Accurate coding is the backbone of a high-performing Revenue Cycle Management (RCM) workflow. Among the most critical components in that system are HCPCS codes the standardized identifiers that determine whether a claim gets paid, denied, or delayed. For healthcare organizations across mental health, home health, therapy, laboratory services, and beyond, understanding which codes apply to your specialty isn't optional. It's the difference between clean claims and costly write-offs.
This guide offers a practical, industry-specific reference to the most commonly used HCPCS codes for the specialties Vinali Group serves designed to help billing teams, coders, and revenue cycle managers work smarter, not harder.

What Are HCPCS Codes?
The Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS) is a standardized coding framework used to report medical procedures, supplies, equipment, and services to Medicare, Medicaid, and most commercial payers. Maintained by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), HCPCS ensures uniformity in how services are billed across the U.S. healthcare system.
HCPCS Levels Explained
HCPCS is organized into two levels:
- Level I (CPT Codes): Five-digit numeric codes developed by the American Medical Association (AMA), used primarily for physician services and procedures. If you work with evaluation and management billing, you're already familiar with this level.
- Level II (HCPCS Level II Codes): Alphanumeric codes (a letter followed by four digits) covering supplies, equipment, non-physician services, ambulance transport, drugs, and more. This is the focus of this guide.
It's also worth staying current with new CPT codes for 2025 as coding updates directly affect reimbursement eligibility.
Industry-Specific HCPCS Codes: Your Billing Reference
Mental Health Care
Mental health billing demands precision. Many services fall under HCPCS Level II when they involve case management, community support, or specialized therapeutic interventions not fully captured by CPT codes alone.
| Code | Description | Billing Use Case |
|---|---|---|
| H0001 | Alcohol and/or drug assessment | Initial intake assessments in outpatient substance use programs |
| H0004 | Behavioral health counseling and therapy, per 15 minutes | Community mental health center billing for individual therapy |
| H0031 | Mental health assessment by non-physician | Used when licensed counselors or social workers conduct evaluations |
| H2015 | Comprehensive community support services, per 15 minutes | Psychosocial rehabilitation, often Medicaid-billed |
| H2016 | Comprehensive community support services, per diem | Full-day programs for patients requiring intensive community support |
| T1017 | Targeted case management, per 15 minutes | Care coordination for high-need behavioral health populations |
Is your mental health practice leaving money on the table with incorrect H-code billing? Connect with a certified medical coder today and protect your revenue.
Home Health Care Services
Home health agencies rely heavily on HCPCS Level II healthcare billing codes for supplies, equipment, and visit-based services. Accurate use of these codes is essential for Medicare cost reports and claim adjudication.
| Code | Description | Billing Use Case |
|---|---|---|
| A6216 | Gauze, non-impregnated, non-sterile, pad size 16 sq in or less | Routine wound care supply billing |
| E0100 | Cane, includes canes of all materials, adjustable or fixed | DME billing for mobility aids |
| E0601 | Continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) device | Home respiratory therapy billing |
| G0299 | Direct skilled nursing services of a registered nurse (RN) in home health or hospice settings | Per-visit Medicare billing for RN services |
| G0300 | Direct skilled nursing services of a licensed practical nurse (LPN) in home health settings | Per-visit Medicare billing for LPN services |
| S9123 | Nursing care, in the home; by registered nurse, per hour | Non-Medicare private duty nursing billing |
Medical and Diagnostic Laboratories
Laboratories depend on accurate HCPCS codes to avoid underpayments and audit risk especially when billing Medicare Part B for clinical diagnostics.
| Code | Description | Billing Use Case |
|---|---|---|
| P9603 | Travel allowance, one way, in connection with medically necessary laboratory specimen collection drawing station | Rural lab specimen collection billing |
| G0432 | Infectious agent antibody detection by enzyme immunoassay (EIA) technique, qualitative | HIV screening under Medicare preventive services |
| G0433 | Infectious agent antibody detection by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), HIV antibody | HIV testing claim billing |
| Q0091 | Screening Papanicolaou smear; obtaining, preparing and conveyance of cervical/vaginal smear | Pap smear collection at lab or clinic setting |
| G0123 | Screening cytopathology, cervical or vaginal (any reporting system) | Thin-prep and conventional Pap billing for screening |
Physical, Occupational, and Speech Therapy
Therapy providers frequently use HCPCS Level II codes alongside CPT codes, particularly for functional devices, assistive technology, and specialized assessments.
| Code | Description | Billing Use Case |
|---|---|---|
| L1820 | Knee orthosis, elastic with stays, prefabricated | Billing for orthotic devices in PT settings |
| E1399 | Durable medical equipment, miscellaneous | Catch-all for unlisted DME in occupational therapy |
| G0281 | Electrical stimulation (unattended) for wound care | PT wound care adjunct therapy billing |
| V5008 | Hearing screening | Audiology and speech-language pathology screenings |
| G0129 | Occupational therapy services requiring the skills of a qualified occupational therapist, per diem | Outpatient OT per-diem billing under Medicare Part B |
Physicians (Evaluation & Management + Preventive)
Physicians billing Medicare and Medicaid regularly encounter HCPCS Level II codes for preventive services, immunizations, and care management supplements. These work alongside standard E/M codes like those used in 99213 billing and 99212 encounters.
| Code | Description | Billing Use Case |
|---|---|---|
| G0402 | Initial preventive physical examination (Welcome to Medicare visit) | First-year Medicare beneficiary preventive visit |
| G0438 | Annual wellness visit (AWV), includes a personalized prevention plan; initial visit | Medicare AWV billing for established patients |
| G0439 | Annual wellness visit, subsequent visit | Annual follow-up AWV billing |
| G0101 | Cervical or vaginal cancer screening; pelvic and clinical breast examination | Preventive exam billing under Medicare Part B |
| Q2035 | Influenza virus vaccine, split virus, when administered to individuals 3 years of age and older | Flu vaccine administration billing for Medicare patients |
Family Planning Centers
Family planning facilities rely on specific HCPCS codes for contraceptive supplies and counseling services, many of which are covered under Medicaid's family planning benefit.
| Code | Description | Billing Use Case |
|---|---|---|
| A4267 | Contraceptive supply, condom, male, each | Medicaid supply billing in Title X clinics |
| A4268 | Contraceptive supply, condom, female, each | Billing for female barrier contraceptive devices |
| J7297 | Levonorgestrel-releasing intrauterine contraceptive system (Mirena), 52 mg | IUD insertion and device billing |
| J7300 | Intrauterine copper contraceptive (Paragard) | Copper IUD billing in family planning settings |
| S4981 | Insertion of levonorgestrel-releasing intrauterine system | Procedure code for IUD insertion services |
Outpatient Care Centers
Outpatient facilities often bridge gaps between physician and facility billing, making comprehensive knowledge of RCM coding across code sets essential.
| Code | Description | Billing Use Case |
|---|---|---|
| G0463 | Hospital outpatient clinic visit for assessment and management of a patient | Standard outpatient clinic visit billing under OPPS |
| T1015 | Clinic visit/encounter, all-inclusive | Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC) encounter billing |
| G0176 | Activity therapy, such as music, dance, art or play therapies not for recreation, per session | Mental health outpatient adjunct therapy billing |
| G0177 | Training and educational services related to the care and treatment of patient's disabling mental health problems | Psychoeducation billing in outpatient behavioral health |
Ambulance Services
Ambulance billing is one of the most audit-prone specialties in healthcare. HCPCS codes for transport services must be paired with the correct modifiers to indicate origin and destination a detail that directly impacts reimbursement.
| Code | Description | Billing Use Case |
|---|---|---|
| A0425 | Ground mileage, per statute mile | Per-mile transport billing added to base rate codes |
| A0426 | Ambulance service, advanced life support, non-emergency transport, Level 1 (ALS 1) | ALS non-emergency ground transport billing |
| A0427 | Ambulance service, advanced life support, emergency transport, Level 1 (ALS 1-Emergency) | Emergency ALS ground transport — highest-volume ambulance code |
| A0428 | Ambulance service, basic life support, non-emergency transport (BLS) | BLS non-emergency transport billing |
| A0429 | Ambulance service, basic life support, emergency transport (BLS-Emergency) | BLS emergency transport — critical to have correct modifiers |
| A0998 | Ambulance response and treatment, no transport | Scene treat-and-release billing when no transport occurs |
Why HCPCS Codes Matter in RCM Optimization
In a well-optimized RCM workflow, HCPCS codes are more than billing identifiers, they are revenue signals. Incorrect or missing codes are among the leading causes of claim denials. If your team is already reviewing top denial codes in medical billing, you'll recognize how often coding errors sit at the root of payer rejections.
Proper use of HCPCS Level II codes also ensures compliance with Medicare's National Coverage Determinations (NCDs) and Local Coverage Determinations (LCDs) especially relevant for providers billing in high-volume markets. For Vinali Group's virtual healthcare services, coding accuracy is equally critical in telehealth billing contexts where modifier usage is tightly regulated.
Don't let coding gaps hurt your bottom line. Hire a certified medical biller from Vinali Group and start submitting cleaner claims today.

Common Mistakes and Best Practices
Common Errors to Avoid:
- Using outdated HCPCS codes that have been deleted or replaced in the current year's code set
- Submitting HCPCS Level II codes without required modifiers (especially in ambulance and therapy billing)
- Confusing HCPCS Level II codes with CPT codes when payers require one over the other
- Failing to document medical necessity to support high-value supply or equipment codes
Best Practices for Your Billing Team:
- Audit HCPCS code utilization quarterly against payer-specific fee schedules
- Cross-reference CMS updates each October before the new fiscal year begins
- Train staff on certified medical billing and coding standards to reduce human error
- Implement payer-specific edits in your practice management system to flag known denials before submission
Conclusion
HCPCS codes are not a back-office detail they are a front-line revenue tool. For mental health providers, home health agencies, laboratories, therapists, physicians, family planning centers, outpatient facilities, and ambulance services, getting these codes right is foundational to financial performance. The codes listed here represent some of the most frequently used and highest-impact entries across each specialty, but no reference guide replaces the value of a skilled, certified coding team working inside your revenue cycle.
Ready to optimize your RCM from the ground up? Contact Vinali Group's billing and coding experts and get the specialized support your practice deserves.








