96137 CPT Code Description: Complete Billing & Documentation Guide
When a psychologist spends four hours administering a comprehensive cognitive battery, they are not simply running through a checklist. They are methodically peeling back the layers of a patient’s mental architecture identifying where memory falters, where attention breaks down, and where executive functioning struggles to hold ground. That clinical depth deserves precise compensation, and that is exactly where CPT code 96137 becomes indispensable. For anyone working in behavioral health billing whether you are a solo practitioner, a billing specialist at a multi-provider clinic, or a revenue cycle manager navigating the ever-shifting landscape of insurance compliance CPT 96137 is a code you will encounter repeatedly. Yet, despite its frequency of use, it remains one of the more misunderstood and frequently misused codes in psychological and neuropsychological billing.
This guide strips away the confusion. From its official definition to unit calculation, documentation requirements, common pitfalls, and reimbursement expectations for 2026, here is everything you need to know about CPT code 96137 explained clearly, practically, and completely.
What Is CPT Code 96137? The Official Definition
CPT code 96137 is formally defined by the American Medical Association as:
“Psychological or neuropsychological testing administration and scoring by physician or other qualified health care professional, two or more tests, any method, each additional 30 minutes (List separately in addition to code for primary procedure).”
In plain language: when a licensed psychologist, psychiatrist, or other credentialed clinician personally administers and scores standardized psychological or neuropsychological tests, and that process extends beyond the initial 30-minute window covered by CPT 96136 each additional 30-minute increment gets billed under CPT 96137.
This code sits firmly in the add-on code category, meaning it carries a “+” designation in the CPT manual. It cannot be billed as a standalone code under any circumstances. It always rides alongside CPT 96136 as the anchor.
The Code Family: Understanding Where 96137 Fits
To use 96137 correctly, you must understand how it relates to the broader family of psychological and neuropsychological testing codes restructured by CMS in 2019.
| CPT Code | Description | Who Performs It |
|---|---|---|
| 96130 | Psychological testing evaluation – first hour | Psychologist/qualified professional |
| 96131 | Psychological testing evaluation – each additional hour | Psychologist/qualified professional |
| 96132 | Neuropsychological testing evaluation – first hour | Psychologist/qualified professional |
| 96133 | Neuropsychological testing evaluation – each additional hour | Psychologist/qualified professional |
| 96136 | Test administration & scoring – first 30 minutes | Psychologist/qualified professional |
| 96137 | Test administration & scoring – each additional 30 minutes | Psychologist/qualified professional |
| 96138 | Test administration & scoring – first 30 minutes | Technician (under supervision) |
| 96139 | Test administration & scoring – each additional 30 minutes | Technician (under supervision) |
| 96146 | Single automated test – electronic administration | Automated platform |
The 2019 restructuring was intentional: CMS wanted to draw a bright line between what the licensed professional does versus what a supervised technician does. CPT 96136 and 96137 are reserved exclusively for when the psychologist or physician is the one holding the clipboard and running the session. The moment a technician steps in, you shift to 96138 and 96139.
This distinction is not merely semantic it affects both compliance and reimbursement. Billing 96136/96137 when a technician performed the work is a documentation error that can trigger claim denials, audits, or worse.
How Time-Based Billing Works for CPT 96137
Time-based billing is where many providers stumble, so let’s walk through this carefully.
The Midpoint Rule
CPT’s time-based billing standard is governed by the midpoint rule. You can bill an additional unit of 96137 once you have crossed the midpoint of the next 30-minute increment. Since each unit represents 30 minutes, the midpoint falls at 15 minutes — but because 96137 begins after the first 30 minutes of 96136, the real calculation looks like this:
96136 = First 30 minutes of administration
First unit of 96137 = Requires at least 16 additional minutes beyond the 96136 block (to cross the 15-minute midpoint of the next 30-minute interval)
Second unit of 96137 = Requires at least another 16 minutes beyond the first 96137 unit
And so on
Practical Time Calculation Chart
| Total Administration Time | Codes to Bill |
|---|---|
| 1 – 30 minutes | 96136 x1 |
| 31 – 45 minutes | 96136 x1 |
| 46 – 75 minutes | 96136 x1 + 96137 x1 |
| 76 – 90 minutes | 96136 x1 + 96137 x1 |
| 91 – 120 minutes | 96136 x1 + 96137 x2 |
| 121 – 150 minutes | 96136 x1 + 96137 x3 |
| 151 – 180 minutes | 96136 x1 + 96137 x4 |
Important: Breaks, restroom time, and conversations unrelated to testing do not count toward the billable time. Only face-to-face administration and scoring time qualifies.
Multi-Day Testing Episodes
Comprehensive neuropsychological evaluations frequently span multiple sessions spread across several days. When this happens, the correct approach is to accumulate all time across sessions and submit the claim on the last day of service. You do not split the claim day by day. All units of 96136 and 96137 are submitted together once the entire testing episode is complete.
Documentation Requirements: The Foundation of a Defensible Claim
No matter how accurate your unit calculation, your claim is only as strong as the documentation supporting it. Here is what a well-documented 96137 claim looks like:
1. Start and Stop Times
The clinical record must include precise start and stop times for each testing session. Timestamps like “9:05 AM – 11:47 AM” are not only best practice they are increasingly required by payers during audits. Vague entries like “patient seen for testing in the morning” will not survive scrutiny.
2. Test Battery Administered
Document every standardized instrument used during the session. Listing test names is not enough you should specify which tests were administered in which time segments, especially when multiple tests span a long session.
Common instruments that appear in 96137 billing include:
- Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS-IV) – cognitive and intelligence testing
- Wechsler Memory Scale (WMS-IV) – memory assessment
- Delis-Kaplan Executive Function System (D-KEFS) – executive functioning
- Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI-3) – personality and psychopathology
- Conners’ Continuous Performance Test (CPT-3) – attention and ADHD evaluation
- Beck Depression Inventory (BDI-II) – depression symptom severity
- Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) – depression screening
3. Medical Necessity
Every claim requires a clear, documented rationale explaining why psychological or neuropsychological testing was clinically necessary. This ties directly to the patient’s presenting complaints, referral reason, and the diagnostic question being answered. Vague justifications like “patient referred for testing” will frequently result in denials.
4. ICD-10 Diagnostic Codes
The clinical record must link the testing services to appropriate ICD-10 codes. Common pairings include:
- F90.x – Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)
- F32.x / F33.x – Major depressive disorder
- F41.x – Anxiety disorders
- G31.84 – Mild cognitive impairment
- F07.81 – Postconcussional syndrome (traumatic brain injury)
- F20.x – Schizophrenia spectrum disorders
- F70–F79 – Intellectual disabilities
5. Qualified Provider Credentials
The documentation must clearly identify the licensed professional who administered the tests. Their qualifications licensure type, state of licensure, and NPI number should be included in the claim. Remember: if a technician performed any portion of the administration, that time must be billed under 96138/96139 and kept separate.
Reimbursement Rates for CPT 96137 in 2026
Understanding what you should expect to be paid is just as important as knowing how to bill correctly.
Medicare’s national average reimbursement for CPT code 96136 runs approximately $43.94 per 30-minute unit, and private payers typically follow a comparable baseline for the companion 96137 code, with commercial reimbursement generally ranging from $55 to $65 per 30-minute increment.
Factors That Influence Payment
Several factors influence the actual payment you receive:
- Geographic location: Urban markets with higher practice costs tend to reimburse at a higher rate.
- Payer contract terms: Contracted rates with commercial insurers vary significantly by network.
- Provider type: Hospital-based providers may have different rates than private practice psychologists.
- Facility vs. non-facility settings: Rates differ based on where the service is rendered.
Daily Unit Cap Guidance
The daily unit cap generally allows billing up to a combined 6 hours of administration time per testing episode day which translates to 1 unit of 96136 and up to 11 units of 96137 in a single day, though exceeding this threshold will likely trigger a medical necessity review.
Telehealth Billing for CPT 96137
The expansion of telehealth mental health services has opened the door for remote psychological testing. As of 2026, CMS continues to allow billing for psychological testing codes including 96136 and 96137 via telehealth platforms through December 31, 2026.
To bill 96137 for a telehealth encounter, providers should:
- Ensure the platform used is HIPAA-compliant and supports synchronous real-time video connection
- Apply the appropriate telehealth modifier as required by the payer (typically modifier 95 for synchronous telehealth or modifier GT for Medicare)
- Document that the patient provided informed consent for telehealth services
- Confirm that the state where the patient is physically located allows telehealth testing under the provider’s licensure
Not all standardized instruments are validated for remote administration. Before conducting telehealth-based testing, verify that the specific instruments in your battery have established norms and protocols for virtual delivery.
Common Billing Errors – and How to Avoid Them
Even experienced billing professionals make mistakes with CPT 96137. Here are the most frequent errors and how to steer clear of them:
Error 1: Billing 96137 Without 96136
Since 96137 is an add-on code, it cannot appear on a claim without its parent code 96136. Submitting 96137 as a standalone will result in an automatic denial.
Error 2: Incorrect Unit Calculation Based on Break Time
Including non-testing time (lunch breaks, administrative tasks, waiting between sessions) in the billable minute count inflates unit counts beyond what is defensible. Always count only active, face-to-face test administration time.
Error 3: Mixing Professional and Technician Codes
Billing 96136/96137 when a technician administered the tests conflates two distinct code families. Keep the pairings clean: 96136/96137 for qualified professionals, 96138/96139 for technicians.
Error 4: Missing Authorization
Some commercial payers require prior authorization for comprehensive psychological testing. Failing to secure authorization before testing begins can result in retroactive denials that are difficult to appeal.
Error 5: Vague or Undated Documentation
Generic progress notes without specific timestamps, test names, or clinical rationale are a red flag during payer audits. Specificity in documentation is your best protection.
Best Practices for Compliance and Maximum Reimbursement
Running a compliant, financially sustainable psychological testing practice in 2026 requires more than just knowing the codes. It requires building systems around them.
- Implement a real-time time-tracking workflow – Whether you use an EHR system, billing software, or a dedicated behavioral health platform, capturing start and stop times as they happen rather than reconstructing them at the end of the day dramatically reduces documentation errors.
- Conduct periodic internal audits – Reviewing a sample of 96137 claims quarterly allows you to identify patterns of error before they become patterns of denial.
- Stay current on payer-specific policies – Medicare, Medicaid, and commercial payers each have their own coverage determination documents. A policy that applies to one payer does not automatically apply to another. Download and save payer coverage policies for psychological testing annually.
- Train your clinical staff alongside your billing team – Compliance breaks down when clinicians and coders operate in separate silos. When psychologists understand why timestamps matter and billing specialists understand the clinical flow of a testing session, accuracy improves across the board.
The Clinical Case for Getting This Right
There is a dimension of this discussion that goes beyond revenue. When CPT 96137 is billed accurately and claims are reimbursed appropriately, the downstream effect is that patients continue to have access to comprehensive psychological evaluation services. When practices are chronically underpaid because of billing errors, they scale back the time they can offer for complex evaluations and patients lose access.
Accurate billing for psychological testing is, in a very real sense, a patient access issue. The families seeking ADHD evaluations for their children, the veterans undergoing traumatic brain injury assessments, the adults trying to understand a new diagnosis of early cognitive decline all of them benefit when the billing infrastructure supporting these services functions correctly.
Conclusion
CPT code 96137 is a workhorse of behavioral health billing essential, precise, and frequently misunderstood. As an add-on to CPT 96136, it captures the extended professional time that comprehensive psychological and neuropsychological evaluations routinely demand. Billing it correctly requires a firm command of time-based unit rules, thorough documentation of test administration, appropriate ICD-10 linkage, and an ongoing awareness of payer-specific requirements. Get these elements right, and 96137 becomes a straightforward, well-reimbursed tool in your coding arsenal. Get them wrong, and it becomes a source of denials, audits, and revenue leakage that compounds over time
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