General Surgery CPT Reference

General Surgery CPT Codes and Reimbursement Rates

General surgery billing spans a wide range of CPT codes for procedures from appendectomies and cholecystectomies to hernia repairs, breast surgery, and complex abdominal operations.

General Surgery CPT Codes and Reimbursement Rates
01

Laparoscopic cholecystectomy (47562, ~$750-$1,100) is the highest-volume general surgery CPT code

02

Cholangiography add-on codes (47563) are frequently underbilled during routine laparoscopic cholecystectomy

03

Laparoscopic-to-open conversion uses the open code with no special modifier

04

Most general surgery procedures carry 90-day global periods covering all post-op care

Overview

Why General Surgery CPT Codes Teams Need a Better Workflow

General surgery billing spans a wide range of CPT codes for procedures from appendectomies and cholecystectomies to hernia repairs, breast surgery, and complex abdominal operations. Each procedure has specific global period rules and documentation requirements that affect claim processing.

This reference covers the CPT codes most frequently billed in general surgery. Sections address laparoscopic vs. open procedure coding, global surgical package components, modifier usage for multiple and staged procedures, and the documentation standards for establishing medical necessity across the scope of general surgical services.

Why General Surgery CPT Codes Teams Need a Better Workflow
Challenges

Common General Surgery CPT Codes Challenges We Solve

Every General Surgery CPT Codes team deals with payer delays, coding nuance, and collection leakage.

Laparoscopic cholecystectomy (47562, ~$750-$1,100) is the highest-volume general surgery CPT code

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

Cholangiography add-on codes (47563) are frequently underbilled during routine laparoscopic cholecystectomy

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

Laparoscopic-to-open conversion uses the open code with no special modifier

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

Most general surgery procedures carry 90-day global periods covering all post-op care

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

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Guide

The Complete Guide to General Surgery CPT Codes

General Surgery CPT Code Framework

General surgery billing covers a broad spectrum of procedures across multiple organ systems. The CPT code structure for general surgery spans abdominal procedures (appendectomy, cholecystectomy, colectomy), hernia repair (inguinal, ventral, incisional), breast surgery (lumpectomy, mastectomy), and soft tissue procedures (wound debridement, abscess drainage). Each category has its own coding conventions, global period assignments, and modifier requirements. A general surgeon performing 8 to 12 cases per week across these categories needs a billing team that understands the nuances of each procedural group because the coding rules differ substantially.

The most important financial distinction in general surgery coding is between open and laparoscopic approaches. Laparoscopic codes exist as separate CPT entries (not just modifier additions to open codes), and the reimbursement rates differ. In most cases, laparoscopic approaches reimburse 5% to 15% less than the corresponding open procedure despite requiring equivalent or greater surgical skill. When a laparoscopic procedure converts to open, the open code is reported without any conversion modifier because the final procedure performed determines the CPT code.

Appendectomy Codes (44950-44960)

Open appendectomy (44950, approximately $700 to $1,000) is the base code for open surgical removal of the appendix. Code 44960 (open appendectomy with abscess drainage, approximately $900 to $1,300) applies when a periappendiceal abscess is encountered and drained during the appendectomy. Laparoscopic appendectomy (44970, approximately $650 to $950) is the standard approach for uncomplicated appendicitis. Code 44979 (unlisted laparoscopic procedure, appendix) covers laparoscopic appendectomy with additional complexity not described by 44970, though this code requires a cover letter describing the procedure. For interval appendectomy (performed electively after initial conservative management of complicated appendicitis), use the standard appendectomy code appropriate to the approach.

Cholecystectomy Codes (47562-47564)

Laparoscopic cholecystectomy (47562, approximately $750 to $1,100) is the most commonly performed general surgery procedure and the highest-volume general surgery CPT code. Code 47563 (laparoscopic cholecystectomy with cholangiography, approximately $850 to $1,250) adds the intraoperative cholangiogram. Code 47564 (laparoscopic cholecystectomy with exploration of common duct, approximately $1,100 to $1,600) covers common bile duct exploration. Open cholecystectomy (47600, approximately $900 to $1,300) is used when the procedure is performed open from the start. Code 47605 (open cholecystectomy with cholangiography, approximately $1,000 to $1,400) adds the imaging component. The cholangiogram add-on codes represent a significant revenue opportunity that is frequently underbilled when surgeons perform routine intraoperative cholangiograms but coders assign only the base cholecystectomy code.

Hernia Repair Codes (49505-49525)

Inguinal hernia repair codes are organized by type (initial vs. recurrent) and patient age. Code 49505 (initial repair, inguinal hernia, age 5+, reducible, approximately $650 to $950) is the standard adult inguinal hernia repair. Code 49507 (initial repair, inguinal hernia, incarcerated or strangulated, approximately $850 to $1,200) applies for complicated hernias. Code 49520 (repair, recurrent inguinal hernia, approximately $800 to $1,150) covers re-do repairs. Code 49525 (repair, recurrent inguinal hernia, incarcerated or strangulated, approximately $1,000 to $1,400) covers the most complex inguinal repairs. Laparoscopic inguinal hernia repair (49650 for initial, approximately $700 to $1,000; 49651 for recurrent, approximately $800 to $1,150) uses separate code entries. Ventral and incisional hernia repairs (49560-49566) follow similar complexity stratification based on reducibility and incarceration status.

Breast Surgery Codes (19301-19307)

Breast surgery codes separate mastectomy from lumpectomy and add complexity modifiers for lymph node procedures. Code 19301 (mastectomy, partial, approximately $700 to $1,050) covers lumpectomy or segmental mastectomy. Code 19303 (mastectomy, simple, complete, approximately $1,000 to $1,500) is the standard total mastectomy. Code 19305 (mastectomy, radical, approximately $1,400 to $2,000) includes pectoralis muscle removal and axillary dissection. Code 19307 (mastectomy, modified radical, approximately $1,200 to $1,800) includes axillary dissection but preserves the pectoralis muscles. Sentinel lymph node biopsy (38900, approximately $250 to $350 add-on) is frequently performed with breast surgery and should be coded separately. Axillary lymph node dissection (38745, approximately $600 to $900) is coded when a complete dissection is performed instead of or in addition to sentinel node biopsy.

Global Period Considerations

Most general surgery procedures carry a 90-day global period that includes the surgery, all post-operative hospital care, and follow-up office visits for 90 days. Minor procedures (wound debridement, simple abscess drainage) carry 0-day or 10-day global periods. Understanding the global period assignment for every code prevents overbilling for included services. During the 90-day global period, routine wound checks, staple and suture removal, and post-operative evaluations are included. Unrelated services during the global period require modifier 24 (E/M) or modifier 79 (unrelated procedure). Return to the operating room for a related complication uses modifier 78 (unplanned return for a related procedure during the post-operative period).

Common General Surgery CPT Codes

CPT Code Description Reimbursement Range
47562 Laparoscopic cholecystectomy $750 - $1,100
44970 Laparoscopic appendectomy $650 - $950
49505 Inguinal hernia repair, initial, reducible $650 - $950
19303 Mastectomy, simple, complete $1,000 - $1,500
19301 Partial mastectomy (lumpectomy) $700 - $1,050
49560 Ventral hernia repair, initial, reducible $750 - $1,100
Common Questions

General Surgery CPT Codes FAQ

Answers to the questions practice owners ask most often.

Report only the open procedure code. Do not bill the laparoscopic code or add a conversion modifier. The rationale is that the final procedure performed was an open surgery, and the CPT code should reflect what was actually completed. Document the reason for conversion (adhesions, bleeding, inability to safely identify anatomy) in the operative note. The open code typically reimburses at a slightly higher rate than the laparoscopic code, which partially compensates for the additional operative time. Some payers previously accepted modifier 22 for conversion cases, but current guidelines do not require it.

Apply modifier 22 when the surgical work substantially exceeds the typical service described by the CPT code. Examples in general surgery include: cholecystectomy with severe inflammation requiring 3 times the normal operative time, hernia repair with extensive adhesiolysis adding significant complexity, and appendectomy complicated by a retrocecal abscess requiring additional dissection. The operative note must document the specific additional work and the additional time. Most payers increase reimbursement by 20% to 30% when modifier 22 is supported by documentation, but some payers require pre-approval or additional review.

Sentinel lymph node biopsy (38900) is an add-on code billed in addition to the primary breast surgery code (19301, 19303, or 19307). It cannot be billed as a standalone procedure. The pathology interpretation (88307 or 88309) is billed separately by the pathologist. If the sentinel node biopsy leads to a complete axillary dissection during the same operative session, bill the axillary dissection code (38745) instead of 38900, not both. Document the sentinel node identification method (blue dye, radiotracer, or both) and the number of nodes retrieved.

Initial hernia repair codes (49505 for reducible inguinal, 49507 for incarcerated) apply to the first surgical repair of a hernia at that anatomic location. Recurrent hernia repair codes (49520 for reducible, 49525 for incarcerated) apply when the hernia has been previously repaired and has returned. Recurrent repair codes reimburse 15% to 25% higher than initial repair codes because the surgery is more complex due to scar tissue and altered anatomy. Verify the patient surgical history before code assignment; using a recurrent code for a first-time repair is a compliance issue.

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