Coding Reference

Bariatric Surgery Coding Guide: ICD-10 and CPT Pairing

Bariatric surgery coding requires linking obesity-related ICD-10 diagnoses with the appropriate surgical CPT codes while thoroughly documenting the comorbidities that establish medical necessity for the surgical intervention.

Bariatric Surgery Coding Guide: ICD-10 and CPT Pairing
01

Always use E66.01 (morbid obesity) as primary diagnosis, never E66.09 for surgical cases

02

BMI code (Z68.x) must accompany E66.01. Neither code should stand alone on the claim.

03

For BMI 35-39.9, code ALL documented comorbidities to strengthen medical necessity

04

Modifier 22 on revisional cases adds 20-30% reimbursement with detailed operative report

Overview

Why Bariatric Surgery Coding Guide Teams Need a Better Workflow

Bariatric surgery coding requires linking obesity-related ICD-10 diagnoses with the appropriate surgical CPT codes while thoroughly documenting the comorbidities that establish medical necessity for the surgical intervention. The specificity of BMI documentation and the number of qualifying comorbidities directly influence whether a surgical claim will be approved or denied.

This coding guide covers the ICD-10/CPT pairing rules for bariatric surgery billing in detail. Sections address morbid obesity coding conventions, BMI-specific diagnosis codes and their documentation requirements, comorbidity documentation standards, and the correct coding sequences for both primary and revision bariatric surgical procedures.

Why Bariatric Surgery Coding Guide Teams Need a Better Workflow
Challenges

Common Bariatric Surgery Coding Guide Challenges We Solve

Every Bariatric Surgery Coding Guide team deals with payer delays, coding nuance, and collection leakage.

Always use E66.01 (morbid obesity) as primary diagnosis, never E66.09 for surgical cases

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

BMI code (Z68.x) must accompany E66.01. Neither code should stand alone on the claim.

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

For BMI 35-39.9, code ALL documented comorbidities to strengthen medical necessity

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

Modifier 22 on revisional cases adds 20-30% reimbursement with detailed operative report

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

Services

Complete Bariatric Surgery Coding Guide Resources

Support spans the full revenue cycle.

CPT Codes

Billing Process

Claim Denials

Revenue Cycle

Outsourcing

Bariatric Surgery Billing Hub

Coverage

Serving Bariatric Surgery Billing Teams Nationwide

We support independent practices and growing provider organizations.

Bariatric Surgery private practices

Bariatric Surgery multisite groups

Bariatric Surgery billing managers

Bariatric Surgery owners and operators

Guide

The Complete Guide to Bariatric Surgery Coding Guide

Bariatric Surgery Diagnosis Coding Foundation

Every bariatric surgery claim starts with the correct primary diagnosis. The ICD-10 code E66.01 (morbid/severe obesity due to excess calories) is the primary diagnosis for nearly all bariatric procedures. This code requires a documented BMI of 40 or greater, or 35 to 39.9 with comorbidities. The older code E66.09 (other obesity due to excess calories) applies to non-morbid obesity (BMI 30-39.9 without comorbidities) and does not support bariatric surgery medical necessity. Using E66.09 instead of E66.01 results in denial because it indicates a BMI range below the surgical threshold.

BMI Coding (Z68.x)

Always pair the obesity diagnosis with the corresponding BMI code from the Z68 range. Z68.35 through Z68.39 cover BMI 35-39.9, Z68.41 through Z68.44 cover BMI 40-44.9, and Z68.45 covers BMI 45 and above. The BMI code is a secondary code that provides specificity to the obesity diagnosis. For BMI 50 and above, use Z68.45 (BMI 45 or greater) because there is no code for BMI above 45 with more granularity. Document the exact BMI in the medical record even though the ICD-10 code groups BMI into ranges.

A common coding error is reporting the BMI code without the obesity diagnosis code. The BMI code (Z68.x) cannot be used as a standalone primary diagnosis. It must always accompany E66.01 or another obesity code. Similarly, reporting E66.01 without the supporting BMI code weakens the claim because it does not demonstrate that the BMI meets the surgical threshold.

Comorbidity Coding for BMI 35-39.9

When the patient BMI is 35 to 39.9, at least one obesity-related comorbidity must be documented and coded to support surgical medical necessity. The most commonly accepted comorbidities with their ICD-10 codes include: type 2 diabetes (E11.65 with hyperglycemia, E11.9 without complications), hypertension (I10), obstructive sleep apnea (G47.33), gastroesophageal reflux disease (K21.0), degenerative joint disease of weight-bearing joints (M17.11 for right knee, M17.12 for left knee), and hyperlipidemia (E78.5). Code all documented comorbidities, not just one, because multiple comorbidities strengthen the medical necessity argument.

Procedure and Diagnosis Pairing

CPT 43775 (laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy) pairs with E66.01 as primary and Z68.x as secondary, plus all applicable comorbidity codes. CPT 43644 (laparoscopic gastric bypass) uses the same diagnosis coding. When hiatal hernia repair (43281, ICD-10 K44.9) is performed concurrently, list the hernia diagnosis in addition to the obesity codes. When EGD (43235) is performed during the same session, pair it with the appropriate GI diagnosis (K21.0 for GERD, K25.9 for gastric ulcer) rather than the obesity code.

Modifier Usage in Bariatric Surgery

Modifier 22 (increased procedural services) applies to revisional bariatric procedures and cases with significant adhesions, altered anatomy, or BMI above 60 where the surgical difficulty is substantially increased. The operative report must specifically describe the additional work performed and the time added compared to a standard case. Modifier 22 typically adds 20% to 30% to the reimbursement. Modifier 51 (multiple procedures) applies when a second distinct procedure is performed during the same session (hiatal hernia repair with sleeve, band removal with bypass conversion). Modifier 59 (distinct procedural service) separates procedures that might otherwise be bundled, such as EGD during bariatric surgery when the EGD has its own medical indication.

Post-Operative Complication Coding

Complications after bariatric surgery require specific coding. Anastomotic leak: K91.89 (other postprocedural complications of the digestive system) or T81.31xA (disruption of surgical wound). Stricture at the anastomosis: K91.89 with procedure code 43245 (EGD with dilation). Dumping syndrome after gastric bypass: K91.1. Nutritional deficiencies: E53.8 (vitamin B deficiency), E56.0 (vitamin E deficiency), D50.9 (iron deficiency anemia), E83.42 (hypomagnesemia). Use modifier 78 for return to the operating room for a related complication within the global period, and modifier 24 for E/M visits related to complications that are distinct from routine postoperative care.

Key Bariatric Surgery ICD-10 and CPT Pairings

CPT Code Primary ICD-10 Required Secondary Codes
43775 (Lap sleeve) E66.01 Z68.x (BMI) + comorbidity codes
43644 (Lap bypass) E66.01 Z68.x (BMI) + comorbidity codes
43770 (Lap band) E66.01 Z68.x (BMI) + comorbidity codes
43281 (Hiatal hernia repair) K44.9 E66.01, Z68.x (when concurrent)
43245 (EGD with dilation) K91.89 T81.31xA (post-op complication)
43772 (Band removal) T85.09xA E66.01, Z68.x + complication code
Common Questions

Bariatric Surgery Coding Guide FAQ

Answers to the questions practice owners ask most often.

E66.01 (morbid/severe obesity due to excess calories) is the primary diagnosis for all bariatric surgical procedures. Always pair it with the appropriate Z68.x BMI code as a secondary diagnosis. Do not use E66.09 (other obesity due to excess calories) because it indicates a BMI below the morbid obesity threshold and does not support medical necessity for surgery. For BMI 35-39.9 cases, also list comorbidity codes (E11.x diabetes, I10 hypertension, G47.33 OSA) to demonstrate surgical indication.

Use modifier 22 when the procedure requires substantially more work than typical. Common scenarios include: revisional surgery with extensive lysis of adhesions, super-obese patients (BMI 60+) where anatomical access is significantly more difficult, conversion from one procedure type to another (band to bypass), and cases with unexpected findings requiring additional surgical work. The operative report must explicitly describe what additional work was performed and why it was necessary.

Bill CPT 43775 for the sleeve gastrectomy with E66.01 as primary diagnosis, and CPT 43281 for the laparoscopic hiatal hernia repair with K44.9 (diaphragmatic hernia) as the supporting diagnosis. Apply modifier 51 to 43281 as the secondary procedure. The operative report must document the hernia repair as a distinct procedure with its own findings and surgical technique description. Some payers bundle the hernia repair into the sleeve; appeal with the operative report showing two distinct procedures.

Common nutritional deficiency codes after bariatric surgery include: E53.8 (other vitamin B complex deficiency, used for B1/thiamine and B12), E56.0 (vitamin E deficiency), E56.1 (vitamin K deficiency), D50.9 (iron deficiency anemia, unspecified), E83.42 (hypomagnesemia), E55.9 (vitamin D deficiency), and E61.1 (iron deficiency). These codes are used for E/M visits and lab orders after the 90-day global period. The monitoring visits and labs are separately billable outside the global period.

READY TO GET STARTED?

Start Billing Smarter for Bariatric Surgery Coding Guide

Get a revenue review and a clear action plan tailored to your practice.

HIPAA Compliant · No Upfront Fees · No Long-Term Contracts