Orthopedic Revenue Cycle Overview
Orthopedic revenue cycle management must account for the bimodal nature of orthopedic billing: high-volume, moderate-value office visits and lower-volume, high-value surgical cases. A well-managed orthopedic practice generates $800,000 to $1.5 million per provider annually, with surgical revenue comprising 50% to 70% of total collections. The metrics that matter most differ between these two revenue streams.
Surgical Revenue Metrics
Track surgical revenue per case by procedure type. Total joint replacement should average $1,200 to $1,800 in surgeon professional fees (before facility fees). Arthroscopic procedures should average $400 to $700. Fracture ORIF averages $600 to $1,200 depending on complexity. If actual collections per case are significantly below these benchmarks, investigate payer contract rates and coding accuracy.
Surgical case volume per provider per month is a productivity metric. The benchmark for a full-time orthopedic surgeon is 30 to 50 surgical cases per month. Below 25 cases suggests scheduling inefficiency or referral pipeline issues. Above 55 raises quality and patient safety considerations.
Office Visit Revenue
Average revenue per office visit for orthopedics should be $140 to $200, higher than primary care due to the frequency of same-day procedures (injections, casting, X-ray interpretation) that add revenue beyond the E/M code. If office visit revenue is below $130, the practice is likely missing procedure charges or undercoding E/M levels.
Track procedure revenue per visit separately. An orthopedic office that averages $25 in procedure revenue per visit has room to improve. Practices performing routine in-office injections, X-ray interpretation, and casting/splinting average $40 to $60 in procedure revenue per visit.
Days in Accounts Receivable
Overall AR days for orthopedics should be 28 to 35 days. However, this metric masks important differences: office visit claims should adjudicate in 20 to 28 days, while surgical claims typically take 30 to 45 days due to higher claim values and more frequent payer review. Track AR separately for office and surgical claims to identify which category is driving the overall number.
Net Collection Rate
Net collection rate for orthopedics should be 96% or higher. The primary collection risks are surgical claim denials (high dollar impact per denial), patient responsibility on high-cost procedures (surgical copays can be $500 to $2,000+), and payer underpayments on contracted rates for surgical procedures. Monthly reconciliation of surgical payments against contracted rates catches underpayments before they age out of the appeal window.
Implant Cost Recovery
For practices that perform surgery in an outpatient or ambulatory surgery center, implant cost recovery is a critical financial metric. Track the percentage of implant costs that are recovered through payer reimbursement. The target is 100% recovery. If you are absorbing implant costs that should be passed through to payers, this represents a direct margin erosion that can amount to tens of thousands of dollars annually.
Payer Contract Optimization
Orthopedic payer contracts should be benchmarked against Medicare rates for the top 20 surgical CPT codes. Commercial payers should reimburse 120% to 180% of Medicare for surgical procedures and 130% to 160% for E/M services. Contracts below these ranges should be flagged for renegotiation during the next contract renewal cycle.