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General Surgery Billing and Coding Guidelines: A Complete Guide for 2026

General surgery encompasses one of the broadest procedural footprints in outpatient medicine — from laparoscopic cholecystectomy and appendectomy to hernia repair, bowel resection, skin and soft tissue procedures, and increasingly complex minimally invasive and robotic-assisted cases. The billing complexity matches the clinical breadth: each approach (laparoscopic vs. open), each anatomical location, and each combination of concurrent procedures carries its own CPT code, its own global period, and its own documentation requirements.

In 2026, the American College of Surgeons (ACS) confirmed several meaningful CPT changes affecting general surgery practice. New codes for diaphragmatic hernia repair and congenital duodenal obstruction address procedures that previously relied on unlisted or approximated codes. The removal of “peritoneoscopy” terminology from all laparoscopy code descriptors — a term that appears in operative templates at many practices — requires immediate attention: operative note templates that still reference peritoneoscopy will create documentation-to-code mismatches. And the -2.5% efficiency adjustment to physician work RVUs affects surgical reimbursement across the board.

This guide covers the complete general surgery billing framework for 2026 — the core procedure code families, global period rules, modifier logic, 2026 ACS code changes, and the denial patterns that cost surgical practices the most revenue.

General Surgery Billing Guide 2026 — ClaimsXperts
Specialty billing guide · 2026

General Surgery Billing

High-volume, high-audit-risk procedures with 90-day global periods, multiple procedure reductions, and 2026 ACS CPT changes including new diaphragmatic hernia codes and the removal of “peritoneoscopy” from all laparoscopy descriptors.

90-day global periods Peritoneoscopy removed New diaphragm codes –2.5% RVU adjustment
⚠️ Immediate action required — “peritoneoscopy” removed from all CPT laparoscopy descriptors

Any operative note template that still contains the word “peritoneoscopy” is now inconsistent with 2026 CPT language. Audit and update all laparoscopic operative note templates immediately. Replace with “laparoscopy” or procedure-specific descriptive language. Documentation misalignment with CPT descriptors creates audit exposure.

Cholecystectomy
47562Lap — no cholangiography
47563Lap — with cholangiography
47600Open — no cholangiography
47605Open — with cholangiography
90-day global. Conversion: bill only the completed open code. Fluoroscopy (76000) not separately billable with IOC.
Appendectomy
44950Incidental appendectomy (during other procedure)
44960Ruptured appendix with abscess or peritonitis
44970Laparoscopic appendectomy (inflamed or ruptured)
90-day global. 44970 applies for both inflamed and ruptured lap cases. Document perforation findings specifically — ~17% of claims miscoded from incomplete notes.
Hernia Repair — 4 variables required
49505Open inguinal, initial, reducible
49507Open inguinal, initial, incarcerated
49650Laparoscopic inguinal, initial
49560Open incisional, initial, reducible
49652Lap ventral/incisional, initial, reducible
4 required variables: type · technique · initial/recurrent · reducible/incarcerated. Missing any = wrong code. Mesh is usually bundled — do not bill separately without payer policy confirmation.
2026 ACS CPT changes
NEW
39XX3–39X12 — New diaphragmatic hernia repair codes. Add-on 39X13 for mesh implantation. Codes 39540/39541 revised to specify “via laparotomy.”
NEW
44XX1, 44XX2 — Congenital duodenal obstruction repair (open and laparoscopic). Code 44180 revised.
NEW
395X2 — Thoracoscopic plication of diaphragm for eventration or paralysis. Code 39545 revised to “open plication.”
NEW
0800T–0805T — Robotic assistance Category III codes. Payer-specific policies vary — verify before submitting.
DELETED
37220–37235 (LER codes) — replaced by 46 new codes in four anatomical territories. Remove from all charge masters immediately.
REMOVED
“Peritoneoscopy” term removed from all CPT laparoscopy descriptors. Update operative note templates now.
Key surgical modifiers
22Unusual procedural services — additional work; must document specifically why
24Unrelated E/M during global period — different diagnosis required
25Significant E/M same day as procedure (minor procedures)
51Multiple procedures — 50% reduction on secondary procedures; list by descending RVU
57E/M decision for major surgery — day before or day of surgery
58Staged procedure — planned at time of original surgery
78Return to OR — related complication during global period
79Unrelated procedure performed during global period
–2.5% work RVU efficiency adjustment applies to most surgical codes in 2026. Factor into all revenue projections for surgical procedures.
Top denial patterns in general surgery
1
Laparoscopic code billed after conversion to open
Fix: Bill only the completed approach — open code after conversion
2
76000 (fluoroscopy) billed with 47563 (lap chol with IOC)
Fix: Fluoroscopy is included in cholangiography code — remove from template
3
Hernia missing one of four required documentation variables
Fix: Checklist in template: type · technique · initial/recurrent · reducible/incarcerated
4
Routine post-op E/M billed without modifier in 90-day global
Fix: Track global periods; apply modifier 24/78/79 as appropriate or don’t bill
5
Peritoneoscopy in operative note — terminology mismatch with 2026 CPT
Fix: Audit and update all laparoscopy templates immediately
6
Mesh billed separately from hernia repair code
Fix: Verify payer policy — most payers bundle mesh into hernia repair payment
7
Modifier 22 without documenting specific additional work
Fix: Require specific narrative — generic “complex case” insufficient
8
Deleted LER codes 37220–37235 submitted after Jan 1, 2026
Fix: Remove all 37220–37235 from charge master; add 46 new LER codes

Part 1: Cholecystectomy — Highest-Volume, Highest-Audit-Risk

Cholecystectomy is the most frequently performed general surgery procedure and one of the most actively audited, driven by the volume of claims and the potential for approach miscoding and cholangiography bundling errors.

Cholecystectomy CPT Codes

CodeDescriptionApproach
47562Laparoscopic cholecystectomy without cholangiographyLaparoscopic — standard
47563Laparoscopic cholecystectomy with cholangiographyLaparoscopic with IOC
47600Cholecystectomy without cholangiographyOpen
47605Cholecystectomy with cholangiographyOpen with IOC
47564Laparoscopic cholecystectomy with exploration of common bile ductLaparoscopic with CDE

Critical Cholecystectomy Billing Rules

Laparoscopic vs. open approach — document the completed approach:

  • Bill 47562/47563 only when the procedure is completed laparoscopically
  • If conversion to open occurs, bill only the open code (47600/47605) — not the laparoscopic code
  • The operative note must include timestamps and clear clinical justification for conversion
  • Billing both a laparoscopic and open code for the same cholecystectomy is an automatic denial and a compliance violation

Cholangiography inclusion:

  • If intraoperative cholangiography (IOC) was performed and interpreted, bill 47563 (lap with cholangiogram) or 47605 (open with cholangiogram)
  • If no IOC was performed, bill 47562 or 47600
  • Document who interpreted the intraoperative cholangiogram — the interpreting physician bills the supervision and interpretation component; sloppy attribution leads to billing conflicts

Fluoroscopy — do not bill separately: Intraoperative fluoroscopy (76000) is generally considered inherent to cholecystectomy with cholangiography and is not separately payable. Do not add 76000 to a 47563 claim.

Critical View of Safety (CVS) documentation — 2026 emphasis: The ACS and AAP increasingly expect operative notes for cholecystectomy to document achievement of the Critical View of Safety — the visualization standard that confirms the cystic duct and artery are the only two structures entering the gallbladder before division. While CVS documentation is a patient safety standard, it also strengthens medical necessity documentation for complex cases and supports audit defense.


Part 2: Appendectomy

Appendectomy CPT Codes

CodeDescription
44950Appendectomy — incidental (performed during another procedure)
44960Appendectomy for ruptured appendix with abscess or generalized peritonitis
44970Laparoscopic appendectomy

Key Appendectomy Billing Rules

Ruptured vs. non-ruptured: The distinction between a ruptured and intact appendix affects the code — 44960 applies specifically to cases with abscess or generalized peritonitis. Industry data shows approximately 17% of appendectomy claims remain miscoded due to incomplete documentation of perforation or abscess. The operative note must clearly state intraoperative findings regarding appendix integrity, presence of abscess, and contamination.

Laparoscopic code for both inflamed and ruptured cases: For laparoscopic appendectomy (44970), the same code applies regardless of whether the appendix is inflamed or ruptured — there is no separate laparoscopic code for the ruptured case. Apply Modifier 22 (unusual procedural services) if the ruptured case required significantly greater work than typical, and document specifically why.

Incidental appendectomy (44950): An incidental appendectomy performed during another primary abdominal procedure is billed with 44950 in addition to the primary procedure. The primary procedure drives global period; 44950 has its own separate consideration.


Part 3: Hernia Repair — Most Complex Coding in General Surgery

Hernia repair is the most scrutinized service line in general surgery billing because correct coding requires specifying four variables for every case:

  1. Type — inguinal, umbilical, incisional, femoral, epigastric, parastomal, hiatal, or other
  2. Technique — open or laparoscopic
  3. Status — initial (first repair of this hernia) or recurrent
  4. Reducibility — reducible or incarcerated/strangulated

Missing any variable means billing an incorrect code. Incorrect hernia coding is among the highest-value coding errors in general surgery — the RVU differential between codes can be significant.

Inguinal Hernia Repair Codes

CodeDescription
49505Open inguinal hernia repair — initial, reducible, age 5+
49507Open inguinal hernia repair — initial, incarcerated/strangulated
49520Open inguinal hernia repair — recurrent, reducible
49521Open inguinal hernia repair — recurrent, incarcerated/strangulated
49650Laparoscopic inguinal hernia repair — initial
49651Laparoscopic inguinal hernia repair — recurrent

Umbilical and Incisional/Ventral Hernia Codes

CodeDescription
49585Open umbilical hernia repair — reducible, age 5+
49587Open umbilical hernia repair — incarcerated/strangulated
49560Open repair initial incisional or ventral hernia — reducible
49561Open repair initial incisional or ventral hernia — incarcerated/strangulated
49565Open repair recurrent incisional or ventral hernia — reducible
49566Open repair recurrent incisional or ventral hernia — incarcerated/strangulated

Laparoscopic Ventral/Incisional Hernia Codes

CodeDescription
49652Laparoscopic ventral hernia repair — initial, reducible
49653Laparoscopic ventral hernia repair — initial, incarcerated/strangulated
49654Laparoscopic ventral hernia repair — recurrent, reducible
49655Laparoscopic ventral hernia repair — recurrent, incarcerated/strangulated

Mesh in Hernia Repair

Mesh is included in many hernia repair codes — separate mesh billing is one of the most commonly denied unbundling errors in general surgery. Before billing a separate mesh supply code, confirm payer-specific policy. Most commercial payers consider mesh included in the hernia repair code payment.


Part 4: 2026 ACS-Confirmed CPT Code Changes

The American College of Surgeons confirmed several significant CPT changes for 2026 that directly affect general surgery billing.

1. New Diaphragmatic Hernia Repair Codes

New codes 39XX3–39X12 were added for repair of diaphragmatic hernia. An add-on code 39X13 was added for mesh implantation with diaphragmatic hernia repair. The existing codes 39540 and 39541 were revised to specify “via laparotomy” for diaphragmatic hernia repair — narrowing their application.

Action required: Practices that previously billed diaphragmatic hernia repairs under approximated or unlisted codes now have specific code options. Update your charge master and confirm operative documentation matches the new specific descriptors.

2. New Congenital Duodenal Obstruction Repair Codes

New codes 44XX1 and 44XX2 were added to report surgical treatment for congenital duodenal obstruction via open and laparoscopic approaches. Existing code 44180 was revised.

These codes primarily affect pediatric general surgery practices and pediatric hospitals. For practices performing duodenal obstruction repairs, confirm code selection against the new descriptors and update templates accordingly.

3. Thoracoscopic Diaphragm Plication — New Code 395X2

New code 395X2 covers thoracoscopic plication of the diaphragm for eventration or paralysis. Code 39545 was revised to specify open plication of the diaphragm.

4. “Peritoneoscopy” Removed from All Laparoscopy Descriptors

This change requires immediate action at most practices. As the ACS confirmed: “In 1996, the term peritoneoscopy was deleted from all laparoscopy code descriptors because laparoscopy and peritoneoscopy meant exactly the same thing… However, the term was not deleted from parentheticals, guidelines, or images. For CPT 2026, all instances of the term peritoneoscopy have been removed from the CPT code set.”

The practical impact: Many operative note templates — particularly for laparoscopic procedures — may still contain the word “peritoneoscopy” based on older template language. While this is a terminology cleanup rather than a code change, operative notes that use terminology inconsistent with current CPT descriptors create documentation-to-code alignment risk during audits.

Action required: Audit your EHR operative note templates for laparoscopic procedures. Remove any remaining “peritoneoscopy” language and replace with “laparoscopy” or procedure-specific descriptive language.

5. New Robotic Category III Codes — 0800T–0805T

New Category III codes 0800T–0805T cover advanced robotic assistance for certain procedures. These codes remain under Category III status — they are not assigned standard RVU values and reimbursement varies significantly by payer. Do not assume these codes will be reimbursed without confirming payer-specific policy. Many commercial payers and Medicare have not established payment rates for Category III codes.

6. Lower Extremity Revascularization (LER) — 46 New Codes Replace 37220–37235

The LER procedure code family underwent a major restructuring for 2026. Codes 37220–37235 were deleted and replaced with 46 new codes grouped into four anatomical “territories” by type of treatment. This affects vascular surgeons and general surgeons who perform peripheral vascular procedures.

Action required: Remove 37220–37235 from all charge masters effective January 1, 2026. Add the 46 new codes and train surgical coders on the new territory-based classification system.

7. -2.5% Work RVU Efficiency Adjustment

CMS finalized a -2.5% efficiency adjustment to physician work RVUs for most non-time-based services under the Medicare Physician Fee Schedule. This applies to surgical CPT codes. Build this reduction into 2026 surgical revenue projections — it compounds across high-volume procedures.


Part 5: Global Surgical Period Rules

The global surgical period is one of the most consequential and most commonly misunderstood concepts in surgical billing.

Global Period Lengths

PeriodApplies ToWhat Is Included
0-day globalMinor procedures (YAG capsulotomy, some skin biopsies)Procedure only; E/M on same day as procedure may need Modifier 25
10-day globalMinor surgical proceduresRoutine post-op care through day 10
90-day globalMajor surgical proceduresPre-op visits day before surgery, procedure, and all routine post-op through day 90

For general surgery:

  • Cholecystectomy (47562, 47600): 90-day global
  • Appendectomy (44970, 44950, 44960): 90-day global
  • Hernia repair (49505–49657): 90-day global

Services Within the Global Period

These are included in the global surgical fee — do not bill separately:

  • Pre-operative evaluation the day before or day of surgery related to the procedure
  • All routine intraoperative services
  • All routine post-operative visits through day 90
  • Treatment of minor complications not requiring a return to the OR

Modifiers for Billing Within the Global Period

ModifierUse
24Unrelated E/M service during the global period — different diagnosis, different body system
57E/M that led to the decision for major surgery — performed day before or day of surgery
58Staged or related procedure — planned at the time of the original procedure
78Return to the OR for a complication — related to the original surgery
79Unrelated procedure performed in the OR during the global period

Part 6: Multiple Procedures in the Same Surgical Session

When multiple surgical procedures are performed during the same operative session, Medicare and most commercial payers apply a 50% reduction to the lesser-valued secondary procedures. The primary procedure (highest RVU) is reimbursed at 100%; each additional procedure is reimbursed at 50% of its standard rate.

Key modifiers for multiple procedures:

  • Modifier 51 — Multiple procedures; applied to the secondary procedures to indicate additional procedures performed in the same session
  • Modifier 59 — Distinct procedural service; used to bypass NCCI bundling edits when two procedures that are normally bundled are genuinely performed as separate, distinct procedures

Sequence matters: List procedures in descending order of RVU value on the claim form. The highest-RVU procedure should be listed first (no modifier), and each additional procedure should be listed with Modifier 51.


Part 7: Key Surgical Modifiers Reference

ModifierDescription
22Unusual procedural services — additional work required beyond typical; must document why
24Unrelated E/M during global period
25Significant, separately identifiable E/M on same day as procedure
51Multiple procedures — second and subsequent procedures same session
57E/M decision for major surgery same day
58Staged procedure within global period
59Distinct procedural service — bypass NCCI bundles
62Co-surgery — two surgeons each performing distinct portions
66Surgical team required — highly complex procedure
78Return to OR, related complication
79Return to OR, unrelated procedure
80Assistant surgeon
81Minimum assistant surgeon
82Assistant surgeon when qualified resident not available
ASPhysician assistant, nurse practitioner, or CNS as assistant

Part 8: Common ICD-10 Codes in General Surgery

CodeDescription
K80.20Calculus of gallbladder without cholecystitis, without obstruction (cholelithiasis)
K80.00Calculus of gallbladder with acute cholecystitis, without obstruction
K37Unspecified appendicitis
K35.2Acute appendicitis with generalized peritonitis
K35.80Other and unspecified acute appendicitis without abscess
K40.90Unilateral inguinal hernia, without obstruction or gangrene, not specified as recurrent
K40.20Bilateral inguinal hernia, without obstruction or gangrene, not specified as recurrent
K43.9Ventral hernia without obstruction or gangrene (incisional hernia)
K42.9Umbilical hernia without obstruction or gangrene
K57.32Diverticulitis of large intestine without abscess, without bleeding
C18.9Malignant neoplasm of colon, unspecified
K92.1Melena
K56.60Unspecified intestinal obstruction

Part 9: Top Denial Patterns in General Surgery

1. Wrong Approach Code After Conversion

Billing a laparoscopic code (47562) when the procedure was converted and completed as open. Results in code-to-documentation mismatch.

Fix: Code based on the completed approach per the operative note. Converted cases bill the open code only.

2. Cholecystectomy With Separate Fluoroscopy

Billing 76000 alongside 47563 (cholecystectomy with cholangiography).

Fix: Intraoperative fluoroscopy is included in the cholangiography code. Remove 76000 from cholecystectomy with IOC templates.

3. Hernia Repair Without Complete Documentation

Missing one of the four hernia variables (type, technique, initial/recurrent, reducible/incarcerated) in the operative note.

Fix: Build a hernia documentation checklist into your operative note template. All four variables must be explicitly stated.

4. Routine Post-Op E/M Billed Without Global Modifier

Billing a 99213 for a routine day-14 cholecystectomy follow-up visit during the 90-day global period without any modifier.

Fix: Track global periods in your scheduling system. All E/M visits within 90 days of major surgery need modifier review — routine post-op visits are included and not separately billable.

5. Using Deleted Peritoneoscopy Terminology in Templates

Operative notes that reference “peritoneoscopy” creating documentation inconsistency with current CPT descriptors.

Fix: Audit and update all laparoscopic operative note templates immediately. Replace “peritoneoscopy” with accurate descriptive language.

6. Mesh Billed Separately From Hernia Repair

Billing a supply code for mesh in addition to a hernia repair CPT code when the payer bundles mesh into the procedure payment.

Fix: Verify payer-specific mesh billing policy before adding a supply line to hernia repair claims.

7. Modifier 22 Without Documentation

Using Modifier 22 (unusual services) to claim higher reimbursement without documenting specifically why the case required unusual additional work.

Fix: Modifier 22 requires a cover letter or documentation attachment explaining the specific additional complexity — not a generic statement. If the documentation cannot support the unusual work, do not use Modifier 22.

8. Multiple Procedure Reduction Not Accounted For

Projecting full reimbursement for every procedure when multiple procedures are performed in the same session.

Fix: Build 50% reduction for secondary procedures into surgical revenue benchmarks. List procedures in descending RVU order with Modifier 51 on secondary codes.


What Your General Surgery Practice Should Do Right Now

2026 code updates:

  • Remove codes 37220–37235 from your charge master — replaced by 46 new LER codes
  • Add new diaphragmatic hernia codes to your charge master if relevant to your practice
  • Update all laparoscopic operative note templates — remove any remaining “peritoneoscopy” language immediately
  • Review robotic case documentation before billing new Category III codes 0800T–0805T — confirm payer policies first

Documentation compliance:

  • Build the Critical View of Safety (CVS) notation into all cholecystectomy operative templates
  • Build the four hernia variables (type, technique, initial/recurrent, reducible/incarcerated) into all hernia repair templates
  • Confirm appendectomy notes clearly document intraoperative findings regarding appendix integrity and perforation status

Revenue cycle:

  • Implement a global period tracking workflow — flag all E/M and procedure codes within 90 days of major surgery for modifier review
  • Build secondary procedure 50% reduction into surgical revenue projections
  • Audit a sample of Modifier 22 claims for adequate documentation support

At ClaimsXperts, we work with general surgery practices on operative note coding alignment, global period management, multiple procedure billing, and full-cycle revenue cycle management.

Contact us today at https://www.rcmmasters.com/#contactus

ClaimsXperts is a Revenue Cycle Management company based in Frisco, TX.

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