Outsourcing Guide

Outsourcing Orthopedic Billing: Evaluation Guide

Selecting a billing partner for an orthopedic practice demands attention to surgical coding expertise, global period management capabilities, and experience navigating the prior authorization requirements of major orthopedic payers.

Outsourcing Orthopedic Billing: Evaluation Guide
500+

Practices Supported

98.2%

Clean Claim Rate

$2.4M

Revenue Recovered

24hr

Claim Submission

Overview

The Complexity of Orthopedics billing

Selecting a billing partner for an orthopedic practice demands attention to surgical coding expertise, global period management capabilities, and experience navigating the prior authorization requirements of major orthopedic payers. The right partner can significantly reduce surgical claim denials and accelerate collections on high-value procedures.

This guide helps orthopedic practices evaluate billing companies with the criteria that matter most. Key assessment areas include the company familiarity with orthopedic-specific CCI edits, their approach to implant billing, and their ability to manage the revenue cycle effectively across office, ASC, and hospital settings.

The Complexity of Orthopedics billing
Challenges

Common Orthopedics billing Challenges We Solve

Every Orthopedics billing team deals with payer delays, coding nuance, and collection leakage.

Authorization Gaps

We identify missing authorizations and documentation gaps before they create denials.

Coding Drift

Procedure coding and modifier use stay aligned with payer rules.

Aging AR

We actively work unresolved balances so claims do not sit untouched.

Patient Collections

Clear statements and follow-up plans reduce missed payments.

Services

Complete Orthopedics billing Services

Support spans the full revenue cycle.

Eligibility verification and benefits checks

Specialty-specific coding review

Electronic claim submission within 24 hours

Denial management and appeals

Payment posting and reconciliation

Weekly reporting and revenue reviews

Coverage

Serving Orthopedics billing Teams Nationwide

We support independent practices and growing provider organizations.

Independent physician groups

Multi-location practices

Private equity backed platforms

Hospital-owned outpatient groups

Guide

The Complete Guide to Orthopedics billing

When Orthopedic Practices Should Outsource Billing

Orthopedic billing requires dual expertise in high-volume office visit processing and complex surgical claim management. Few in-house billing teams have both capabilities. A biller who handles office visits efficiently may lack the training to code multi-procedure surgical cases, manage global periods, and track implant billing. Outsourcing becomes attractive when surgical claim denial rates exceed 8%, when operative reports are not translated into claims within 72 hours, or when the practice is losing revenue to global period billing errors.

Criteria 1: Surgical Billing Expertise

The billing company must have demonstrated orthopedic surgical billing experience. Ask for their surgical claim denial rate, average time from operative report to claim submission, and their process for handling multi-procedure surgical cases with modifier 51, 59, and bilateral modifiers. Request examples of how they code common orthopedic procedures: total knee arthroplasty, ACL reconstruction, and fracture ORIF with hardware placement.

Criteria 2: Global Period Management

Ask how the billing company tracks 90-day surgical global periods. They should have an automated system that flags surgical patients and prevents routine post-op visit charges during the global window. Ask about their process for billing unrelated E/M visits (modifier 24) and returns to the OR (modifier 78) during the global period. Manual tracking of global periods breaks down in practices with 30+ surgical cases per month.

Criteria 3: Authorization Management

Orthopedic surgical authorization is time-sensitive and high-stakes. The billing company should handle the authorization process end-to-end: submitting the request with clinical documentation, tracking status, communicating approval or denial, and managing peer-to-peer reviews when initial authorization is denied. Ask for their authorization approval rate and average turnaround time.

Criteria 4: Pricing for Mixed Claims

Orthopedic billing pricing should account for the mix of simple office visits and complex surgical claims. Percentage-based pricing (6% to 8% of collections) works well because it automatically adjusts for the higher revenue per surgical claim. Per-claim pricing ($5 to $10 per claim) may undercharge for surgical claims and overcharge for office visits. Some companies use tiered pricing: one rate for E/M claims and a higher rate for surgical claims.

Criteria 5: Implant and Supply Billing

For practices operating in outpatient surgical centers or ambulatory surgery centers, the billing company must manage implant billing using HCPCS codes. This includes tracking implant inventory, matching implant invoices to surgical cases, and billing the appropriate HCPCS code for each device. Missing implant charges is a significant revenue leak in orthopedic surgery billing.

Red Flags

Avoid billing companies that do not have existing orthopedic surgical clients. Surgical billing requires specific expertise that cannot be learned on your account. Also avoid companies that cannot explain the difference between modifier 51 (multiple procedures), modifier 59 (distinct procedural service), and modifier 78 (return to OR during global period). These modifiers are fundamental to orthopedic billing.

Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions About Orthopedics billing

Answers to the questions practice owners ask most often.

For solo and two-surgeon practices, outsourcing at 6-8% of collections is almost always more cost-effective than employing 1-2 dedicated billers with surgical coding expertise. The specialized skill set required for orthopedic surgical billing commands higher salaries ($50,000-70,000) than general medical billing positions. At 3+ surgeons, compare outsourcing costs against fully loaded in-house staffing costs.

Request a coding accuracy audit of 10-20 surgical cases during the evaluation period. Provide the operative reports and compare the billing company code selection against your current coding. Differences in modifier usage, code selection, and multi-procedure billing reveal whether the company codes more or less accurately than your current process.

Plan for 4 to 6 weeks. Orthopedic transitions take longer than primary care because of the surgical authorization inventory, global period calendar, and implant billing setup. Week 1-2: EHR integration, fee schedule loading, surgical authorization inventory. Week 3-4: Parallel billing for office visits. Week 5-6: Surgical claim billing begins with senior coder oversight.

Orthopedic practices see a significant volume of Workers Compensation and personal injury claims. These require separate billing processes, different fee schedules, and specific reporting requirements. If Workers Comp represents more than 10% of your claim volume, the billing company must have dedicated experience with comp billing, including state-specific fee schedules and utilization review processes.

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