Quick Intro
Mental health services are in higher demand than ever. Therapists, psychiatrists, psychologists, and counselors are seeing more patients and running busier practices. But behind every successful session sits a billing process that can either support your revenue or quietly drain it.
Mental health billing is not a simplified version of general medical billing. It comes with its own CPT codes, documentation standards, payer rules, and compliance requirements. Providers who understand the system get paid faster and with fewer denials. Those who do not often leave significant money on the table.
This guide walks through everything a mental health provider needs to know about billing accurately and getting reimbursed consistently.
What Is Mental Health Billing?
Mental health billing is the process of submitting claims to insurance payers for behavioral health services rendered by licensed providers. This includes services provided by licensed clinical social workers, licensed professional counselors, psychologists, and psychiatrists.
The billing process involves assigning the correct CPT codes to each session type, pairing those codes with accurate ICD-10 diagnosis codes, verifying patient eligibility and benefits, obtaining prior authorizations when required, and submitting clean claims to the appropriate payer.
When done correctly, mental health billing results in timely reimbursement. When done incorrectly, it leads to denials, underpayments, delayed revenue, and in some cases, compliance issues that can put a practice at risk.
Why Mental Health Billing Is More Complex Than General Medical Billing
General medical billing typically involves procedure codes tied to clearly defined clinical services. Mental health billing adds several layers of complexity that make accurate claim submission harder.
Time-based coding is one of the biggest factors. Many mental health CPT codes are billed by the duration of the session. A few minutes difference can change which code applies. Providers and billers must document session start and stop times clearly to support whatever code is billed.
Payer-specific rules add another layer. Some commercial payers follow their own billing guidelines for behavioral health that differ from standard AMA guidance. Medicaid rules also vary significantly from state to state, which matters for practices serving publicly insured populations.
Mental health parity laws are also in play. The Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act requires most insurers to cover mental health services at the same level as medical or surgical services. While this is designed to help patients, navigating parity compliance in billing can be nuanced.
Finally, telehealth continues to reshape the space. Billing for teletherapy involves platform requirements, consent documentation, and modifier usage that differ from in-person visit billing.
Most Used CPT Codes in Mental Health Billing
Getting CPT codes right is foundational. Below are the codes that appear most often in outpatient behavioral health billing.
CPT Code 90791 – Psychiatric Diagnostic Evaluation
CPT 90791 is used for the initial psychiatric evaluation without medical services. It is typically billed once per patient at the start of care and covers a comprehensive assessment of the patient's psychiatric history, mental status, and treatment needs.
This code should be supported by thorough intake documentation. It is not appropriate for ongoing sessions once the diagnostic evaluation phase is complete.
CPT Code 90837 – 60-Minute Psychotherapy
CPT 90837 covers individual psychotherapy lasting 53 minutes or more. It is the most commonly billed psychotherapy code in outpatient mental health settings and carries one of the higher reimbursement rates among therapy codes.
Documentation must reflect the full session time. Payers can and do request records to confirm that the session length matches the code billed.
CPT Code 90834 – 45-Minute Psychotherapy
CPT 90834 applies to individual psychotherapy sessions lasting between 38 and 52 minutes. It is appropriate when clinical need supports a session shorter than the full 60-minute window covered by 90837.
Practices sometimes overbill 90837 for sessions that actually fall in the 90834 range. This creates audit risk and potential recoupment exposure.
CPT Code 90832 – 30-Minute Psychotherapy
CPT 90832 covers individual psychotherapy of 16 to 37 minutes. It is less frequently billed than 90834 or 90837 but appropriate for shorter check-in sessions or when clinical documentation supports reduced session time.
Common ICD-10 Codes Used in Behavioral Health
Every CPT code on a mental health claim must be paired with a diagnosis code from the ICD-10 system. The diagnosis must be documented in the clinical record and must support the medical necessity of the service billed.
Frequently used ICD-10 codes in mental health billing include:
F32.1 – Major depressive disorder, single episode, moderate
F33.1 – Major depressive disorder, recurrent, moderate
F41.1 – Generalized anxiety disorder
F43.10 – Post-traumatic stress disorder, unspecified
F31.9 – Bipolar disorder, unspecified
F90.0 – Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, predominantly inattentive type
Choosing the most specific diagnosis code supported by documentation is critical. Unspecified codes are appropriate when the documentation genuinely does not support a more specific diagnosis. Defaulting to unspecified codes out of habit can raise flags during a payer audit.
Credentialing and Payer Enrollment for Mental Health Providers
A provider cannot bill insurance until they are credentialed and enrolled with each payer. This process verifies the provider's licensure, training, and practice information and links them to the payer's network.
Credentialing timelines for mental health providers typically run 90 to 180 days depending on the payer. Some take longer. Starting the credentialing process before a practice opens or before a new provider joins the group is essential to avoid gaps in billing.
CAQH ProView is the central repository most payers use to verify provider information. Keeping a CAQH profile current is an ongoing responsibility. Outdated information leads to credentialing delays and claim rejections.
Our medical credentialing services team handles the full enrollment workflow so mental health providers can focus on patient care instead of paperwork.
Prior Authorization in Mental Health Billing
Many payers require prior authorization for certain mental health services before claims will be paid. Intensive outpatient programs, partial hospitalization, psychological testing, and some ongoing therapy benefits fall into this category.
Failing to obtain authorization when one is required results in a denial that is very difficult to appeal successfully. The time and cost of chasing those claims often exceeds the reimbursement value.
Best practices for prior authorization in mental health billing include verifying authorization requirements during the benefits check, initiating the authorization request before the service is rendered, documenting the authorization number in the patient's file, and tracking expiration dates to renew authorizations before they lapse.
Our prior authorization services team manages the full authorization cycle for behavioral health practices looking to eliminate this administrative burden.