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Home Specialties We Serve Physical Therapy Medical Billing

Quick Answer

Physical therapy medical billing is one of the most rule-intensive specialties in all of healthcare billing — governed by the 8-minute rule for timed codes, annual Medicare therapy thresholds with KX modifier requirements, strict Plan of Care documentation mandates, and a 2026-expanded set of Remote Therapeutic Monitoring codes. XMB's certified PT billing specialists manage every one of these rules across all 50 U.S. states, achieving a 99.99% clean claim acceptance rate and systematically recovering revenue lost to incorrect unit calculations, missed modifiers, and abandoned denials.

Physical Therapy
Medical Billing Services

The 8-minute rule. KX modifier thresholds. Timed vs. untimed code distinctions. RTM billing. PT billing has more specialty-specific rules than almost any other discipline — and getting one wrong quietly drains your revenue every single day.

99.99% Clean Claim Acceptance Rate
$2,480 2026 Medicare KX Threshold — Tracked Per Patient
48 hrs Maximum Denial Turnaround Time
50 U.S. States Covered
CPT Code Reference

Physical Therapy CPT Codes XMB Bills — All Four Categories

PT billing uses four distinct code categories — each with its own unit calculation rules, documentation requirements, and modifier logic. XMB's billers are trained on all four.

Category 1

Evaluation Codes (Untimed)

PT evaluation codes are untimed — billed once per evaluation regardless of time spent. Code selection is based on the clinical complexity of the patient's condition, requiring distinct documentation to justify each level. Miscoding complexity level is a leading audit trigger.

  • 97161
    Low Complexity EvaluationStable condition, limited clinical factors, minimal comorbidities affecting PT plan.
  • 97162
    Moderate Complexity EvaluationEvolving condition, multiple clinical factors requiring judgment about plan of care.
  • 97163
    High Complexity EvaluationUnstable or unpredictable condition, requiring highly complex clinical reasoning and management.
  • 97164
    Re-evaluationSignificant change in patient condition or failure to respond as expected — requires fresh documentation.
Category 2

Therapeutic Procedures (Timed)

Timed therapeutic procedure codes require direct 1-on-1 skilled care and are billed in units based on the 8-minute rule. Start and stop times must be documented for every timed service. These are the core revenue drivers of PT billing — and the highest source of denial when unit calculations are wrong.

  • 97110
    Therapeutic ExerciseResistance, endurance, and flexibility exercises requiring skilled therapy instruction and supervision.
  • 97112
    Neuromuscular Re-educationTechniques to improve movement, balance, coordination, and postural control.
  • 97140
    Manual TherapyHands-on mobilization/manipulation techniques to improve joint and soft tissue mobility.
  • 97530
    Therapeutic ActivitiesFunctional, task-oriented activities designed to improve daily living performance.
  • 97116
    Gait TrainingSkilled training to improve ambulation mechanics, balance during walking, and functional mobility.
Category 4 — New 2026

Remote Therapeutic Monitoring (RTM)

RTM codes allow PTs to bill for monitoring patient adherence to home exercise programs and collecting musculoskeletal data between sessions. The 2026 update introduced shorter-duration billing options, making RTM accessible to more practice types. This is one of the most underbilled revenue opportunities in physical therapy today.

  • 98975
    RTM — Device Supply, Initial SetupSupply of digital musculoskeletal monitoring device with initial setup and patient education. 2026
  • 98977
    RTM — Musculoskeletal Data Collection16+ days of musculoskeletal data transmission per calendar month.
  • 98980
    RTM — Treatment Management, First 20 minClinical staff time managing RTM data — first 20-minute increment per calendar month. 2026
  • 98981
    RTM — Treatment Management, Add'l 20 minEach additional 20-minute increment beyond the first. 2026
Critical Billing Rule

What Is the 8-Minute Rule in Physical Therapy Billing — And Why Does It Matter?

CMS 8-Minute Rule

Timed code unit calculation — Medicare & most payers

Total Time Spent Billable Units
8 – 22 minutes
1 unit
23 – 37 minutes
2 units
38 – 52 minutes
3 units
53 – 67 minutes
4 units

Documentation requirement: Start and stop time for each timed service must be recorded in the visit note. Time must reflect direct 1-on-1 treatment — passive or unsupervised patient time does not count toward billable units.

The 8-minute rule is a CMS billing guideline that governs how many units a physical therapist can bill for timed CPT codes in any given session. A timed therapeutic service must be performed for a minimum of 8 minutes before any unit can be billed. Each additional unit requires at least 8 more minutes of time within the applicable range.

When a session involves multiple timed services — for example, 20 minutes of therapeutic exercise (97110) plus 18 minutes of manual therapy (97140) — the total timed minutes are calculated across all services, and the distribution of units is determined by relative time and the rounding rules in the CMS Claims Processing Manual, Chapter 5. Getting this wrong in either direction — overbilling units or underbilling because of incorrect rounding — triggers audits or leaves legitimate revenue uncaptured.

According to the MGMA, incorrect 8-minute rule unit calculations account for approximately 23% of all PT claim denials and represent the single largest source of both revenue loss and audit exposure in physical therapy practices.

Real-World Calculation Example

A PT session includes: Therapeutic Exercise (97110) for 25 minutes + Manual Therapy (97140) for 20 minutes = 45 total timed minutes. Under the 8-minute rule, 45 minutes falls in the 38–52 minute range = 3 billable units. The 3 units are distributed based on the time spent: 97110 receives 2 units (25 min) and 97140 receives 1 unit (20 min). Billing 97110 x2 and 97140 x2 (4 units total) is a compliance violation.

23% of all physical therapy claim denials are caused by incorrect 8-minute rule unit calculations — making it the single most common and most preventable PT billing error. XMB's certified billers verify unit calculations on every claim before submission (MGMA, 2025).
Documentation & Modifiers

PT Documentation Requirements & Critical Billing Modifiers

  • Plan of Care (POC) — Before Treatment BeginsMust include diagnosis, functional limitations, treatment goals, anticipated frequency and duration. Required before any billable service is rendered.
  • Diagnosis & Functional LimitationsICD-10-CM codes must link directly to the treatment being provided, demonstrating medical necessity for each service billed.
  • Short-Term & Long-Term GoalsGoals must be measurable, functional, and time-bound. Vague goals without measurable outcomes fail medical necessity review.
  • Start & Stop Times for All Timed CodesExact start and stop time for every timed service in every visit note. Without these, the billed units cannot be validated and the claim is subject to full denial on audit.
  • Patient Response & Progress Toward GoalsEach visit note must document the patient's response to treatment and measurable functional progress. "Tolerated well" alone is insufficient — payers require functional progress statements.
  • Licensed Therapist SignatureAll visit notes must be signed and dated by the treating licensed physical therapist. PTA-provided services require supervising PT co-signature where applicable.

POC Recertification: The Plan of Care must be recertified every 90 days. A lapsed POC retroactively invalidates all claims submitted after expiration. XMB tracks POC expiration dates for every active patient.

Critical Billing Modifiers for Physical Therapy

Applying the wrong modifier — or omitting a required one — is the second most common cause of PT claim denials. XMB verifies modifier accuracy on every single claim.

GP

Physical Therapy Modifier

Required on all PT claims to identify services under a physical therapy plan of care. Missing GP on any PT claim causes immediate denial.

KX

Above Medicare Therapy Threshold

Required when Medicare patient PT costs exceed $2,480 in 2026. Attests continued therapy is medically necessary. Claims above threshold without KX are automatically denied. Above $3,000 triggers targeted medical review.

59

Distinct Procedural Service

Used when two codes billed on the same day would otherwise be bundled under NCCI edits. Prevents incorrect bundling when services are genuinely separate and distinct.

GA

Advance Beneficiary Notice (ABN) on File

Applied when a service is expected to be denied as not medically necessary but the patient has signed an ABN. Shifts cost responsibility to the patient with proper notice on file.

Threshold Management

Medicare Therapy Threshold Tracking & the Top PT Denial Reasons XMB Prevents

2026 Medicare Therapy Threshold Zones

Zone 1 — Standard Billing$0 – $2,480

Bill normally with Modifier GP. No additional modifiers or documentation requirements beyond standard medical necessity.

Zone 2 — KX Modifier Required$2,480 – $3,000

Modifier KX must be appended to all PT claim lines. Documentation must explicitly support medical necessity. Failure to apply KX results in automatic denial.

Zone 3 — Targeted Medical Review Risk$3,000+

Claims may be selected for targeted medical review by Medicare contractors. Documentation must be exceptional — goals, progress, and necessity explicitly stated and defensible.

XMB tracks cumulative Medicare therapy costs per patient in real time. We notify you when patients approach the $2,480 threshold, automatically apply KX, and ensure documentation supports continued necessity before submission.

Top Physical Therapy Claim Denial Reasons

The six denial patterns responsible for the majority of PT claim rejections — and how XMB prevents each one.

  • 1
    Incorrect 8-Minute Rule Unit CalculationBilling more units than total timed minutes support — or distributing units incorrectly across multiple services — triggers automatic denial. XMB verifies unit math on every claim before submission.
  • 2
    Missing GP ModifierEvery line item on a PT claim requires Modifier GP. A single omission denies the entire claim line. XMB's claim scrubber flags any missing GP before it reaches the clearinghouse.
  • 3
    KX Modifier Not Applied Above ThresholdOnce a Medicare patient crosses $2,480 in PT costs, KX is mandatory. Claims submitted without it above the threshold are automatically rejected — no exception.
  • 4
    Missing or Vague Functional Goals in DocumentationClaims denied for "lack of medical necessity" are almost always traceable to documentation that lists goals without measurable outcomes or fails to show functional progress.
  • 5
    Lapsed Plan of Care CertificationA POC not recertified within 90 days retroactively invalidates all claims submitted after expiration — creating bulk denials that are difficult to overturn on appeal.
  • 6
    Billing Maintenance Therapy as Skilled PTServices that merely maintain a patient's condition without skilled therapy judgment are not billable under Medicare. Claims must demonstrate skilled PT reasoning was required.
Our Process

How XMB Handles Physical Therapy Billing — Step by Step

From the first day onboarded through every monthly performance report, here is exactly how XMB manages your PT revenue cycle.

1

Free PT Practice Assessment

XMB audits your denial patterns, 8-minute rule compliance, threshold tracking, and documentation quality to quantify where revenue is being lost.

2

PT Software Integration

We connect with your PT practice management system — WebPT, Raintree, Clinicient, Fusion, or others — adapting entirely to your workflow.

3

Timed Code Audit & Unit Check

Every claim reviewed for correct 8-minute rule unit calculations, timed vs. untimed code classification, and modifier accuracy before submission.

4

Clean Claim Submission

Claims pass payer-specific edits and threshold checks before transmission. 99.99% clean claim rate means most are paid on first submission.

5

Threshold Monitoring & Denial Management

Per-patient KX threshold tracked continuously. Every denial worked within 48 hours. Monthly reports show collections, denial trends, and revenue recovery.

Side-by-Side

Physical Therapy Billing: In-House vs. XMB

How XMB's specialized PT billing compares to the in-house approach across the factors that matter most to your practice's revenue.

FactorIn-House / Generalist BillerXMB — Xecta Medical Billing
8-Minute Rule Unit AccuracyCalculation errors common — 23% denial rate impactVerified on every claim before submission
KX Threshold TrackingManual tracking — threshold frequently missedAutomated per-patient threshold monitoring
GP Modifier ApplicationOmissions cause line-level denialsClaim scrubber flags missing GP before submission
Plan of Care RecertificationPOC expiry missed — bulk retroactive denials90-day POC expiration alerts for every patient
RTM Code Billing (2026)Typically not billed — significant missed revenueAll 2026 RTM codes systematically captured
Documentation Quality AuditingNo pre-submission review of visit note qualityFunctional goals and progress reviewed before billing
Clean Claim Rate78–85% (MGMA PT benchmark)99.99%
Denial Turnaround3–10 days or claims abandonedEvery denial worked within 48 hours
2026 CMS Rule UpdatesStaff training lag — compliance risk at update cyclesApplied automatically to all claims
Long-Term ContractN/ANo fixed contract — cancel any time
Is This Right For You?

Who XMB's Physical Therapy Billing Is For — And Who It Is Not For

✓ XMB Is Right For Your PT Practice If:

  • You are a PT, PT group, or outpatient PT clinic in any U.S. state
  • Your denial rate is above 5% or collections have been declining
  • You are not tracking Medicare therapy thresholds per patient
  • Your billers are unfamiliar with multi-service 8-minute rule rounding logic
  • You are not yet billing for RTM services despite qualifying
  • You have experienced bulk denials from lapsed POC certifications
  • You want HIPAA compliance, transparent reporting, and no billing interruptions

✗ XMB May Not Be the Right Fit If You:

  • Operate a cash-pay PT practice that does not bill Medicare or insurance
  • Need in-person, on-site billing staff at your location
  • Are looking for a one-time billing audit rather than ongoing management
  • Are seeking a billing software platform rather than a full-service company
Frequently Asked Questions

Physical Therapy Billing — Questions PT Practices Ask XMB

What is the 8-minute rule in physical therapy billing?

The 8-minute rule is a CMS billing guideline governing how many units a PT can bill for timed CPT codes in a single session. A timed service must be performed for at least 8 minutes before one unit can be billed. Full thresholds: 8–22 min = 1 unit, 23–37 min = 2 units, 38–52 min = 3 units, 53–67 min = 4 units. When multiple timed services occur in one session, total timed minutes are calculated and units distributed proportionally. Incorrect calculations account for approximately 23% of all PT denials — the single most common PT billing error. See our medical billing and revenue cycle management services.

What CPT codes does XMB bill for physical therapy?

XMB bills all PT CPT code categories: evaluation codes (97161, 97162, 97163, 97164); timed therapeutic procedure codes including therapeutic exercise (97110), neuromuscular re-education (97112), manual therapy (97140), therapeutic activities (97530), and gait training (97116); modality codes including attended electrical stimulation (97032), ultrasound (97035), hot/cold packs (97010), and mechanical traction (97012); and all 2026 RTM codes (98975, 98977, 98980, 98981). XMB also correctly applies all required modifiers including GP, KX, 59, and GA on every claim.

When is the KX modifier required in PT billing?

The KX modifier must be added to all PT claim lines once a Medicare patient's cumulative PT costs reach $2,480 in 2026. KX is the therapist's attestation that continued therapy is medically necessary and that documentation supports this. Claims above the threshold without KX are automatically rejected. Once costs exceed $3,000, claims may be selected for targeted medical review. XMB tracks each Medicare patient's cumulative PT costs in real time and automatically applies KX when the threshold is reached.

What are Remote Therapeutic Monitoring (RTM) codes for physical therapy?

RTM codes allow physical therapists to bill Medicare for monitoring patient adherence to home exercise programs and collecting musculoskeletal data between in-person sessions. The 2026 RTM codes for PT include 98975 (device supply and initial setup), 98977 (musculoskeletal data monitoring for 16+ days/month), 98980 (first 20 minutes of treatment management per month), and 98981 (each additional 20-minute increment). The 2026 expansion introduced shorter-duration billing options making RTM viable for more practices. RTM is one of the most underutilized revenue streams in PT today — XMB captures this billing systematically for every eligible patient.

What documentation is required for physical therapy billing?

CMS and payer standards require PT documentation to include: a Plan of Care (POC) before the first treatment with diagnosis, functional limitations, goals, and planned frequency/duration; short-term and long-term measurable functional goals; start and stop times for every timed code in every visit note; patient response and measurable progress at each visit; licensed PT signature with date; and POC recertification every 90 days. Missing or vague documentation — particularly absent start/stop times for timed codes or non-measurable goals — is the leading cause of PT claims being denied for lack of medical necessity. XMB reviews documentation quality as part of every claim's pre-submission process.

Stop Losing Revenue to PT Billing Errors That Are 100% Preventable

Incorrect unit calculations, missing KX modifiers, lapsed POC certifications, uncaptured RTM billing — XMB's free practice assessment shows you exactly how much each error is costing your PT practice and what recovering it looks like.

HIPAA Compliant No Fixed Contract 2026 Rules Applied Automatically All 50 States Free Practice Assessment
Page Reviewed & Maintained By

M. Tayyab

CPC, CPMA — Certified Professional Coder & Medical Billing Specialist

M. Tayyab is a certified medical billing and coding expert at Xecta Medical Billing (XMB) with specialized experience in physical therapy revenue cycle management, 8-minute rule compliance auditing, and Medicare therapy threshold management. He has helped PT practices across the U.S. recover significant lost revenue through systematic unit calculation corrections, RTM billing implementation, and KX modifier threshold tracking. He oversees XMB's PT billing division and leads the clinical accuracy review process for all physical therapy content.

Expert Reviewed: May 22, 2026  ·  Last Updated: May 22, 2026

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