Billing Workflow

Behavioral Health Billing Process: Step-by-Step Workflow

The billing process for behavioral health services involves navigating session-based coding, mental health parity regulations, and authorization requirements that vary dramatically across payers and plan types.

Reviewed by MMBS Billing Review Team Last updated Mar 31, 2026 Published Mar 16, 2026
Behavioral Health Billing Process: Step-by-Step Workflow
01

Verify behavioral health-specific benefits before the first session, not just medical coverage

02

Authorization typically covers 8-12 sessions. Track expiration dates and remaining counts.

03

Update treatment plans every 90 days. Stale plans weaken medical necessity on audit.

04

Submit re-authorization requests 2-3 weeks before current authorization expires.

Overview

Why Behavioral Health Billing Process Teams Need a Better Workflow

The billing process for behavioral health services involves navigating session-based coding, mental health parity regulations, and authorization requirements that vary dramatically across payers and plan types. A streamlined workflow is critical for practices managing high caseloads with limited administrative staff and narrow reimbursement margins.

This guide outlines the behavioral health billing workflow from intake through payment posting and reconciliation. Key topics include verifying mental health benefits at the outset, selecting time-based codes accurately, handling telehealth billing requirements, and managing the recurring authorization cycle for ongoing treatment plans.

Why Behavioral Health Billing Process Teams Need a Better Workflow
Challenges

Common Behavioral Health Billing Process Challenges We Solve

Every Behavioral Health Billing Process team deals with payer delays, coding nuance, and collection leakage.

Verify behavioral health-specific benefits before the first session, not just medical coverage

The workflow has to support this issue before claim submission, or it turns into avoidable rework after the payer responds.

Authorization typically covers 8-12 sessions. Track expiration dates and remaining counts.

When this area is inconsistent, denial rate, payment timing, and staff follow-up effort all get worse at the same time.

Update treatment plans every 90 days. Stale plans weaken medical necessity on audit.

Tight documentation and coding controls here usually improve both reimbursement accuracy and operational speed.

Submit re-authorization requests 2-3 weeks before current authorization expires.

This is one of the first places revenue leakage shows up when specialty billing habits are not standardized.

Services

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Support spans the full revenue cycle.

CPT Codes

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Revenue Cycle

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Coding Guide

Behavioral Health Billing Hub

Coverage

Serving Behavioral Health Billing Teams Nationwide

We support independent practices and growing provider organizations.

Behavioral Health private practices

Behavioral Health multisite groups

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Behavioral Health owners and operators

Guide

The Complete Guide to Behavioral Health Billing Process

Quick answer

The billing process for behavioral health services involves navigating session-based coding, mental health parity regulations, and authorization requirements that vary dramatically across payers and plan types. A streamlined workflow is critical for practices managing high caseloads with limited administrative staff and narrow reimbursement margins.

This guide outlines the behavioral health billing workflow from intake through payment posting and reconciliation. Key topics include verifying mental health benefits at the outset, selecting time-based codes accurately, handling telehealth billing requirements, and managing the recurring authorization cycle for ongoing treatment plans.

The Behavioral Health Billing Cycle

Behavioral health billing has a different rhythm than most medical specialties. Sessions occur on regular schedules (weekly or biweekly), creating predictable claim volumes but also requiring ongoing authorization management that does not exist in most medical billing. A therapist seeing 25 patients per week generates 100 claims per month, each requiring accurate time documentation, valid authorization, and correct payer-specific coding.

Step 1: Benefits Verification and Authorization

Before the first session, verify the patient behavioral health benefits. Key information to confirm: Is outpatient behavioral health covered? How many sessions are authorized per year? Is prior authorization required before treatment begins? What is the patient copay or coinsurance for behavioral health visits? Does the plan distinguish between in-network and out-of-network behavioral health providers?

Many commercial plans require prior authorization for behavioral health services, especially for sessions beyond an initial assessment. Authorization typically covers a set number of sessions (often 8 to 12), after which a treatment review and re-authorization are required. Tracking authorization expiration dates and remaining session counts is one of the most important administrative tasks in behavioral health billing.

Step 2: Session Documentation

Providers document each session with a progress note that includes the specific time spent in psychotherapy, clinical interventions used, patient response, and progress toward treatment plan goals. The documentation must support the CPT code selected. For 90834, the note must reflect 38 to 52 minutes of face-to-face psychotherapy. For 90837, it must reflect 53 minutes or more.

Treatment plans should be updated every 90 days or as clinically indicated. Payers use treatment plan reviews during audits to verify that ongoing sessions are medically necessary. A treatment plan that has not been updated in 6 months weakens the medical necessity argument for continued sessions.

Step 3: Claim Coding and Submission

Behavioral health coding is relatively straightforward compared to procedural specialties, but the details matter. The correct psychotherapy code must match the documented session duration. The ICD-10 diagnosis must be from the behavioral health chapter (F01-F99) and must match the treatment plan. Place of service must reflect whether the session was in-office (11), telehealth from home (10), or another setting.

Claims should be submitted within 48 hours of the session. Weekly batch submission is acceptable for behavioral health because session volumes are lower than urgent care or primary care, but faster submission improves cash flow. The clearinghouse should flag common behavioral health errors: missing time documentation, expired authorization, and diagnosis codes that do not support psychotherapy services.

Step 4: Payment and Patient Responsibility

Behavioral health copays are often different from medical visit copays. Many plans charge $30 to $50 per therapy session, and some apply sessions to the deductible before copay pricing kicks in. Collecting patient responsibility at the time of each session prevents balance accumulation that becomes difficult to collect from patients who may discontinue therapy.

Step 5: Re-Authorization Management

When the authorized session count approaches the limit, submit a re-authorization request with updated treatment plan, progress notes, and clinical justification for continued care. Re-authorization requests should be submitted 2 to 3 weeks before the current authorization expires to avoid gaps in coverage that result in denied claims for sessions provided during the gap period.

Behavioral Health Billing Workflow Timeline

Step Action Target Timeline
1 Benefits verification + initial authorization Before first session
2 Session documentation with time Same day as session
3 Claim coding and submission Within 48 hours
4 Copay collection At time of session
5 Treatment plan update Every 90 days
6 Re-authorization request 2-3 weeks before expiry

Official sources

Use these checks with payer policy, coding documentation, and remittance data before changing claim workflows.

Common Questions

Behavioral Health Billing Process FAQ

Answers to the questions practice owners ask most often.

Most commercial plans authorize 8 to 12 sessions initially, with additional sessions available through re-authorization. Some plans authorize up to 20 sessions. Medicare does not require prior authorization for outpatient psychotherapy but may audit for medical necessity. Each payer has different authorization requirements, so verification must happen per patient and per plan.

Claims for sessions provided after authorization expiration are typically denied with no appeal rights. The provider is responsible for tracking authorization status. Most practices absorb the cost of unauthorized sessions because billing the patient for an administrative error creates compliance and patient relationship issues. Prevention through authorization tracking is the only reliable solution.

You cannot bill insurance for no-show appointments. You can charge the patient a no-show fee if your practice policy (signed by the patient) includes a no-show fee provision. Medicare prohibits charging Medicare patients for missed appointments. Commercial plans vary. The no-show fee must be a reasonable amount, typically $25 to $75, and cannot exceed the amount the patient would have paid for the session.

Verify benefits and obtain authorization under the new plan before the next session. Do not assume the new plan covers behavioral health or that the provider is in-network. If there is a coverage gap, discuss options with the patient including self-pay rates, out-of-network benefits, or a temporary pause until coverage is confirmed.

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