Skip to content
BillRazor
Double-Charge Detector 17313

Mohs 1 stage t/a/l — 267 bundling rules

If your bill lists 17313 alongside any of these codes as separate charges, it may be an unbundling error.

By David Park , Healthcare Cost Researcher · ·
About the analyst

David Park researches procedure pricing and insurance reimbursement patterns at BillRazor Research. He specializes in cost comparison across care settings and metropolitan areas. Expertise: procedure pricing, insurance reimbursement, cost comparison.

NCCI edit data
267 code pairs
Updated 2026-04-03
Bundling rules — 17313
NCCI edits: these codes have billing restrictions when billed with 17313
173130213TNjx paravert w/us cer/thorNever bill together0216TNjx paravert w/us lumb/sacNever bill together0596TTemp fml iu vlv-pmp 1st insjMay bill with modifier0597TTemp fml iu valve-pmp rplcmtMay bill with modifier0903TEcg alg 12 lead reduced i&rMay bill with modifier0904TEcg alg 12 ld rdcd trcg onlyMay bill with modifier0905TEcg alg 12 ld rdcd i&r onlyMay bill with modifier11000Dbrdmt ecz/infected skin<10%May bill with modifier
Research suggests 49–80% of hospital bills contain errors. Our system checks every line item against Medicare benchmarks.

Common unbundling errors — Surgery procedures

Unbundling occurs when hospitals bill component steps of a surgical procedure separately instead of using the appropriate comprehensive code that covers the entire operation. The NCCI database contains 1,142 surgery codes with bundling restrictions to prevent this practice. Common unbundling patterns include separately billing for surgical approach and closure when these are integral components of the main procedure, and charging for routine preparation steps like positioning or draping that are already included in the primary surgical code. Another frequent error involves billing separately for minor procedures performed during the same operative session that should be considered incidental to the major surgery. These billing practices result in charges above the benchmark for what should constitute a single surgical service. Patients may face potential differences in their financial responsibility when component procedures are unbundled rather than appropriately consolidated under comprehensive surgical codes. Understanding these bundling rules helps ensure accurate billing that reflects the actual scope of surgical services provided during a single operative encounter.

What to check on your bill

When reviewing surgery bills, patients should examine itemized charges for potential unbundling issues. Look for multiple procedure codes billed separately when they should be bundled together under standard billing practices. Watch for code patterns where a primary procedure appears alongside related minor procedures without appropriate modifiers - for example, seeing separate charges for incision, repair, and closure that typically comprise one surgical package. Check that modifier codes like -59 or -25 are present when separate procedures are legitimately billed, as these indicate the charges meet specific criteria for separate billing. Verify that pre-operative and post-operative care aren't billed separately from the main procedure unless clearly documented as distinct services. Compare your itemized statement against the original procedure authorization to identify any charges above the benchmark for your specific surgery type, noting potential differences between bundled and unbundled billing approaches.

All bundling rules for 17313

267 code pairs that have billing restrictions with this procedure.

63
Never bill together
204
May bill with modifier
Code Description Rule
0213T Njx paravert w/us cer/thor Never bill together
0216T Njx paravert w/us lumb/sac Never bill together
0596T Temp fml iu vlv-pmp 1st insj May bill with modifier
0597T Temp fml iu valve-pmp rplcmt May bill with modifier
0903T Ecg alg 12 lead reduced i&r May bill with modifier
0904T Ecg alg 12 ld rdcd trcg only May bill with modifier
0905T Ecg alg 12 ld rdcd i&r only May bill with modifier
11000 Dbrdmt ecz/infected skin<10% May bill with modifier
11001 Dbrdmt ecz/infct skn ea addl May bill with modifier
11004 Dbrdmt skin xtrnl gent&per May bill with modifier
11005 Dbrdmt skin abdominal wall May bill with modifier
11006 Dbrdmt skin xtrnl gent per May bill with modifier
11010 Debride skin at fx site May bill with modifier
11011 Debride skin musc at fx site May bill with modifier
11012 Deb skin bone at fx site May bill with modifier
11042 Dbrdmt subq tis 1st 20sqcm/< May bill with modifier
11043 Dbrdmt musc&/fsca 1st 20/< May bill with modifier
11044 Dbrdmt bone 1st 20 sq cm/< May bill with modifier
11045 Dbrdmt subq tiss each addl May bill with modifier
11046 Dbrdmt musc&/fsca ea addl May bill with modifier
11047 Dbrdmt bone each addl May bill with modifier
11102 Tangntl bx skin single les May bill with modifier
11104 Punch bx skin single lesion May bill with modifier
11106 Incal bx skn single les May bill with modifier
11400 Exc tr-ext b9+marg 0.5 cm< May bill with modifier
11401 Exc tr-ext b9+marg 0.6-1 cm May bill with modifier
11402 Exc tr-ext b9+marg 1.1-2 cm May bill with modifier
11403 Exc tr-ext b9+marg 2.1-3cm May bill with modifier
11404 Exc tr-ext b9+marg 3.1-4 cm May bill with modifier
11406 Exc tr-ext b9+marg >4.0 cm May bill with modifier
11450 Exc skn hdrdnt ax smpl/ntrm May bill with modifier
11451 Exc skn hdrdnt ax complex May bill with modifier
11462 Exc skn hdrdnt ing smpl/ntrm May bill with modifier
11463 Exc skn hdrdnt ing complex May bill with modifier
11470 Exc skn h/p/p/u smpl/ntrm May bill with modifier
11471 Exc skn h/p/p/u complex May bill with modifier
11600 Exc tr-ext mal+marg 0.5 cm/< May bill with modifier
11601 Exc tr-ext mal+marg 0.6-1 cm May bill with modifier
11602 Exc tr-ext mal+marg 1.1-2 cm May bill with modifier
11603 Exc tr-ext mal+marg 2.1-3 cm May bill with modifier
11604 Exc tr-ext mal+marg 3.1-4 cm May bill with modifier
11606 Exc tr-ext mal+marg >4 cm May bill with modifier
11620 Exc h-f-nk-sp mal+marg 0.5/< May bill with modifier
11621 Exc s/n/h/f/g mal+mrg 0.6-1 May bill with modifier
11622 Exc s/n/h/f/g mal+mrg 1.1-2 May bill with modifier
11623 Exc s/n/h/f/g mal+mrg 2.1-3 May bill with modifier
11624 Exc s/n/h/f/g mal+mrg 3.1-4 May bill with modifier
11626 Exc s/n/h/f/g mal+mrg >4 cm May bill with modifier
11640 Exc f/e/e/n/l mal+mrg 0.5cm< May bill with modifier
11641 Exc f/e/e/n/l mal+mrg 0.6-1 May bill with modifier

Showing 50 of 267 rules. Show all

FAQ — Surgery procedure bundling

What is NCCI bundling and what does 'bundled' mean on a medical bill?
NCCI bundling refers to Medicare's National Correct Coding Initiative rules that require certain surgical procedure codes to be billed together as a single comprehensive service rather than as separate line items. When procedures are 'bundled,' component steps of a surgery are included in one primary procedure code instead of being billed individually, which reflects the standard of care for that operation.
How can I determine if surgical codes were incorrectly unbundled on my bill?
Incorrect unbundling occurs when a hospital bills separate codes for surgical steps that should be included in one comprehensive procedure code according to NCCI rules. You can identify potential unbundling by looking for multiple surgical codes billed on the same date that represent component parts of a single operation, particularly among the 1,142 codes with known bundling restrictions.
What should I do if I find unbundled charges on my medical bill?
If you identify potentially unbundled charges, contact your hospital's billing department to request a review of the coding and ask them to verify compliance with NCCI bundling rules. You can also work with your insurance company's medical review team or consult with a medical billing advocate to analyze the charges against established bundling requirements.
When is it legitimate for hospitals to use modifiers to bypass bundling rules?
Modifiers can legitimately bypass bundling rules when surgical procedures are performed on different anatomical sites, during separate patient encounters, or when clinical circumstances genuinely require distinct procedures beyond the standard bundled service. However, modifier usage must be supported by medical documentation that demonstrates the procedures were truly separate and distinct from the bundled service.
Rates shown are from the 2026 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule and CMS IPPS. BillRazor compares your bill against these data sources. See how it works →

Data source: CMS National Correct Coding Initiative (NCCI) Procedure-to-Procedure (PTP) edits, updated quarterly. These code pairs are maintained by CMS to prevent improper billing of services that should be billed as a single procedure.

What this means: When two codes are listed as an NCCI edit pair, billing them separately on the same date of service is typically incorrect. "Never bill together" means no modifier can override the rule. "May bill with modifier" means the codes can be billed separately with appropriate documentation.

See If I'm Overcharged