The Most Commonly Denied Pediatric CPT® Codes
May 25, 2026
Pediatric medical billing involves preventive care, developmental screenings, immunizations, newborn services, behavioral health assessments, and evaluation and management encounters, creating multiple opportunities for claim denials. While denial patterns vary among payers, several CPT® codes consistently appear in pediatric denial reports because they involve complex documentation requirements, medical necessity reviews, modifier usage, age-specific coverage rules, frequency limitations, or payer-specific reimbursement policies.
Most Common Pediatric CPT® Codes Associated With Denials
The following CPT® codes are among the pediatric services most frequently associated with claim denials and payer review activity.
| CPT® Code | Procedure | Common Denial Drivers |
|---|---|---|
| 99381-99395 | Preventive Medicine Services | Frequency limits, documentation deficiencies |
| 99213 | Established Patient Office Visit | Modifier 25 review, medical necessity |
| 90460 | Immunization Administration With Counseling | Missing counseling documentation |
| 90461 | Additional Vaccine Components | Component counting errors |
| 96110 | Developmental Screening | Incomplete screening documentation |
| 96127 | Behavioral Assessment | Missing scoring results |
| 99460 | Initial Newborn Care | Documentation inconsistencies |
| 99401 | Preventive Counseling | Time and documentation requirements |
| 99402 | Extended Preventive Counseling | Coverage limitations |
| 99214 | Established Patient E/M Service | Medical necessity and documentation review |
Although these services vary considerably, most pediatric denials stem from recurring categories. Documentation issues, medical necessity concerns, modifier errors, payer frequency restrictions, vaccine administration requirements, and preventive care policies account for a significant percentage of denied claims.
Pediatric Denials Often Follow Predictable Patterns
Documentation gaps, modifier issues, preventive care restrictions, and vaccine administration requirements are among the most common causes of pediatric claim denials.
Guarantee: We’ll help identify the denial trends affecting your pediatric revenue cycle.
Documentation and Medical Necessity Denials
Several commonly denied pediatric CPT® codes share the same underlying problem: insufficient documentation supporting medical necessity. This frequently affects office visits, developmental screenings, behavioral assessments, counseling services, and certain newborn care claims.
Denial Snapshot
Commonly affected CPT® codes: 99213, 99214, 96110, 96127, 99401, 99402
Primary issue: Documentation does not clearly support medical necessity, clinical findings, assessment results, or treatment decisions.
Payers increasingly evaluate whether documentation supports the level of service billed. For example, a higher-level E/M code may be denied or downcoded if documentation does not support the complexity reported. Similarly, developmental screenings and behavioral assessments often require completed tools, scoring information, interpretation, and follow-up plans.
Practices that maintain strong medical necessity documentation processes are often better positioned to reduce these denials and support reimbursement during payer reviews.
Preventive Medicine Service Denials
Preventive medicine services represent a significant portion of pediatric reimbursement. However, these visits are also among the most frequently denied services because payers apply strict rules regarding age eligibility, frequency limitations, and covered preventive benefits.
| CPT® Code Range | Service Type | Common Denial Reason |
|---|---|---|
| 99381-99385 | New Patient Preventive Visits | Coverage frequency restrictions |
| 99391-99395 | Established Patient Preventive Visits | Benefit limitations |
| 99401-99404 | Preventive Counseling | Documentation deficiencies |
Many payers limit preventive visits to specific intervals based on patient age and plan benefits. Claims submitted outside allowable periods may be denied even when services are clinically appropriate.
Documentation Reminder
Preventive visit documentation should include age-appropriate history, examination findings, anticipatory guidance, counseling, and risk assessment information.
Practices frequently improve preventive visit reimbursement through stronger coding workflows and medical coding services that help ensure compliance with payer-specific preventive care guidelines.
Modifier 25 Denials and Evaluation and Management Services
Modifier 25 remains one of the most scrutinized modifiers in pediatric billing. Pediatric providers often address acute illnesses, injuries, or chronic conditions during preventive visits, creating circumstances where preventive and problem-oriented services occur on the same day.
Payers carefully review these claims to determine whether the additional E/M service was truly significant and separately identifiable.
| Code | Description | Common Review Concern |
|---|---|---|
| 99213 | Established Patient Visit | Insufficient separate documentation |
| 99214 | Higher Complexity Visit | Medical necessity concerns |
| 99203 | New Patient Visit | Bundling review |
| 99204 | Complex New Patient Visit | Documentation scrutiny |
Billing Alignment Check
When reporting Modifier 25, documentation should clearly demonstrate work beyond the preventive service and support a separate evaluation and management encounter.
Many pediatric organizations use revenue cycle management services to monitor modifier utilization and identify recurring denial trends.
Immunization Administration Denials
Vaccines are among the most common services provided in pediatric practices. However, vaccine administration codes frequently appear in denial reports because of documentation requirements, counseling rules, component reporting challenges, and payer-specific reimbursement policies.
| CPT® Code | Description | Common Denial Driver |
|---|---|---|
| 90460 | Vaccine Administration With Counseling | Missing counseling documentation |
| 90461 | Additional Vaccine Components | Component reporting errors |
| 90471 | Initial Administration | Administration mismatch |
| 90472 | Additional Administration | Sequencing errors |
Payers often require documentation showing that physician or qualified healthcare professional counseling occurred before reimbursing vaccine administration counseling codes.
Many Vaccine Administration Denials Are Preventable
Strong documentation and accurate component reporting can significantly improve immunization reimbursement performance.
Guarantee: We’ll help identify reimbursement challenges affecting your vaccine billing processes.
Developmental Screening and Behavioral Assessment Denials
Developmental and behavioral screening services are essential components of pediatric preventive care. Unfortunately, they are also frequent targets of payer review.
Many denials occur because screening tools were administered but the results, scoring methodology, interpretation, or follow-up recommendations were not fully documented.
| CPT® Code | Description | Common Denial Issue |
|---|---|---|
| 96110 | Developmental Screening | Missing screening documentation |
| 96127 | Behavioral Assessment | Incomplete scoring records |
| 96160 | Patient Risk Assessment | Medical necessity review |
| 96161 | Caregiver Assessment | Documentation deficiencies |
Revenue Cycle Insight
Many developmental screening denials result from missing supporting documentation rather than incorrect CPT® code selection.
Practices that perform regular audits using medical audit services frequently identify documentation gaps before they result in large-scale denial trends.
Newborn Care and Hospital-Based Pediatric Denials
Newborn care claims present unique reimbursement challenges because services may involve hospital admission, subsequent care, discharge management, and varying payer requirements.
| CPT® Code | Description | Common Denial Reason |
|---|---|---|
| 99460 | Initial Newborn Care | Admission documentation issues |
| 99462 | Subsequent Newborn Care | Date-of-service discrepancies |
| 99463 | Discharge Service | Incomplete discharge records |
| 99477 | Neonatal Intensive Care | Medical necessity review |
Audit Risk Alert
Newborn services often receive heightened scrutiny because reimbursement varies significantly based on documented acuity and service complexity.
Documentation inconsistencies between hospital records and submitted claims can create delays, denials, and additional administrative workload for billing teams.
Behavioral Health and Counseling Service Denials
Pediatric behavioral health services continue to grow in utilization. As demand increases, payers have expanded review efforts focused on counseling documentation, medical necessity, and time requirements.
| CPT® Code | Description | Primary Denial Driver |
|---|---|---|
| 99401 | Preventive Counseling | Insufficient documentation |
| 99402 | Extended Counseling | Time documentation issues |
| 96127 | Behavioral Assessment | Missing scoring results |
| 90832 | Psychotherapy | Coverage restrictions |
Payers frequently request additional records when counseling services are reported alongside preventive visits or evaluation and management services.
Behavioral Health Billing Requires Strong Documentation
Documentation quality often determines whether counseling and behavioral health services are reimbursed successfully.
Guarantee: We’ll help identify documentation vulnerabilities affecting pediatric reimbursement.
Common Pediatric Denial Drivers
Although denial reasons vary among payers, most pediatric reimbursement challenges fall into several recurring categories.
Using Denial Data To Improve Pediatric Billing Performance
Many denial patterns become visible only after reviewing claims by CPT® code, payer, provider, diagnosis, modifier, and denial category. One practice may discover recurring vaccine administration denials, while another may find that preventive visit frequency restrictions are creating the majority of reimbursement challenges.
Useful Denial Data Points
Track denials by: CPT® code, payer, provider, diagnosis, modifier, denial reason, patient age, and appeal outcome.
Improved visibility through medical billing data analytics and reporting tools can help practices identify recurring reimbursement issues before they become larger revenue cycle problems. A structured process for managing rejected claims can also improve denial resolution efficiency.
Your Pediatric Denial Data Can Reveal Exactly Where Revenue Is Being Lost
The challenge is turning denial information into actionable improvements that strengthen reimbursement performance.
Guarantee: We’ll help identify your top pediatric denial drivers and organize them into a clear action plan.
What Pediatric Practices Should Monitor
Many of the pediatric CPT® codes most frequently associated with denials share similar reimbursement challenges. Documentation support, medical necessity, preventive care requirements, modifier accuracy, vaccine administration rules, and developmental screening documentation continue to influence claim outcomes across pediatric practices.
Practices that monitor denial trends by CPT® code, payer, provider, diagnosis, and denial reason are often better positioned to identify recurring issues and strengthen billing performance over time. Understanding the common causes behind denials can help pediatric organizations focus their efforts where reimbursement risk is highest.
Trademark Notice: CPT® is a registered trademark of the American Medical Association.
For informational purposes only.

