Medical Billing for Optometry


It’s more than caring for patients when you’re operating an optometry practice. Practices bleed thousands of dollars annually due to billing mistakes, denied claims, or confusion between medical and visual insurance benefits.

This handbook breaks down the essentials of optometry medical billing CPT codes, coding guidelines, and all in between and provides time-tested strategies for streamlining your billing, reducing claim denial, and generating profits.

What is Optometry Medical Billing and Why Does It Matter?

Optometric billing is distinct from general medical billing. Most specialties in medicine entail a single type of insurance claim, that of the provider’s office. Optometrists, however, practice under medical and vision insurance, potentially for the same individual.

This dual-coverage model creates complexity but also opportunities. If handled correctly, it allows practices to increase reimbursements, avoid denials, and set clear expectations with patients. Major Differences Between Optometry Billing and General Medical Billing Unlike general medical billing, optometry billing requires understanding two different insurance structures. This is critical. If you’re billed improperly, you end up denied claims, patients receive surprises on their bills, and the practice’s cash flow suffers.

KEY Optometry Billing Codes (CPT, ICD-10)

Proper coding is the key to successful billing. There are several coding schemes utilized by optometry practices:

  • CPT Codes → Procedures (tests, refraction, images) identification.
  • ICD-10 Codes → Select diagnoses (e.g., cataracts, diabetic ret.).
  • HCPCS Level II Codes → Supply codes (lenses, frames, medical equipment).
  • Modifiers → Provide ancillary billing information.

General Procedures of Optometrists and Their Codes

Service Type

Usual CPT Codes

Description

Comprehensive Exam

92004, 92014

New and established patient eye

Refraction

92015

Vision testing for glasses/contacts

Visual Field Testing

92083

Glaucoma & neurological

Contact Lens Fitting

92071, 92072

Initial & follow-up services

Fundus Photography

92250

Retinal imaging

OCT Imaging

92134

Optical coherence tomography

Tip: Always verify that documentation supports the CPT code used. Upcoding (billing higher-level codes without documentation) can trigger audits and penalties.

How to Maximize Revenue in Optometry Billing

Revenue optimization reduces to coding accuracy, submission of claims, and documentation.

Service Type

Specific Purpose

Type of Insurance

CPT Codes

Office or Routine Eye Exam

Preventive care, refraction

Vision Insurance

92015, S0625

Medical Eye Care

Diagnosis/treatment

Medical Insurance

92004, 92012, 92014

 

You can have healthier cash flow, happier patients, and less administrative stress. Begin small: become comfortable with a few of your billing processes and correct inefficiencies. Gradually, these efficiencies will accrue and provide large gains in finance for your eye care practice.

At MediDocCareMD, we help healthcare providers manage complex billing rules for Optometry so they can focus on patient care while we ensure proper claim submission and maximum reimbursements.

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Schedule your consultation today and start your journey towards a healthier Revenue Cycle Management. Contact us now!