Ophthalmology billing demands more than general medical coding knowledge. Between global surgical packages, diagnostic testing nuances, and modifier-driven claims, eye care practices face unique revenue cycle challenges. Medhasty Medical Billing delivers specialized ophthalmology billing services that maximize reimbursement, reduce audit risk, and accelerate cash flow.
Our AAPC-certified ophthalmology coders assign precise procedure codes for every service—from routine comprehensive eye exams (CPT 92004, 92014) to complex retinal repairs (CPT 67108, 67228). We ensure every claim carries the correct diagnosis linkage (ICD-10-CM) and HCPCS codes for supplies and drugs (e.g., anti-VEGF medications like bevacizumab and aflibercept).
We manage the complete surgical billing lifecycle: pre-authorization, procedure coding, modifier application, claim submission, and post-operative global period tracking. We distinguish between major surgeries (90-day global) and minor procedures (10-day or 0-day global) and apply modifiers 24, 55, 56, 57, 58, 78, and 79 appropriately.
Medhasty bills all common ophthalmology diagnostic tests, including OCT (CPT 92133, 92134), visual fields (CPT 92081-92083), fundus photography (CPT 92250), corneal topography (CPT 92025), and fluorescein angiography (CPT 92235, 92240). We handle the technical component (TC), professional component (26), and global billing based on your practice’s facility arrangement.
Every ophthalmology claim is scrubbed against payer-specific editing rules before submission. We validate modifiers, check NCCI edits, confirm medical necessity through diagnosis-to-procedure logic, and verify laterality indicators. This pre-submission rigor targets a 95%+ clean claim rate.
When denials occur—and they will, even in the best-run practices—Medhasty’s denial management team analyzes root causes within 24 hours. We write and submit tailored appeal letters, provide requested medical records, and track appeals through to payment. Our ophthalmology denial appeal success rate exceeds 85%.
Aged A/R is trapped revenue. Medhasty provides active A/R follow-up, working aged insurance balances through targeted payer contact, secondary claims, and appeals. We reduce A/R days for ophthalmology practices from industry averages of 45–60 days to 30 days or fewer.
Ophthalmology practices across the United States select Medhasty over national competitors for specific, proven reasons.
Deep Specialty Billing Knowledge: Medhasty’s coders are not generalists who occasionally bill eye care. We are specialists who understand the nuances of OCT billing, global period management, and NCCI edits specific to ophthalmology. This depth of knowledge translates directly into higher net collection rates.
Dedicated Account Management: You are not a number in a large call center. Medhasty assigns a dedicated account manager to every ophthalmology client—a single point of contact who knows your practice, your payers, and your revenue goals.
Transparent Reporting and Insights: You receive monthly KPI dashboards showing clean claim rates, denial reasons, A/R aging, and net collection rates. No black boxes. No vague promises. Just clear, actionable data about your revenue cycle performance.
Proactive Regulatory Monitoring: Medicare LCDs change. NCCI edits update quarterly. Commercial payers revise pre-authorization requirements without notice. Medhasty monitors these changes continuously and updates our billing protocols proactively.
HIPAA-Compliant and Secure: All patient data is handled through HIPAA-compliant channels with a Business Associate Agreement (BAA) in place. Your protected health information is secure.
Medhasty’s ophthalmology billing expertise spans the full range of eye care subspecialties. Each has unique coding and documentation requirements that our team handles with precision.
Retina billing involves anti-VEGF injections (J2778, J0178, J3590), retinal detachment repairs (67108, 67113), and photocoagulation (67228). We manage the high-volume, high-frequency injection billing with accurate diagnosis linkage (H35.30 for macular degeneration) and proper modifier use for bilateral or multiple injections.
Glaucoma billing includes trabeculectomy (66170), tube shunt placement (66180), laser trabeculoplasty (65855), and minimally invasive glaucoma surgery (MIGS) codes (e.g., 0191T, 0376T). We track visual field frequency limitations and ensure OCT documentation supports ongoing medical necessity.
Cataract surgery is the most common major surgery in ophthalmology. Medhasty bills complex and routine cataract extractions (66984, 66982), laser-assisted cataract surgery (66987, 66988), and premium IOLs with appropriate HCPCS and modifiers. We manage global periods, post-op transfers, and ABNs for non-covered services.
Pediatric ophthalmology billing involves distinct CPT codes for strabismus surgery (67311-67346), amblyopia treatment, and retinopathy of prematurity (ROP) exams. Medicaid and CHIP billing rules for pediatric eye care vary by state; Medhasty navigates these variations for compliant reimbursement.
Cornea billing includes penetrating keratoplasty (65710), endothelial keratoplasty (DSEK/DMEK – 65756), and cross-linking for keratoconus (0402T, 0403T). Refractive surgery (LASIK, PRK) is typically not covered by insurance but requires accurate coding for patient billing and any covered medically necessary components (e.g., PRK for corneal scarring).
Even well-managed practices face predictable revenue leakage. Here are the most frequent culprits, and how Medhasty solves them.
Incorrect Modifier Usage → Denials: Modifier errors are the #1 denial driver in eye care. Modifier 25 (same-day E/M) is often used incorrectly, either without supporting documentation or when Modifier 57 (major surgery decision) was appropriate. Modifier 79 (unrelated post-op procedure) is another frequent misfire. Each error = denied claim + delayed payment.
Missed Charges for Diagnostic Procedures: OCT scans, visual fields, and fundus photography are frequently performed, interpreted, and documented, but never billed. In a busy practice, these charges fall through the cracks.
Surgical Bundling & Unbundling Errors: NCCI includes hundreds of ophthalmology-specific procedure edits. Billing cataract extraction (66984) with a corneal transplant (65710) on the same eye may require Modifier 59 or XU to bypass edits. Unbundling—billing separately for bundled services—triggers denials and audit risk.
Delayed Payments from Payers: Ophthalmology claims face delays due to payer-specific medical necessity reviews. Each Medicare MAC has different LCDs for visual fields and OCT. A clinically correct claim with insufficient MAC-specific documentation will spend for weeks before denying.
Incomplete or Inaccurate Documentation: Documentation deficiencies cause most denials: missing laterality (RT/LT), incomplete MDM rationale, lack of signed operative reports, and failure to document medical necessity for diagnostic tests.
Measurable results are the only meaningful metric.
Here is how Medhasty transforms ophthalmology revenue cycle performance.
Increase Clean Claim Rates and Faster Payments: By scrubbing every claim for modifier accuracy, NCCI compliance, and medical necessity before submission, Medhasty achieves clean claim rates of 95% or higher. Clean claims pay faster—typically within 14–21 days for electronic claims.
Reduce Denials Related to Modifiers and Bundling: Modifier errors and NCCI unbundling denials are preventable. Medhasty’s coding team applies modifiers correctly the first time, reducing first-pass denial rates from industry averages of 15–25% to 5% or less.
Improve Cash Flow and Reduce A/R Days: Faster claim submission, fewer denials, and aggressive A/R follow-up combine to reduce days in accounts receivable from 45–60 days to 30 days or fewer. Improved cash flow means more working capital for your practice.
Identify Missed Billing Opportunities: Medhasty’s charge capture audits regularly identify missed billable services—unbilled diagnostic tests, unreported minor procedures, and overlooked E/M services. Capturing these missed charges typically increases practice revenue by 3–7% in the first year alone.
Ophthalmology practices must navigate a complex web of payer-specific rules. Medhasty stays current with all of them.
Medicare has specific requirements for cataract surgery billing:
Medicaid coverage for ophthalmology services varies significantly by state. Some states restrict routine eye exam coverage for adults, while others cover only medically necessary services. Medhasty maintains state-specific Medicaid billing guides for all 50 states, ensuring compliant claims regardless of your practice location.
Commercial payers frequently require pre-authorization for:
Medhasty manages the pre-authorization workflow, including clinical documentation submission, authorization tracking, and notification of approvals before service delivery.
Transparency and predictability define Medhasty’s approach to ophthalmology revenue cycle management. Here is our step-by-step process.
Before the patient arrives or the procedure is scheduled, we verify insurance eligibility, confirm benefits, and obtain required pre-authorizations—especially for cataract surgery, retinal injections, and advanced diagnostic testing.
Our certified coders review clinical documentation to assign accurate CPT, ICD-10-CM, and HCPCS codes. We apply correct modifiers (24, 25, 57, 79, RT, LT, 50, 59) and ensure diagnosis-to-procedure code linkages meet payer medical necessity requirements.
All charges are entered into your practice management system or Medhasty’s secure platform. Claims are built with complete, accurate data—patient demographics, provider information, procedure codes, modifiers, diagnosis pointers, and place of service.
Claims are submitted electronically to Medicare, Medicaid, and commercial payers within 48 hours of charge entry. We monitor claim acceptance and resolve any rejections immediately.
Payments from payers and patients are posted accurately, with contractual adjustments applied according to your fee schedules. We reconcile ERA/EOB files daily and identify payment variances that may indicate underpayment.
Denied or underpaid claims are routed to our denial management team for root cause analysis and appeal. Aging A/R is worked systematically, with priority given to high-dollar claims and claims approaching timely filing limits.
Stop leaving revenue on the table due to modifier errors, missed diagnostic charges, and global period confusion. Medhasty Medical Billing offers a free, no-obligation ophthalmology billing audit that identifies your current denial patterns, charge capture gaps, and revenue leakage points.
FAQS
Ophthalmology billing involves three layers of complexity that most specialties don't face simultaneously: (1) high-volume surgical procedures with 90-day global periods, (2) frequent diagnostic testing with strict frequency limitations and technical/professional component splits, and (3) heavy reliance on modifiers (24, 25, 57, 79, RT, LT, 50) that are frequently misunderstood and misapplied.
Modifiers tell payers that a service was modified in some way—performed on a different day, in a different anatomical location, or under different circumstances. Using the wrong modifier (e.g., 25 instead of 57) results in a denial. Omission of a required modifier (e.g., RT/LT for unilateral procedures) also causes denial. Correct modifier application is essential for reimbursement.
The most frequent ophthalmology billing errors include: incorrect modifier usage (especially 25 vs. 57), missed charges for diagnostic tests (OCT, visual fields), surgical unbundling (billing separately for procedures NCCI says should be bundled), incomplete laterality documentation, and insufficient medical necessity documentation for testing frequency.
Medhasty manages the complete surgical billing lifecycle, including pre-authorization, surgical coding, modifier application (57 for decision, 24 for unrelated post-op visits, 55/56 for shared care), claim submission, and global period tracking to ensure you do not improperly bill for bundled post-operative care.
Reducing ophthalmology denials requires a multi-pronged approach: (1) pre-submission claim scrubbing for modifier and NCCI compliance, (2) documentation education for providers, (3) payer-specific submission protocols, and (4) rapid denial root cause analysis and appeal. Medhasty delivers all four components as part of our standard ophthalmology billing service.
The global surgical period is the time following a procedure during which all routine post-operative care is bundled into the original procedure payment. Major ophthalmology surgeries (cataract, glaucoma filtering, retinal repair) have a 90-day global period. Minor procedures (laser capsulotomy, punctal cautery) have a 10-day global period. Billing separately for post-op visits during this period requires a specific modifier (24 for unrelated services).
Medhasty targets claim submission within 48 hours of charge entry and documentation completion. Rapid submission reduces A/R aging and accelerates your cash flow.
Let our medical billing experts optimize your revenue cycle management. We enable healthcare practices to increase cash flow and avoid denials. Permanently!