Understanding Cardiology CPT Codes
Cardiology billing relies on a dense set of CPT codes spanning diagnostic testing, interventional procedures, and evaluation and management services. Getting these codes right determines whether your claims clear adjudication or land in the denial queue.
The most commonly billed cardiology codes fall into three categories: diagnostic (echocardiography, stress testing, Holter monitoring), interventional (catheterization, stent placement, ablation), and E/M services tied to cardiac consultations. Each category carries its own documentation requirements and modifier rules that billing teams need to track.
High-Volume Cardiology CPT Codes
Code 93306 (transthoracic echocardiography) is the single most billed diagnostic cardiology code. Medicare reimbursement for 93306 sits around $188 nationally, but rates vary by MAC jurisdiction. Commercial payers typically reimburse between 120% and 160% of Medicare rates, depending on your contract terms.
Stress testing codes (93015-93018) require careful attention to who performs and who interprets the test. Using 93015 (global) when a separate physician interprets means leaving the professional component (93016) unbilled. Split billing with 93017 (tracing only) and 93018 (interpretation only) captures the full reimbursement when multiple providers are involved.
Modifier Rules That Affect Reimbursement
Modifier 26 (professional component) and modifier TC (technical component) are the two most critical modifiers in cardiology billing. Every diagnostic test has a global fee that splits into these two components. Billing the wrong component or forgetting to split when your practice only performs one side of the service creates either underpayment or denial.
Modifier 59 applies when you perform distinct procedures during the same encounter. In cardiology, this commonly occurs when a patient receives both an echocardiogram and an electrocardiogram on the same visit. Without modifier 59, CCI edits will bundle the lower-valued code into the higher one, and you lose that revenue.
Reimbursement Rate Benchmarks
Cardiology practices that track their reimbursement rates against Medicare fee schedule benchmarks catch underpayment patterns faster. Commercial contracts should reimburse above Medicare rates for most procedures. If your payer mix shows commercial reimbursement below 110% of Medicare for high-volume codes like 93306 or 93000, your contracts need renegotiation.
AR days for cardiology claims should sit between 25 and 35 days. Practices running above 40 days typically have a modifier issue, a prior authorization gap, or a documentation problem that is causing systematic delays. Our billing team benchmarks your AR days against specialty averages and identifies the root cause when numbers run high.