CPT code

99213Office visit, established patient, low complexity (20–29 min)

Plain-English reference for CPT 99213. What it covers, what it typically costs, and the billing errors patientbill.org looks for on this code.

Typical setting
Office
Medicare allowable
$93
Common private-payer range
$150 – $350

The Medicare allowable is the national non-facility rate from the CMS Physician Fee Schedule and is the most defensible "fair price" anchor. Commercial charges typically run 2–5× this number; hospital list prices can be much higher still.

What this code actually is

CPT 99213 is the most commonly billed code in all of US outpatient medicine — it's the workhorse established-patient visit (20–29 minutes, low complexity). If your visit was brief, ask whether it should have been a 99212 instead. If multiple complex problems were addressed, 99214 may be more appropriate.

Audit issues we look for on 99213

  • Upcoding — billed at a higher level than the visit actually warranted

Think your bill has the wrong 99213 charge?

Upload the bill and we'll check for upcoding, unbundling, duplicates, and prices above what's reasonable. If we recover money for you, we keep a small contingency fee. If we don't, you owe nothing.

Common questions about CPT 99213

Private-payer charges typically fall in the $150 – $350 range, though hospital list prices can run much higher. Medicare's allowable rate for 99213 is roughly $93, which is a useful fair-price anchor. If your bill for this code is significantly above the high end of that range, ask for an itemized statement and compare against your Explanation of Benefits (EOB) — the insurance "allowed amount" is the most defensible reference point.

Related codes in Office & evaluation visits

Patientbill.org is not affiliated with any provider, insurer, or the AMA. Code descriptions are CMS-published short descriptors plus our own plain-English explanations; pricing references are from the CMS Medicare Physician Fee Schedule and public charge benchmarks and may be outdated. Verify your specific charges against your EOB.