December 15, 2025

Mental health services are essential but getting paid for them depends heavily on accurate CPT coding, correct time reporting, and strong documentation. Even small mistakes can lead to denied claims, underpayment, or compliance risk. Because mental health billing rules differ from many other specialties, providers and practices need a clear understanding of which CPT codes apply to which services.
This guide walks through the most commonly used mental health CPT codes, explains when and how to use them, and highlights documentation and billing considerations that directly affect reimbursement.
Mental health CPT codes describe the type of service provided, not just the diagnosis. Unlike many procedural specialties, mental health coding is largely time-based and influenced by the provider’s credentials and whether medical decision making is involved.
These codes are used to communicate with payers:
Mental health CPT codes generally fall into a few major categories: diagnostic evaluations, psychotherapy, medication management, crisis care, and group/family therapy.
Diagnostic evaluation codes are used when a patient is being assessed for the first time or re-evaluated after a significant gap in care. These services focus on diagnosis and treatment planning, not therapy.
This code is used for a comprehensive mental health assessment without medical services. It is typically billed by non-prescribing providers such as psychologists and licensed therapists.
The evaluation usually includes:
Important billing note:
This code applies when the diagnostic evaluation includes medical decision-making, such as prescribing or adjusting medication.
It is commonly billed by:
The service includes:
Key distinction:
The presence of medical services is what separates 90792 from 90791.
Psychotherapy codes are among the most frequently used—and most denied—codes in mental health billing. These codes are selected based on face-to-face therapy time, not total appointment length.
Accurate time tracking is critical, as each code has a defined time range.
This code is used for shorter therapy sessions, typically lasting 16 to 37 minutes.
Common scenarios include:
Documentation must clearly reflect:
This is the most commonly billed psychotherapy code, covering sessions of 38 to 52 minutes.
It is often used for:
Because it aligns with typical therapy session lengths, payers generally view this code as low risk when appropriately documented.
This code applies to extended therapy sessions lasting 53 minutes or more.
Important caution:
Best practice:
Use this code only when clinically appropriate and well-supported by detailed notes.
Some mental health visits include both medical management and psychotherapy. In these cases, psychotherapy is billed as an add-on code to an E/M service.
These codes apply only when both services are clearly documented and distinct.
These codes represent psychotherapy provided alongside an E/M visit:
Billing requirements include:
Failure to separate documentation is a common cause of denial.
Medication-only visits are billed using office visit E/M codes, not psychotherapy codes.
These codes are used for:
Code selection is based on:
Clear documentation of assessment, medication changes, and clinical reasoning is essential.
Mental health treatment often involves families or groups, which require separate CPT codes and documentation standards.
This code is used for therapy delivered in a group setting with multiple patients.
Documentation should include:
Each patient is billed individually using the same code.
Used when family members are treated without the patient present, often for education or behavioral planning.
Used when the patient participates actively in family therapy.
Correct selection depends on whether the patient was present during the session.
Crisis codes apply when a patient experiences an acute mental health crisis requiring immediate intervention.
These codes require:
These are high-scrutiny codes and should be used carefully.
Most mental health CPT codes can be billed for telehealth, but billing rules vary by payer.
Common requirements include:
Always verify payer-specific telehealth policies to avoid denials.
Even experienced mental health providers lose revenue due to small but costly billing and coding mistakes. These errors don’t just slow payments—they increase denials, trigger audits, and create compliance risks. Understanding where things go wrong is the first step toward building a clean, repeatable billing process.
Below are the most common mental health billing and coding errors, along with practical ways to prevent them.
Mental health CPT codes are time-based, yet many claims are denied because the documented session length doesn’t match the billed code.
Providers estimate time instead of documenting it precisely or default to the same code for every visit.
How to avoid it:
Codes 90791 and 90792 are meant for initial or major reassessments, not routine does follow-ups.
Practices mistakenly rebill diagnostic codes when treatment continues or when patients return after short gaps.
How to avoid it:
When medication management and therapy occur in the same visit, both services must be clearly distinct.
Documentation blends therapy and medical decision-making into a single note.
How to avoid it:
Payers closely review time-based mental health claims, and missing time details are a common reason for denial.
Notes describe therapy content but omit session duration.
How to avoid it:
Not all providers can bill the same CPT codes, and mismatches lead to rejected claims.
Credentialing status or scope-of-practice rules are overlooked.
How to avoid it:
Telehealth mental health services are widely covered, but billing rules vary by payer and state.
Incorrect place of service or missing telehealth modifiers.
How to avoid it:
Even correctly coded claims are denied when medical necessity is unclear.
Notes lack clinical justification, progress updates, or diagnosis linkage.
How to avoid it:
Copy-paste notes may save time, but they raise red flags for payers.
Templates aren’t customized per session.
How to avoid it:
Mental health billing is more than selecting the right CPT code—it’s about precision, consistency, and compliance at every step. From choosing the correct time-based psychotherapy codes to documenting medical necessity and avoiding common billing errors, each detail directly affects reimbursement. Practices that follow a structured coding workflow experience fewer denials, faster payments, and stronger financial stability. When billing is handled correctly, providers gain the freedom to focus on patient care without constant revenue disruptions.
Medix Revenue Group helps mental health practices eliminate denials, clean up coding errors, and get paid accurately and on time. Our specialty-focused billing and RCM experts manage your claims, AR, and compliance so revenue flows without the stress.