
Unlike many specialties, routine foot care is generally not covered by Medicare unless medical necessity is clearly documented. At the same time, the patient population, heavily skewed toward older adults, diabetics, and those with peripheral vascular disease, demands constant, high-frequency care. According to research, diabetes alone affects more than 38 million Americans (11.6% of the population), and 15–34% of those patients will develop a foot ulcer in their lifetime.
That intersection of clinical urgency and billing complexity is where revenue leaks. This cheat sheet consolidates every critical element of podiatry billing with updated information so your practice can code cleanly, get paid faster, and stay audit-proof.
Medicare generally excludes “routine” foot care unless specific systemic conditions exist that make professional care a medical necessity. These codes must be accompanied by Q modifiers and appropriate ICD-10 diagnosis codes.
These are the highest-volume codes in most podiatry practices:
| CPT Code | Description |
| 11055 | Paring or cutting of a benign hyperkeratotic lesion; single lesion |
| 11056 | Paring or cutting of benign hyperkeratotic lesions; 2–4 lesions |
| 11057 | Paring or cutting of benign hyperkeratotic lesions; more than 4 lesions |
| 11719 | Trimming of nondystrophic nails, any number |
| 11720 | Debridement of nail(s) by any method(s); 1 to 5 |
| 11721 | Debridement of nail(s) by any method(s); 6 or more |
| G0127 | Trimming of dystrophic nails, any number (HCPCS) |
When a minor procedure (such as a biopsy, injection, or destruction) is performed during an office visit, Medicare and other insurers may deny the E/M if the documentation does not support a separate medical necessity.
For instance, if a patient presents for a follow-up on a viral exanthem and is treated with a prescription, but a minor procedure is also done on a different lesion, the documentation must reflect two distinct activities to justify the E/M with Modifier 25
| CPT Code | Description |
| 99202–99205 | Office or outpatient visit, new patient (Levels 2–5) |
| 99211–99215 | Office or outpatient visit, established patient (Levels 1–5) |
| 99203–99204 | Most commonly used new patient codes (Levels 3–4) |
| 99213–99214 | Most commonly used established patient codes (Levels 3–4) |
CMS has mandated that all state Medicaid programs utilize the E/M coding guidelines published in the AMA’s CPT manual. Select the E/M level based on medical decision-making or total time, not the old History/Exam/MDM combination.
Wound management is a high-volume area for podiatrists, requiring the use of specific integumentary debridement and grafting codes.
| CPT Code | Description |
| 11730 | Avulsion of nail plate, partial or complete, one nail |
| 11732 | Avulsion of nail plate, each additional nail (add-on) |
| 28285 | Correction of hammertoe (e.g., interphalangeal fusion, partial or total phalangectomy) |
| 28292 | Hallux valgus correction with sesamoidectomy |
| 28296 | Hallux valgus correction with distal metatarsal osteotomy |
| 28297 | Hallux valgus correction with joint implant |
| 28810 | Amputation, metatarsal, with toe, single |
| 28820 | Amputation of the toe; metatarsophalangeal joint |
For surgical procedures, the operative note must include the osteotomy type, implant use if applicable, whether hardware was inserted, and which digit(s) were treated. Many of these codes carry 90-day global periods; follow-up visits within that window cannot be billed separately unless documented as unrelated to the surgery.
| CPT Code | Description |
| 20550 | Injection(s); single tendon sheath or ligament |
| 20551 | Injection(s); single tendon origin or insertion |
| 20600 | Arthrocentesis, aspiration, and/or injection, small joint |
| 97597 | Debridement, open wound; first 20 sq cm or less |
| 97598 | Debridement, open wound; each additional 20 sq cm (add-on) |
| 15011–15018 | Skin substitute/autograft application for wound care (new in 2025) |
| CPT Code | Description |
| 73600 | Radiologic examination, ankle; 2 views |
| 73610 | Radiologic examination, ankle; minimum 3 views |
| 73620 | Radiologic examination, foot; 2 views |
| 73630 | Radiologic examination, foot; complete, minimum 3 views |
Per AMA 2025-2026 CPT updates, new telemedicine codes now clearly define virtual visit types:
| CPT Code Range | Description |
| 98000–98015 | New telemedicine podiatry visit codes (audio vs. video; new vs. established) |
| 98975–98978 | Remote therapeutic monitoring for digital foot devices and therapeutic apps |
The older codes 99441–99443 and G2012 have been phased out. Continuing to use them will trigger automatic claim rejections from Medicare and commercial payers.
Q modifiers are not optional. For any routine foot care service billed to Medicare, one of three Q modifiers must appear on the claim to establish medical necessity. These modifiers are paired with “class findings” — documented clinical evidence of vascular or neurological impairment.
| Modifier | Clinical Requirement | Example Clinical Scenario |
| Q7 | One Class A finding | Patient with prior transmetatarsal amputation |
| Q8 | Two Class B findings | Absent dorsalis pedis AND posterior tibial pulse |
| Q9 | One Class B + two Class C findings | Absent posterior tibial pulse + claudication + edema |
Per AAPC reporting, approximately 25% of podiatry claim denials are tied to modifier errors. Below are the leading denial triggers and their prevention strategies.
Prevention: Before submitting any routine foot care claim to Medicare, verify that class findings (Class A, B, or C) are documented in the visit note for the same date of service. Use the correct modifier based on the combination: Q7 for one Class A, Q8 for two Class B, Q9 for one Class B + two Class C.
Prevention: Per CMS (Article A57957), notes must state that failure to provide professional services would be hazardous due to the patient’s underlying medical condition. Vague language like “poor circulation” fails audits. Specific documentation, such as “absent posterior tibial pulse on bilateral examination” or “patient reports claudication after walking two blocks,” is required.
Prevention: Every lower extremity procedure requires an LT or RT modifier. Toe-specific procedures require both laterality (LT/RT) and a T-modifier (T0–T9). Missing these creates a claim that is flagged, denied, or delayed.
Prevention: When a procedure and an E/M visit occur on the same date, modifier -25 must be appended to the E/M code. When two separate procedures are performed on different anatomical sites, modifier -59 distinguishes them. Example: bunionectomy (28296-RT) and callus paring (11055-59-LT) on the same visit.
Prevention: The FY 2026 ICD-10-CM update is mandatory for all services on or after October 1, 2025. Per APMA’s official guidance, update EHR templates and coding references before this date each year.
Prevention: Routine foot care covered under systemic conditions is generally reimbursed no more than once every 60 days. Any claims submitted within a shorter interval must include explicit documentation explaining the accelerated need.
Podiatry billing has one clear theme: tighter enforcement of existing rules, not just new codes. Medicare contractors are intensifying scrutiny on Q modifiers, payers are bundling injections and E/M visits more aggressively, and the mandatory FY 2026 ICD-10-CM updates mean outdated codes now cause automatic denials.
Here’s what every podiatric billing team must have locked in:
Accurate podiatry billing isn’t just a revenue protection strategy; it’s what allows your practice to stay compliant, avoid audits, and focus on what matters most: delivering exceptional foot and ankle care to the patients who need it most.
Podiatry billing is too complex to handle alone. At BillingPodiatry, we specialize in the unique codes and modifiers of foot and ankle medicine to ensure you get paid for every service you provide. Contact us today for a comprehensive revenue cycle analysis and start capturing your earned revenue.
FAQs
The 2026 CPT code changes, effective January 1, 2026, introduced 288 new codes, 84 deletions, and 46 revisions.s
The Q7, Q8, and Q9 are specific podiatry billing modifiers used in the healthcare industry to provide additional information about the services rendered to patients.
F221 Custom-made Functional Orthosis (Single). A functional foot orthosis that is custom-made from an impression of the patient’s foot (can be obtained by plaster or foam impression or 3D imaging) with reference to biomechanical measurements, with intrinsic or extrinsic modifications.