient therapy. Miami mental health providers working in crisis stabilization or case management must maintain separate enrollment for these programs. On the commercial side, Florida Blue is the dominant payer, followed by Aetna and Cigna. Florida Blue’s mental health benefit manager varies by employer plan. Some Florida Blue plans use an internal behavioral health unit; others use Magellan Behavioral Health as a separate carve-out. Billing the wrong entity, the Florida Blue medical plan instead of Magellan, results in systematic claim denials that can persist for months.
Common Billing Issues for Miami Mental Health Providers
- Medicaid MCO behavioral health carve-out confusion: Miami mental health providers must determine whether a Medicaid patient’s behavioral health benefits are carved out to a specialty plan or managed by the MMA plan directly. Filing with the wrong payer entity is the single most common billing error for Miami therapists and psychiatrists treating Medicaid-enrolled patients.
- Florida Blue Magellan carve-out identification: Florida Blue employer plans that use Magellan as a behavioral health carve-out require claims submitted to Magellan, not to Florida Blue. Practices without a system to identify Magellan-carved plans before submission see systematic Florida Blue denials on mental health claims that should have gone to Magellan.
- Authorization lapse for ongoing therapy: Miami Medicaid MCOs authorize mental health therapy in short windows of 8 to 12 sessions. Practices that do not track authorization expiration dates render sessions without active authorization, creating retroactive denial exposure that is difficult to resolve.
- Telehealth billing compliance under Florida law: Florida expanded telehealth billing parity for mental health services. Miami therapists billing telehealth visits must use the correct place of service code (POS 10 for telehealth in patient’s home, POS 02 for other telehealth), apply the correct GT modifier where required, and confirm that the patient is physically located in Florida at the time of the session.
Key CPT Codes for Mental Health in Florida
- CPT 90837 (Individual psychotherapy, 60 minutes): The primary revenue code for Miami therapy practices. Florida Blue and Aetna require that session duration matches the billed code. A 45-minute session billed at CPT 90837 (60 minutes) triggers a documentation audit and potential recoupment.
- CPT 90834 (Individual psychotherapy, 45 minutes): Appropriate for standard 45 to 53-minute sessions. Florida Medicaid MMA plans reimburse this code at the Medicaid fee schedule rate. Staywell and Molina FL both cover this code under the behavioral health authorization.
- CPT 90847 (Family psychotherapy with patient present): High-volume code for Miami practices serving families in crisis. Florida Blue covers family therapy but some employer plans limit to individual therapy. Eligibility verification must confirm family therapy benefit inclusion.
- CPT 90791 (Psychiatric diagnostic evaluation): The initial assessment code for new patients. Florida Medicaid MMA plans cover one diagnostic evaluation per year without prior authorization. All subsequent visits require an active authorization. Bill this code only once per patient episode; billing 90791 at a second intake is a documentation compliance issue.
- CPT 99213 (Office/outpatient E/M, moderate complexity): Used by Miami psychiatrists and psychiatric nurse practitioners for medication management visits. Florida Blue and Aetna require that medication management visits be distinguished from psychotherapy visits in the record. Billing 90837 for a visit that is primarily medication management is an upcoding error.
Revenue Cycle for Mental Health Practices in Miami
When Dr. Fernandez’s practice switched to a mental health-specific billing service familiar with Miami Medicaid MCOs and Florida Blue behavioral health carve-outs, her denial rate dropped from 16 percent to 6 percent in one quarter. Her net collections rose 18 percent without adding a single new patient. Her A/R days dropped from 48 to 22. The practice was already doing the clinical work. The billing system finally started keeping up.
Miami mental health practices with structured authorization management, carve-out identification, and telehealth compliance collect 90 to 94 percent of expected net revenue. Practices without these systems collect 74 to 81 percent. The annual revenue gap on a 140-patient practice runs $55,000 to $95,000. For a solo therapist or small group, that is the difference between financial stability and burnout.
How My Medical Bill Solution Helps Miami Mental Health Providers
My Medical Bill Solution manages Medicaid MCO behavioral health carve-out routing, Florida Blue Magellan identification, authorization tracking and renewal, telehealth billing compliance, and payer-specific A/R follow-up for Miami mental health providers. We know the difference between a Staywell behavioral health claim and a Magellan behavioral health claim, and we file both correctly. If you are a therapist, psychologist, or psychiatrist in Miami who is tired of billing surprises, contact My Medical Bill Solution to see how we can help your practice collect what it earns.