CPT CODE

CPT Code for Neurologist: A Practical Guide to Accurate Billing

If you have ever sat down to look at a neurology superbill, you already know it can feel a bit like trying to read a map in a foreign language. Between the sheer number of possible tests, the detailed nature of neurological exams, and the endless nuances of medical coding, it is easy to feel overwhelmed.

But here is the good news: understanding the right codes does not have to be a headache.

Whether you are a neurologist trying to ensure your practice runs smoothly, a new medical coder looking for clarity, or a practice manager trying to reduce claim denials, this guide is for you. We are going to walk through the most common Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes used in neurology.

We will keep things practical, grounded in reality, and focused on what actually works in a busy clinical setting. No fluff, no unrealistic promises—just a reliable roadmap to help you code with confidence.

Let us start by understanding why these codes matter so much in the first place.

CPT Code for Neurologist

CPT Code for Neurologist

Why Neurology Coding Demands Precision

Neurology is a specialty built on details. A patient might walk in with a complex set of symptoms—tingling in the fingers, memory lapses, or sudden weakness. To get to the bottom of it, you perform a detailed history, a comprehensive examination, and often, a series of diagnostic tests.

Each of these services must be translated into a code. If the code is wrong, the claim gets denied, or worse, it gets paid incorrectly and triggers an audit later.

Neurology coding is unique because it often combines evaluation and management (E/M) services with highly technical procedures like nerve conduction studies, electroencephalograms (EEGs), and electromyography (EMG). Knowing how to pair these correctly is the secret to clean claims.

“In neurology, the devil is in the details—not just in the diagnosis, but in how you document and code it. One missing element can turn a reimbursable service into a compliance risk.” — Experienced Neurology Practice Manager


The Foundation: Evaluation and Management (E/M) Codes for Neurologists

Before we jump into the high-tech procedures, let us talk about the bread and butter of any neurology practice: the office visit.

In 2021, the American Medical Association (AMA) overhauled the E/M coding guidelines for office and outpatient visits. These changes simplified many of the old rules, but they still require careful attention.

New Patient vs. Established Patient

The first distinction you need to make is whether the patient is new or established.

  • New patient: A patient who has not received any professional services from the neurologist (or another physician of the same specialty in the same group practice) within the past three years.

  • Established patient: A patient who has received professional services within the past three years.

Office/Outpatient E/M Codes

Here is a breakdown of the most frequently used E/M codes for neurologists. Under the new guidelines, code selection is based on either medical decision making (MDM) or total time on the date of the encounter.

Code Patient Type Typical Neurology Use
99202 New Patient Straightforward: brief headache check, refill of stable medication with minimal complexity.
99203 New Patient Low complexity: new patient with mild neuropathy, no urgent intervention needed.
99204 New Patient Moderate complexity: new seizure evaluation, migraine workup requiring detailed history and plan.
99205 New Patient High complexity: new onset stroke, complex movement disorder, or severe myasthenia gravis.
99212 Established Patient Straightforward: medication refill, stable patient with no new issues.
99213 Established Patient Low complexity: follow-up for migraines with mild change in treatment.
99214 Established Patient Moderate complexity: follow-up for epilepsy with medication adjustment; review of recent EEG.
99215 Established Patient High complexity: follow-up for multiple sclerosis with active symptoms; extensive review of systems.

A Note on Time vs. Medical Decision Making

Under the new rules, you have two ways to choose the level of service: MDM or time.

If you use time, it includes the total time spent on the day of the encounter. This includes:

  • Preparing to see the patient

  • Reviewing history and tests

  • Performing the examination

  • Counseling and educating the patient

  • Documenting the visit

You do not need to have counseling be more than 50% of the visit anymore. You simply document the total time and what you did during that time.

If you use MDM, you evaluate three elements:

  1. Number and complexity of problems addressed

  2. Amount and complexity of data reviewed

  3. Risk of complications, morbidity, or mortality

For neurologists, MDM often aligns well with complex cases where you review MRIs, EEGs, and lab results during the same visit.


Common Neurological Procedures and Their CPT Codes

Now let us get into the specialized procedures. These are the codes that really define neurology billing. When used correctly, they capture the complexity of the work you do.

Electroencephalography (EEG) Codes

EEGs are one of the cornerstones of neurology. Whether you are working up a seizure disorder or evaluating altered mental status, these codes come into play regularly.

CPT Code Description Neurology Context
95700 EEG setup, administration, and supervision (add-on code) This is a foundational code used with other EEG codes to capture the technical and professional components.
95716 EEG with video, 24 hours or more Long-term monitoring for epilepsy patients in an inpatient or outpatient setting.
95812 EEG with activation, 41–60 minutes Routine EEG with activation procedures like hyperventilation or photic stimulation.
95813 EEG with activation, more than 1 hour Extended EEG for longer monitoring.
95816 EEG awake and drowsy Standard EEG when the patient is awake and drowsy but not asleep.
95819 EEG awake and asleep Routine EEG that captures both awake and sleep states.
95822 EEG sleep only Used when the primary goal is to capture sleep patterns.
95827 EEG in coma or during surgery Specialized recording for intensive care or intraoperative monitoring.

Important Note: Many payers now require the use of 95700 as an add-on code for most EEG services. If you are still using older codes like 95812 without the add-on, your claims might be denied. Always check payer-specific guidelines.

Nerve Conduction Studies (NCS) and Electromyography (EMG)

When a patient presents with neuropathy, radiculopathy, or carpal tunnel syndrome, NCS and EMG are the go-to diagnostic tools. These codes are typically billed together, but they must be reported correctly.

Nerve conduction studies are often coded by the number of nerves studied. The key is to document how many motor and sensory nerves you test.

CPT Code Description Typical Use
95907 NCS, 1–2 studies Limited study, often for a single nerve like carpal tunnel screening.
95908 NCS, 3–4 studies More comprehensive evaluation of a limb.
95909 NCS, 5–6 studies Commonly used for generalized neuropathy or multiple limb involvement.
95910 NCS, 7–8 studies Extensive study, often for complex cases.
95911 NCS, 9–10 studies Maximum studies, typically for diffuse processes.
95912 NCS, 11–12 studies Rare, but used in research or highly complex neuromuscular cases.
95913 NCS, 13 or more studies Extensive evaluation.

For needle EMG, the code is based on the number of limbs or muscles tested.

CPT Code Description
95885 Needle EMG, one limb
95886 Needle EMG, two limbs
95887 Needle EMG, three limbs
95886 (with modifier) Four limbs (often billed with a modifier or as a separate line)

Combining NCS and EMG: When you perform both services, you typically bill the appropriate NCS code (95907–95913) and the appropriate EMG code (95885–95887). Do not use codes 95900–95904 unless you are dealing with older payer requirements. Stick to the 95907 series for modern billing.

Autonomic Nervous System Testing

Autonomic testing is increasingly common, especially for patients with Parkinson’s disease, diabetic neuropathy, or syncope.

CPT Code Description
95921 Autonomic function testing, parasympathetic (heart rate)
95922 Autonomic function testing, sympathetic (tilt table, Valsalva, etc.)
95923 Autonomic function testing, sudomotor (sweat testing)
95924 Combined autonomic testing (parasympathetic and sympathetic)

These tests are often bundled together depending on the clinical indication.


A Deeper Look at EMG and NCS Coding

Because EMG and NCS are so common in neurology, it is worth taking a deeper look. This is also one of the areas where mistakes happen most frequently.

The Difference Between NCS and EMG

Let us clarify the difference:

  • Nerve Conduction Studies (NCS): These evaluate the speed and strength of electrical signals traveling along nerves. They use electrodes placed on the skin.

  • Electromyography (EMG): This evaluates the electrical activity of muscles at rest and during contraction using a thin needle electrode inserted into the muscle.

These are distinct services. You cannot bill for an EMG if you only performed an NCS. Documentation must clearly support both.

Modifiers for Professional and Technical Components

Many of these codes have both a professional component (the interpretation) and a technical component (the equipment and technician). In a private practice setting, you typically bill the global code if you own the equipment and provide the interpretation.

However, in hospital settings or when billing for a facility, you may need to use modifiers:

  • 26: Professional component (physician interpretation)

  • TC: Technical component (facility or equipment)

  • No modifier: Global service (both components)

Example Scenario

A patient presents with right-hand numbness and suspected carpal tunnel syndrome. You perform NCS on 2 motor nerves and 2 sensory nerves in the right upper extremity (total of 4 studies) and perform a needle EMG on the right upper extremity.

Coding:

  • 95908 (NCS, 3–4 studies)

  • 95885 (Needle EMG, one limb)


Neuropsychological and Cognitive Testing

Neurologists often order or perform cognitive testing, especially in patients with dementia, traumatic brain injury, or multiple sclerosis.

CPT Code Description
96125 Cognitive testing by a physician or qualified professional
96130 Psychological testing evaluation services, first hour
96131 Psychological testing evaluation services, each additional hour
96132 Neuropsychological testing evaluation, first hour
96133 Neuropsychological testing evaluation, each additional hour
96136 Psychological or neuropsychological test administration and scoring, first 30 minutes
96137 Each additional 30 minutes

It is essential to differentiate between a brief cognitive assessment (like the Montreal Cognitive Assessment, MoCA) done during an E/M visit and comprehensive neuropsychological testing. Brief assessments are typically included in the E/M service and should not be billed separately unless you meet specific criteria.


Headache and Injection Codes

For neurologists treating headache disorders, trigger point injections, nerve blocks, and botulinum toxin injections are common procedures.

Botulinum Toxin (Botox) for Migraine

Botox is a mainstay for chronic migraine. The coding for this is specific.

CPT Code Description
64615 Chemodenervation of muscle(s); muscle(s) innervated by facial, trigeminal, cervical spinal, and accessory nerves, bilateral (e.g., for chronic migraine)

This is the code used for Botox injections for chronic migraine. It is a single code that covers the entire injection session. You should not bill separate injection codes for each muscle group.

Nerve Blocks and Trigger Point Injections

CPT Code Description
64400 Injection, anesthetic agent; trigeminal nerve
64405 Injection, anesthetic agent; greater occipital nerve
64450 Injection, anesthetic agent; other peripheral nerve or branch
20552 Trigger point injection, one or two muscles
20553 Trigger point injection, three or more muscles

For occipital nerve blocks, which are very common in headache neurology, 64405 is your code. Make sure to document laterality (left, right, or bilateral) as payers may require a modifier.


Inpatient and Consultative Codes

Neurologists are frequently called for inpatient consultations. Understanding the difference between consultation codes and subsequent hospital care is critical.

Consultation Codes

As of 2010, Medicare no longer recognizes consultation codes for inpatient settings. Many commercial payers have followed suit. However, some still require them. It is essential to know your payer.

If a payer still accepts consultation codes:

  • 99251: Inpatient consultation, low complexity

  • 99252: Moderate complexity

  • 99253: High complexity

If the payer does not accept consultation codes, you use initial hospital care codes:

  • 99221: Initial hospital care, low complexity

  • 99222: Moderate complexity

  • 99223: High complexity

Subsequent Hospital Care

For follow-up visits on subsequent days:

  • 99231: Low complexity

  • 99232: Moderate complexity

  • 99233: High complexity

Critical Care Codes

When a neurologist manages a patient in critical condition—such as status epilepticus, acute stroke, or myasthenic crisis—you may bill critical care codes.

CPT Code Description
99291 Critical care, first 30–74 minutes
99292 Critical care, each additional 30 minutes

Critical care coding requires documentation that the patient is critically ill and that you are providing intensive management. You cannot bill an E/M code on the same day as critical care unless you have a separately identifiable service that is not part of the critical care time.


Modifiers: The Unsung Heroes of Clean Claims

Modifiers are two-character add-ons that tell payers more about the service you provided. In neurology, certain modifiers come up again and again.

Common Modifiers in Neurology

Modifier Meaning Neurology Example
25 Significant, separately identifiable E/M service on the same day as a procedure Patient comes in for a migraine follow-up (99214) and also receives an occipital nerve block (64405). Append modifier 25 to the E/M code.
26 Professional component You interpret an EEG performed in a hospital. You own the equipment? No. You bill 95816-26.
TC Technical component The hospital or facility provides the equipment and technician for the EEG.
50 Bilateral procedure You perform bilateral nerve conduction studies.
59 Distinct procedural service Used to indicate that two procedures are separate and not bundled. Often used with EMG/NCS when performed on different limbs.
LT / RT Left side / Right side Used to specify which side was treated, especially for injections.

The Modifier 25 Trap

One of the biggest reasons for denials in neurology is the improper use (or omission) of modifier 25. If you perform a procedure like a nerve block or EMG on the same day as an E/M visit, you must append modifier 25 to the E/M code. Without it, the payer may bundle the E/M into the procedure and deny payment.


Documentation: The Key to Justifying Your Codes

No matter how accurate your coding is, if your documentation does not support it, you are at risk for denials and audits. Good documentation tells a story that aligns with the codes you choose.

What Payers Look For

For E/M services, your documentation should clearly show:

  • The history (even if it is problem-focused)

  • The examination findings

  • The medical decision making (problems, data, risk)

For procedures, your documentation should include:

  • Medical necessity: Why was the test or procedure necessary?

  • Details: How many nerves were studied? How many limbs? Which muscles?

  • Results: A clear interpretation of the findings

  • Time: If you use time-based coding, the total time must be documented

“Document as if you are explaining the case to another neurologist who was not there. That level of detail is what payers and auditors expect.” — Neurology Coding Consultant

Common Documentation Pitfalls

  1. Illegible or incomplete notes: This is an instant red flag for auditors.

  2. Copy-paste errors: Reusing old notes without updating them.

  3. Lack of medical necessity: Performing an EEG without clearly stating why it was needed.

  4. Missing laterality: Not indicating which side was tested or treated.

  5. Unbundling: Billing separately for services that are considered part of a comprehensive code.


Telehealth and Neurology

Telehealth has exploded in neurology, particularly for follow-up visits, medication management, and even some cognitive assessments. The coding landscape for telehealth has changed and continues to evolve.

Common Telehealth Codes

For many payers, telehealth visits are coded using the same E/M codes as in-person visits (99202–99215) with a modifier to indicate the service was performed via telehealth.

Modifier Meaning
93 Synchronous telemedicine service rendered via telephone or other real-time interactive audio-only telecommunications system
95 Synchronous telemedicine service rendered via real-time interactive audio and video telecommunications system

Important Considerations

  • Payer variability: Medicare and private payers have different rules about which codes are eligible for telehealth.

  • Place of service: For telehealth, the place of service code is often 02 (telehealth) rather than the location where the physician is physically located.

  • Originating site: The patient’s location may affect reimbursement.

  • Expiration of waivers: Many temporary telehealth flexibilities from the public health emergency have been extended but may change. Always verify current guidelines.


A Handy Quick Reference Table

To make your life easier, here is a quick reference table of the most common neurology CPT codes in one place.

Category CPT Code Brief Description
New Patient E/M 99202–99205 Office/outpatient new patient visits
Established E/M 99212–99215 Office/outpatient established patient visits
EEG 95700, 95812–95827 Routine EEG, long-term monitoring
NCS 95907–95913 Nerve conduction studies (1–13+ studies)
EMG 95885–95887 Needle EMG (1–3+ limbs)
Autonomic Testing 95921–95924 Heart rate, tilt, sweat testing
Botox 64615 Chemodenervation for chronic migraine
Occipital Nerve Block 64405 Injection for headache
Neuropsychological Testing 96130–96137 Evaluation and testing services
Inpatient Care 99221–99233 Initial and subsequent hospital care
Critical Care 99291–99292 Intensive management of critically ill patient

Helpful Lists for Daily Practice

To help you keep things straight, here are some practical checklists.

Checklist for EEG Billing

  • Did you use the appropriate primary code (95812, 95813, 95816, etc.)?

  • Did you add 95700 as an add-on code if required by the payer?

  • Did you document the duration of the recording?

  • Did you specify whether activation (photic, hyperventilation) was used?

  • Did you append modifier 26 if you only interpreted the study?

Checklist for EMG/NCS Billing

  • Did you document the number of nerves studied (motor and sensory separately)?

  • Did you select the correct NCS code (95907–95913) based on the total number of studies?

  • Did you document the number of limbs studied for EMG?

  • Did you use modifier 50 or LT/RT for bilateral studies?

  • Did you ensure the E/M code (if same day) has modifier 25?

Checklist for Headache Procedure Billing

  • Did you document medical necessity (e.g., chronic migraine, occipital neuralgia)?

  • Did you use 64615 for Botox for chronic migraine (not multiple injection codes)?

  • Did you use 64405 for greater occipital nerve block?

  • Did you document laterality (left, right, bilateral)?

  • Did you use modifier 25 on the E/M code if a separate visit occurred?


Important Notes for Readers

  • Payer policies vary widely. What is true for Medicare may not be true for a commercial payer. Always verify specific payer guidelines, especially for telehealth, modifiers, and add-on codes.

  • Code definitions change. The AMA updates CPT codes annually. Ensure you are using the most current edition of the CPT manual.

  • Audits are real. Payers are increasingly auditing high-cost specialties like neurology. Clean documentation and accurate coding are your best defense.

  • Consider certified coders. If your practice struggles with denials, investing in a certified professional coder (CPC) with neurology experience can pay for itself many times over.

  • Do not unbundle. Some codes include multiple components. For example, an E/M service includes brief cognitive assessments. Do not bill separately for a MoCA unless it is a distinct, separately identifiable service that exceeds what is normally included.


Additional Resource

For the most up-to-date information on neurology coding and reimbursement, the American Academy of Neurology (AAN) offers excellent resources, including coding workshops, webinars, and a dedicated coding hotline for members. You can explore their resources here:
American Academy of Neurology – Practice Management & Coding


Conclusion

Navigating the world of neurology CPT codes does not have to be overwhelming. By focusing on the most common codes—E/M visits, EEGs, EMG/NCS, and headache procedures—you can build a solid foundation for clean claims and fair reimbursement. Remember that accurate documentation is the backbone of good coding; every code you select must tell a story supported by the medical record. Stay current with payer policies, use modifiers correctly, and never hesitate to seek expert guidance when a case presents unusual complexity.


Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

1. What is the most common CPT code used by neurologists?
The most common codes are evaluation and management (E/M) codes for office visits, specifically 99213 and 99214 for established patients, and 99203 and 99204 for new patients.

2. Do I need to use modifier 25 with every E/M code when I do a procedure?
Only if the E/M service is separately identifiable and significant from the procedure performed on the same day. For example, if you evaluate a patient for new symptoms and then perform an occipital nerve block, you would append modifier 25 to the E/M code.

3. Can I bill for both an EMG and NCS on the same day?
Yes, these are distinct services. You should bill the appropriate NCS code (95907–95913) and the appropriate needle EMG code (95885–95887). Ensure your documentation clearly supports both.

4. What is the difference between 95812 and 95816 for EEG?
95812 is an EEG with activation (like photic stimulation) for 41–60 minutes. 95816 is an EEG that records the patient awake and drowsy without requiring specific activation procedures.

5. How do I bill for Botox injections for chronic migraine?
Use CPT code 64615 for chemodenervation of muscles innervated by the facial, trigeminal, cervical spinal, and accessory nerves. This is a single code for the entire injection session.

6. Are telehealth visits coded differently from in-person visits?
Generally, you use the same E/M codes (99202–99215) but add a telehealth modifier (93 for audio-only or 95 for audio-video) and use place of service code 02, depending on payer requirements.

7. What should I do if my claim is denied for a missing modifier?
Review the denial reason, correct the claim by adding the appropriate modifier (if applicable), and resubmit it. If the service was indeed payable, an appeal with supporting documentation may be necessary.

8. Where can I find reliable, up-to-date coding information?
The American Medical Association (AMA) publishes the CPT code set annually. The American Academy of Neurology (AAN) also provides specialty-specific guidance. Your local Medicare Administrative Contractor (MAC) is also a reliable source for Medicare policies.

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