Medical Coding · CPC certified

Coding that holds up to audits.

Certified, specialty-trained coders apply ICD-10, CPT, HCPCS, and modifier rules with surgical accuracy. Audit-ready documentation on every claim.

Certified medical coder reviewing CPT, ICD-10, and HCPCS code assignments
What you get

Coding that maximizes revenue without crossing lines.

The right code is the most billable code that's defensible. We find it on every chart.

Specialty-trained coders

Cardiology, oncology, orthopedics, dermatology, mental health, and more. Your coder knows your codes.

ICD-10 + CPT + HCPCS

Every code set, every modifier, every documented detail. Captured, applied, defended.

Audit-ready documentation

Every code linked to chart documentation. If a payer audits, we have the trail.

Annual code-set updates

ICD-10 and CPT changes hit your account on day one. No outdated codes. No undercoding.

Charge capture review

Missed charges identified before claims go out. Recover dollars hidden in your charts.

Provider feedback loop

Coders flag documentation gaps before billing. Providers get clear, actionable notes.

Medical coding FAQ

What practices ask about coding accuracy

Real answers from a coding team that codes every business day.

What credentials do your coders hold?

Our team holds CPC, CPC-P, COC, CCS, CCS-P, CPMA, and specialty-specific certifications from AAPC and AHIMA. Every coder maintains continuing education hours and gets re-tested internally each quarter on rule changes. Specialty assignments match certification: a CPC with surgical experience codes the surgical claims, not a generalist.

Which specialties do you code for?

Primary care, internal medicine, cardiology, orthopedics, dermatology, mental and behavioral health, pediatrics, OB/GYN, gastroenterology, urology, podiatry, pain management, anesthesia, ambulatory surgical centers, and dental. If your specialty isn't listed, we have likely coded for it before; just ask during your audit.

How do you stay current with annual ICD-10, CPT, and HCPCS updates?

Annual code releases (October ICD-10, January CPT) are reviewed and rolled out by our coding leads before the effective date. Crosswalks, deletion lists, and new code mappings get pushed to the team in writing. Quarterly we run audit samples specifically targeting newly-released codes to catch drift early.

Do you offer a one-time coding audit?

Yes. The free billing audit includes a coding sample (typically 25 to 50 charts) reviewed for under-coding, over-coding, modifier accuracy, and documentation support. You get a written findings report with revenue impact estimates. No commitment to engage afterward.

How do you prevent under-coding?

Most practices that lose revenue lose it to under-coding, not over-coding. We compare documented work to coded level on a sample basis, flag charts where the documentation supports a higher level, and feed it back to the provider. Common pattern: a provider documents 99213 work but the chart supports 99214. Over a year that's real money.

Are you up to speed on E/M 2021 and 2023 guideline changes?

Yes. Office E/M codes (99202 to 99215) have been on time-or-MDM since 2021. Hospital E/M (99221 to 99239), ED, nursing facility, and home E/M moved to the same framework in 2023. Our coders apply the right framework to the right encounter type and document why.

How do you handle telehealth POS and modifier rules?

POS 02 vs POS 10, modifier 95 vs FQ vs 93, audio-only vs video, mental health vs medical: each has different rules per payer. We maintain a payer-specific telehealth grid and apply it at coding. Most "telehealth was denied" stories come from generic application of one rule across all payers.

Free, no-obligation

See what your practice is leaving on the table.

30-minute free billing audit. We'll surface the leaks (undercoding, denials never appealed, eligibility errors) and quantify the dollars you can recover this quarter.

What you get

  • A line-by-line review of your last 90 days of claims
  • Specialty benchmark on clean-claim ratio & days in A/R
  • A written estimate of recoverable revenue this quarter
  • Zero pressure. Zero commitment.