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Behavioral Health Billing: Complete Guide to Mental Health Claims

Navigate the extreme complexities of psychiatric billing. Master critical CPT codes like 90837, complex telehealth modifiers, and intensive prior authorization rules to stop revenue leakage in your mental health clinic.

Reading Time: 13 min
Last Updated: January 2025

Prismatica Health Editorial Team

AAPC-Certified Behavioral Health Billing Experts | 10+ Years Experience

Disclaimer: The CPT codes and telehealth modifiers detailed below reflect prevailing AMA and CMS guidelines at publication. Private commercial payers repeatedly modify their behavioral health reimbursement policies mid-year. Always verify specific provider contracts prior to submitting claims.

What are the most common CPT codes used in behavioral health? The core CPT codes for behavioral health are 90791 for psychiatric diagnostic evaluations without medical services, 90834 for 45-minute psychotherapy, 90837 for 60-minute extended psychotherapy, and 90847 for family psychotherapy with the primary patient present. Using these accurately requires meticulous time documentation.

1. Essential Behavioral Health CPT Codes

Unlike acute surgical procedures that rely on tangible outcomes, behavioral health billing is overwhelmingly time-based. A discrepancy of simply three minutes recorded in the clinical chart can fundamentally change the required CPT code, moving the claim from legitimate to fraudulent if over-billed.

CPT Code Description & Application Time Requirements
90791 Psychiatric Diagnostic Evaluation: The initial intake session. Used to assess the patient's history, mental status, and develop a treatment plan. Does not include medical evaluation. Untimed (Typically 60+ min)
90792 Psychiatric Diagnostic Evaluation with Medical Services: Initial intake specifically performed by an MD or prescriber (Psychiatrist/Psychiatric NP) involving prescription management. Untimed (Typically 60+ min)
90834 Psychotherapy (45 Minutes): The standard industry code for a highly targeted individual therapy session. 38 to 52 minutes
90837 Psychotherapy (60 Minutes): Extended individual therapy. Warning: Heavily audited by commercial payers due to higher reimbursement rates. 53+ minutes
90847 Family Psychotherapy: Therapy involving the patient's family members with the actual patient physically present. Untimed (Typically 45-50 min)
96130-96139 Psychological/Neuropsychological Testing: Complex cognitive and psychological testing evaluation services, often mapped by base and add-on hours. Time-based add-ons
97151-97158 Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA): Specialized codes for treating Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), including behavior identification and adaptive behavior treatment. Mapped in 15-min increments

Warning on 90837

Submitting excessive volumes of 90837 (60-minute therapy) relative to 90834 (45-minute therapy) is a massive algorithmic red flag for commercial payers. Insurers aggressively demand comprehensive medical necessity documentation to justify why the extended duration was clinically imperative.

2. Mastering Telehealth (Modifier 95 & POS)

The catastrophic shift toward digital therapy post-2020 vastly complicated claims. Submitting a telehealth claim using the traditional "in-office" criteria guarantees a brutal denial.

To assert that the 90834 session occurred digitally, billers must append Modifier 95 (Synchronous Telemedicine Service Rendered via a Real-Time Interactive Audio and Video Telecommunications System) to the specific CPT line.

Furthermore, the Place of Service (POS) code on the CMS-1500 form must be altered. Historically, POS 02 indicated all telehealth. Currently, CMS strictly differentiates: POS 10 signifies the patient is located in their own home during the call, while POS 02 indicates the patient is located at a different clinical facility (like a hospital) during the transmission. Interchanging these guarantees a rejection.

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Can you bill for behavioral health prior authorizations? Generally, no. Securing prior authorizations is considered an administrative burden, and insurance carriers do not offer a CPT code or direct reimbursement for the administrative time spent on phone calls or portal submissions required to authorize psychological care or inpatient psychiatric treatment.

3. The Prior Authorization Battlefield

In prior authorization, behavioral health is one of the most highly restricted specialties in medicine. Because mental health treatment lengths are subjectively variable compared to an appendectomy, payers utilize aggressive gatekeeping.

Many commercial plans allow the initial intake evaluation (90791) without an authorization. However, subsequent intensive services (like Psychological Testing 96130, or intensive ABA therapy) strictly demand a pre-certified authorization number printed directly on Box 23 of the CMS-1500 claim form. Securing this frequently requires submitting heavily detailed clinical assessments explicitly justifying the ongoing medical necessity of therapy.

4. Bulletproof Clinical Documentation

The golden rule of medical billing dictates: "If it wasn't documented, it never happened." In the event of a commercial audit or a RAC (Recovery Audit Contractor) review, your clinical notes must flawlessly justify the billed CPT codes.

  • Start and Stop Times: Never vaguely write "Session was 45 minutes." You must precisely log: "Session began at 2:05 PM, concluded at 2:50 PM."
  • Modality and Interventions: Explicitly detail the specific therapeutic modality utilized (CBT, DBT, EMDR).
  • Patient Response: Document the patient's exact cognitive processing and emotional reaction to the therapeutic intervention.
  • Risk Assessment: Always include an updated suicidal/homicidal ideation risk assessment per session.

5. Billing for Group Therapy Correctly

Group therapy (CPT Code 90853) represents a massive compliance trap. When eight patients sit in a room for a 60-minute session, the provider cannot bill eight individual 90837 (60-minute individual) charges. The provider must bill the single group therapy code (90853) perfectly replicated across all eight distinct patient ledgers.

6. 4 Common Mental Health Denials

Despite your best clinical efforts, payers will aggressively weaponize the following four operational errors to construct catastrophic claim denials:

  1. Expired Authorizations: Administering the 11th individual therapy session when the payer only explicitly authorized 10 sessions.
  2. Missing Telehealth Modifiers: Forgetting the crucial Modifier 95 or neglecting to switch the POS from 11 (Office) to 10 (Telehealth Home).
  3. Same-Day Exclusions: Attempting to simultaneously bill an individual therapy session (90834) and a group therapy session (90853) on the exact same date of service requires a Modifier 59 (Distinct Procedural Service) and fierce clinical justification.
  4. Invalid Diagnosis Codes: Submitting "Z-Codes" (e.g., Z63.0 Problems in relationship with spouse) as a primary diagnosis. Commercial insurances fundamentally demand an acute Axis I clinical diagnosis (e.g., F32.1 Major Depressive Disorder) to justify medical necessity for reimbursement.

7. Credentialing Traps for Therapists

Provider credentialing in mental health is a tortuous waiting game. A practice cannot simply hire an LCSW (Licensed Clinical Social Worker) or LPC (Licensed Professional Counselor) and begin billing BlueCross the next morning. It routinely takes 90 to 120 days to properly enroll a mid-level provider onto commercial panels and integrate them safely with the practice's Group NPI. Billing under the supervising psychiatrist?s NPI ("Incident-To" billing) while the LCSW waits for approval is heavily restricted and frequently prosecuted as fraud if exact supervisory criteria are ignored.

8. Reclaiming Lost Revenue Structuring

Psychiatrists and therapists frequently open independent clinics to escape massive hospital bureaucracies, only to find themselves completely anchored to their computers at 9:00 PM fighting Anthem BlueCross over a $95 denial.

By leveraging specialized outsourced RCM agencies like Prismatica Health, mental health practitioners completely offload the agony of battling clearinghouse rejections, filing appeals, and verifying brutal HDHP (High Deductible) insurance eligibilities. Our highly trained teams enforce a 98% clean claim architecture, ensuring behavioral health providers possess the maximum possible clinical focus alongside mathematically predictable, accelerated cash flows.

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Frequently Asked Questions

While technically possible if every single session exceeds 53 minutes of strictly therapeutic interaction, billing 90837 exclusively is highly discouraged. Commercial payers utilize algorithms that flag providers who bill substantially more 90837s than 90834s, triggering brutal medical necessity audits that freeze all incoming payments.

Group therapy (90853) must be billed identically on an individual basis for every specific patient who attended the session. You cannot bill an individual therapy charge (e.g., 90834) when a patient functioned as part of a collective multipatient group, regardless of the time elapsed.

Most commercial insurance plans explicitly exclude "marriage counseling" (Z-codes) from medical benefit coverage. To legitimately bill for couples therapy under code 90847 (Family Psychotherapy), one partner must be firmly identified as the "identified patient" maintaining a primary acute mental health diagnosis (like Generalized Anxiety Disorder), and the session's documented goal must be specifically treating that individual's core pathology.