Family medicine practices handle a broad mix of evaluation and management visits, preventive care, chronic disease management, and acute illness treatment. Accurate CPT code selection directly determines reimbursement for every encounter. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), which administers Medicare Part B and sets national payment rates through the Medicare Physician Fee Schedule (MPFS), updates reimbursement values annually. Understanding which codes apply to each visit type, which modifiers are required, and which documentation elements support each code level is the foundation of a healthy revenue cycle for family medicine billing.
Evaluation and Management CPT Codes for Family Medicine
The most frequently billed family medicine CPT codes fall within the office-based evaluation and management (E/M) range (99202-99215). These codes are divided into new patient visits (99202-99205) and established patient visits (99211-99215). Since the 2021 E/M code revisions published by the American Medical Association (AMA), code selection is based on medical decision making (MDM) or total time spent, rather than the former three-component key element approach. For established patients, CPT code 99213 (moderate complexity MDM or 20-29 minutes) and CPT code 99214 (moderate-to-high complexity MDM or 30-39 minutes) account for the majority of family medicine volume.
Preventive Care CPT Codes for Annual Wellness and Physicals
Preventive medicine visits are a major component of family medicine billing. CPT codes 99381-99397 cover preventive visits by age group. For established patients, CPT 99392 covers ages 1-4, CPT 99393 covers ages 5-11, CPT 99394 covers ages 12-17, and CPT 99395 covers ages 18-39. These codes include a comprehensive review of history, physical examination, and anticipatory guidance appropriate to the patient’s age group. When a significant and separately identifiable problem-oriented service is performed on the same date as a preventive visit, modifier 25 must be appended to the problem-oriented E/M code (99213 or 99214) to avoid bundling denials.
Chronic Care Management and Wellness Codes
Family medicine practices managing patients with two or more chronic conditions may bill CPT 99490 for non-face-to-face chronic care management (CCM) services. CCM requires at least 20 minutes of clinical staff time per calendar month, a comprehensive care plan, and patient consent documented in the medical record. Medicare’s annual wellness visit codes, HCPCS G0438 (initial) and G0439 (subsequent), are distinct from the standard preventive medicine codes and are not payable on the same date as a standard preventive visit. Practices that confuse G0438/G0439 with CPT 99395-99397 generate preventable CO-18 duplicate claim denials.
Vaccine Administration Codes
Family medicine offices routinely administer immunizations. CPT 90460 covers vaccine administration for patients through age 18 with counseling by the physician or qualified health professional, with add-on code 90461 for each additional vaccine antigen. For patients 19 and older, CPT 90471 covers the first injection and 90472 covers each additional injection. The vaccine product itself is billed separately using the appropriate CPT or HCPCS supply code (e.g., 90686 for quadrivalent influenza vaccine). Bundling vaccine product and administration codes incorrectly is a common source of CO-4 (code inconsistent with modifier) and CO-97 (payment included in allowance for another service) denials.
Documentation Requirements for Code Support
CMS and commercial payers require medical records to support the level of service billed. For MDM-based E/M coding, the record must document the number and complexity of problems addressed, the amount and complexity of data reviewed, and the risk of complications. For time-based billing, the total time spent on date of service must be documented. Preventive visit documentation must include a comprehensive history, examination, and counseling elements appropriate to the patient’s age and risk factors. Inadequate documentation is the primary driver of CO-16 (claim lacks information) and post-payment audit recoupments in family medicine.
Frequently Asked Questions About Family Medicine CPT Codes
What is the most commonly billed family medicine CPT code?
CPT 99213 and CPT 99214 are the most frequently billed family medicine codes. CPT 99213 covers established patient visits with moderate complexity MDM or 20-29 minutes of total time, while CPT 99214 covers moderate-to-high complexity MDM or 30-39 minutes. Together these two codes represent the majority of family medicine E/M volume.
How does family medicine billing handle same-day preventive and problem visits?
When a family medicine physician performs both a preventive visit and a separately identifiable problem-oriented E/M visit on the same date, modifier 25 is appended to the problem-oriented code (e.g., 99213-25). This signals to the payer that the two services are distinct encounters, preventing automatic bundling. Documentation must clearly separate the preventive and problem-based elements of the visit.
What is the CMS reimbursement rate for a family medicine annual wellness visit?
The CMS Medicare annual wellness visit codes G0438 (initial) and G0439 (subsequent) are covered at 100% with no patient cost-sharing under Medicare Part B when performed by a qualified provider. The 2026 national average reimbursement for G0439 is approximately $107. Rates vary by geographic practice cost index (GPCI) adjustment.
When should family medicine practices bill CPT 99490 for chronic care management?
CPT 99490 applies when a family medicine provider or clinical staff member spends at least 20 minutes per calendar month managing care for a patient with two or more chronic conditions expected to last at least 12 months or until death. Requirements include a structured electronic care plan, 24/7 access arrangements, and documented patient consent obtained before the service begins.