Urgent care billing lives between two payment models: S9083 global case rates for some payers and full E/M leveling for others, plus modifier 25 denials on same-visit procedures and a heavy patient-pay balance. MedTaskly handles every contract rule so your clinic gets paid faster with fewer denials.
Book Free RCM AuditUrgent care billing is different because payers reimburse the same visit in two ways: some pay a flat global case rate under HCPCS code S9083, while others require standard E/M leveling with CPT codes 99202 through 99215 billed under place-of-service 20. Urgent care claims also stack after-hours codes 99050 and 99051 and need modifier 25 when a procedure and E/M happen in one visit, so payment depends on contract-specific coding.
The billing gaps that quietly drain urgent care revenue, and how we close them.
Urgent care billing runs on two competing payment models. Some managed care payers reimburse a flat global case rate under HCPCS code S9083, while others require fee-for-service E/M leveling with CPT codes 99202 through 99215 billed under place-of-service 20. Bill the wrong model for a given contract and the claim pays incorrectly or not at all. Add after-hours codes 99050 and 99051, which some payers reimburse and others bundle, and every visit becomes a contract-by-contract coding decision.
Then there is modifier 25. When a provider performs a laceration repair or splint application alongside an evaluation, the E/M must carry modifier 25 to be paid separately, and payers scrutinize it closely. Urgent care also collects a larger share of revenue directly from patients than most specialties, so eligibility errors at check-in become bad debt. MedTaskly's AAPC-certified coders manage all of it for 1,500+ providers, delivering a 98% clean-claim rate so your clinic gets paid faster with fewer denials.