Pre-participation physical examinations (PPEs) sometimes get treated as paperwork, but a good PPE is real preventive medicine, it occasionally finds the murmur, the concussion history, the red flag that matters. The providers doing them carefully should bill them properly. PPEs are among the most commonly performed services in sports medicine and primary care, and among the most frequently undercoded or unbilled. The confusion is partly semantic: many providers treat PPEs as administrative tasks rather than clinical services, which they are.
The Right Code: Preventive Visit vs. Problem-Focused E/M
A sports physical or PPE for a healthy young athlete with no significant medical history is a preventive visit. It is not a problem-oriented E/M. The correct code depends on the patient's age and new/established status:
| CPT | Service | Age Range |
|---|---|---|
| 99381–99385 | New patient preventive visit | Infant through 40+ |
| 99391–99395 | Established patient preventive visit | Infant through 40+ |
| 99385 | New patient, age 18–39 preventive | Most collegiate athletes |
| 99395 | Established patient, age 18–39 preventive | Most returning athletes |
| 99384 | New patient, age 12–17 preventive | High school athletes |
| 99394 | Established patient, age 12–17 preventive | Returning high school athletes |
When You Address a Separate Problem at the PPE
If during a sports physical you identify and separately evaluate a clinical problem, a previously undiagnosed murmur, a knee complaint that warrants workup, a mental health concern, that separate evaluation can be billed as an E/M with Modifier 25, in addition to the preventive visit code. The same rules from Chapter 10 apply: the problem must be distinct, the documentation must be clear, and the patient should be informed that an additional charge may apply.
Clearance Letters and Forms: Not Separately Billable
Completing the PPE form, signing a clearance letter, or filling out a school sports clearance document is not a separately billable service. That work is part of the preventive visit. Providers sometimes attempt to code a separate E/M or charge for the form completion; this is not appropriate.
Camp Physicals and Other Athletic Clearance Exams
Camp physicals, summer sports clearances, and similar services are coded identically to PPEs, as preventive visits based on age and new/established status. If it is a complete age-appropriate preventive exam, use the preventive visit codes. If it is a limited exam focused only on clearance for a specific activity (shorter, more focused), it may be more accurately coded as an E/M at the appropriate level of complexity.
A Pre-Participation Exam, Worked Through
A 15-year-old comes in for a school sports physical. If this is purely the pre-participation evaluation, it is coded as such, and it is worth knowing that many commercial plans do not cover the sports physical as a preventive benefit, which is why these are so often handled as cash visits or miscoded. But if the same visit turns up an issue that needs real evaluation, exertional chest pain, say, that you work up, you have crossed into problem-oriented E/M and should code accordingly. The frequent error is writing off the entire encounter as a free add-on when genuine evaluation and management occurred.