Visit our website: Click here Follow us: Call now 888 - 357 - 3226 (Toll Free) info@medicalbillersandcoders.com C op yr i g h t © Medical Billers and Coders. Al l R i g h ts Rese r v e d 1 Family Practice Billing Services in Florida Family practice has the widest scope in outpatient medicine — from newborns to geriatric patients, preventive visits alongside acute encounters, chronic disease management layered with behavioral health screenings, and minor in-office procedures billed alongside E/M services on the same day. That breadth is what makes family practice billing in Florida structurally more complex than most specialties, and why the denial patterns that show up consistently in Florida family practices are not random errors — they are predictable failures built into workflows that were not designed around the coding rules that govern the specialty. Two 2026 CMS changes created new denial triggers specifically for family practice that most practices have not yet addressed. Florida ’s payer environment — Medicaid ICP complexity, dominant commercial payers running AI-based claim review, and a large elderly and Spanish-speaking patient population — adds state-specific pressure on top. The result is that Florida family practices are leaving significant, recoverable revenue on the table every billing cycle. MBC provides family practice billing services across Florida , with coders and billing specialists who work exclusively on primary care and family medicine revenue cycles. We act as your Revenue Integrity Partner — handling the full billing cycle, from E/M coding through chronic care management capture, denial management, and A/R recovery. Running denial rates above 8% or noticing G2211 claims being rejected more frequently in 2026? Request a Revenue Diagnostic — a no-cost audit of your current denial patterns by payer and CPT category, G2211 conflict exposure, CCM capture rate, and same-day preventive visit coding accuracy. Visit our website: Click here Follow us: Call now 888 - 357 - 3226 (Toll Free) info@medicalbillersandcoders.com C op yr i g h t © Medical Billers and Coders. Al l R i g h ts Rese r v e d 2 Why Family Practice Billing Is Harder in Florida in 2026 Florida family practices face a specific convergence of state-level payer complexity and 2026 federal coding changes that most billing teams have not fully adapted to: G2211 conflicts with Modifier 25 — a new 2026 denial trigger. 2026 NEW CMS finalized a new rule effective January 1, 2026: G2211 — the longitudinal complexity add- on code — generally cannot be billed on the same day as an E/M service that also carries Modifier 25 for a minor procedure with a 0-day global period. For Florida family practices that routinely bill G2211 for established patient visits, any encounter that also includes an in-office procedure (skin tag removal, joint injection, wound care) now results in a systematic denial of G2211 unless the claim is structured correctly. Practices that did not update their billing protocols on January 1 are generating these denials on every affected encounter — across the entire practice, not in isolated cases. G2211 now applies to home and residence visits — a missed revenue opportunity. 2026 NEW The same 2026 CMS rule expanded G2211 eligibility to include home and residence E/M visits (CPT 99341 – 99350). Family practices using home visit programs or assisted living facility visits are now leaving G2211 revenue uncaptured on every qualifying encounter if their billing team has not added the code to home-visit workflows. Same-day preventive and problem-focused visits. When a patient comes in for a preventive visit, and the provider also addresses an acute or chronic problem during the same encounter, both the preventive code and the problem- focused E/M are billable — but only with Modifier 25 on the problem-focused E/M to establish it as a separately identifiable service. Florida payers, particularly Florida Blue and Humana, routinely deny same-day preventive and problem visit combinations when Modifier 25 is missing or applied to the wrong code. This is one of the most consistent denial sources in Florida family practice, and it is entirely preventable. Chronic care management undercapture. CPT 99490 requires at least 20 minutes of documented non-face-to-face care coordination per month for patients with two or more chronic conditions. Florida family practices typically have large panels of elderly patients who qualify — but CCM is underbilled across the state because documentation workflows were never set up to capture the 20-minute threshold, or because billing teams are not flagging eligible patients. This is recurring, month-over-month revenue that remains unrecovered for patients already in the practice. E/M level undercoding. CPT 99214 alone generated $459 million in improper Medicare payments nationally in FY2024 — the majority of which were due to documentation insufficient to support the billed E/M level. The inverse problem is equally common in Florida family practice: providers consistently bill code 99213 when their documentation actually supports 99214, because no one audits coding levels against documentation. The revenue loss from systematic undercoding is invisible until a billing audit finds it. Florida Medicaid ICP and managed care complexity. Florida’s Medicaid Institutional Care Program covers the state’s large elderly and disabled population, with reimbursement statutes and documentation requirements that differ from Visit our website: Click here Follow us: Call now 888 - 357 - 3226 (Toll Free) info@medicalbillersandcoders.com C op yr i g h t © Medical Billers and Coders. Al l R i g h ts Rese r v e d 3 those of standard Medicaid programs in other states. Florida also operates Medicaid through managed care plans, with distinct eligibility verification, prior authorization, and timely filing requirements for each plan. Family practices seeing high volumes of Medicaid ICP patients need billing teams who know Florida-specific statutes — not generic Medicaid billing rules. Payer AI audit acceleration. Florida Blue, Humana, Aetna, and UnitedHealth have significantly increased AI-assisted claim review in 2025 – 2026. E/M downcoding, medical-necessity disputes over chronic care management, and prior-authorization denials for behavioral health screenings billed alongside office visits are all rising. Practices without current, payer-specific denial pattern tracking are absorbing these losses as write-offs rather than identifying and correcting the upstream billing issue. Family Practice Billing Services We Handle in Florida MBC manages the full revenue cycle for family practice and family medicine providers across Florida, covering the complete scope of services the specialty generates: E/M coding (99202 – 99215, all levels) Preventive care billing (99381 – 99397) G2211 complexity add-on — conflict-aware Same-day preventive + problem visit billing Chronic care management (99490 – 99491) Advanced primary care management (APCM) Annual wellness visits (AWV, IPPE) Transitional care management (99495 – 99496) Home and residence visit billing (99341 – 99350) Behavioral health integration (BHI) billing Minor in-office procedure billing with modifiers Telehealth family practice visit billing Pediatric and well-child visit coding Florida Medicaid ICP billing Denial management and appeals A/R follow-up and aging recovery Insurance eligibility verification Credentialing and payer enrollment We work with your existing EHR — eClinicalWorks, Medisoft, AdvancedMD, GE Centricity, Athena Health, NextGen, or any other platform. No software changes, no workflow disruption. We adapt to your system from day one. The 2026 G2211 Rules: Florida Family Practices Need to Know G2211 has been one of the most significant revenue opportunities for Florida family practices since CMS introduced it in 2024 — and one of the most mishandled in 2026, because two new rules changed how and when it can be billed. Visit our website: Click here Follow us: Call now 888 - 357 - 3226 (Toll Free) info@medicalbillersandcoders.com C op yr i g h t © Medical Billers and Coders. Al l R i g h ts Rese r v e d 4 The Modifier 25 conflict rule. Effective January 1, 2026, G2211 generally cannot be applied to an E/M service on the same day that Modifier 25 is also used on that E/M — specifically when the Modifier 25 is associated with a minor procedure carrying a 0-day global period. In a typical Florida family practice encounter, this means any visit where the provider also performs a skin tag removal, wart treatment, joint injection, ear irrigation, or similar in-office procedure creates a potential G2211 denial if the claim is structured without accounting for this rule. The fix is not to stop billing G2211 — it is to structure the claim correctly for the encounter type. The home visit expansion. CMS expanded G2211 eligibility in 2026 to cover home and residence E/M codes (CPT 99341 – 99350). Florida family practices with home visit programs, assisted living facility visit schedules, or domiciliary care patients now have a G2211 revenue opportunity on every qualifying encounter — but only if their billing workflows have been updated to include the code on home visit claims. Most have not. A practice billing G2211 on every established patient visit without verifying the Modifier 25 interaction is generating systematic denials across every affected encounter — not on isolated claims. MBC’s billing engine checks the G2211 and Modifier 25 combination at the claim level before submission, so denials are prevented rather than appealed after the fact. What a Revenue Diagnostic Finds in a Typical Florida Family Practice When MBC audits a Florida family practice’s billing, the same structural issues appear regardless of practice size or market: G2211 denials spiking in January 2026 with no root-cause identified — the Modifier 25 conflict rule triggering on procedure-day encounters that were billing cleanly before G2211 not added to home visit or domiciliary care workflows, leaving the add-on uncaptured on every qualifying encounter since January 1 Same-day preventive and problem-focused visits billing without Modifier 25 on the E/M — Florida Blue and Humana bundling and denying the problem-visit charge CCM (99490) underbilled or not billed at all, despite large panels of elderly Florida patients with two or more qualifying chronic conditions E/M levels consistently coded at 99213 when provider documentation supports 99214 — the difference is $30 – $40 per visit, compounded across hundreds of weekly encounters Behavioral health integration (BHI) billing not implemented despite providers routinely performing PHQ-9 screenings and depression management during office visits Annual wellness visits billed as preventive E/M instead of AWV codes — triggering patient cost-sharing that should not apply and generating complaint calls that consume front-desk time Florida Medicaid ICP claims aging past 90 days without appeal because the billing team lacks Florida-specific reimbursement statute knowledge to build the appeal correctly A Revenue Diagnostic identifies exactly where your Florida family practice is losing money — with payer-specific data, not generic benchmarks. It takes about 15 minutes. Request yours here. Stop Managing Billing. Start Recovering Revenue. Visit our website: Click here Follow us: Call now 888 - 357 - 3226 (Toll Free) info@medicalbillersandcoders.com C op yr i g h t © Medical Billers and Coders. Al l R i g h ts Rese r v e d 5 Family practices across Florida trust MBC to handle their complete revenue cycle — from same-day visit coding through CCM capture, G2211 compliance, and denial recovery. Let’s find out how much your practice is currently leaving uncollected. Get a Free Revenue Diagnostic Family Practice Billing Coverage Across Florida MBC serves family practice and family medicine providers throughout Florida, including major markets and surrounding communities: Jacksonville • Miami • Tampa • Orlando • St. Petersburg • Fort Lauderdale • Tallahassee • Cape Coral • Gainesville • Pensacola • Sarasota • Port St. Lucie • Hialeah • Palm Beach • Clearwater • Lakeland • Daytona Beach • Palm Harbor • Ocala • Fort Myers • Boca Raton • Pompano Beach • West Palm Beach • Coral Springs • Miramar If your practice is located in a city not listed above, contact us — MBC’s Florida billing team covers the entire state, including rural markets where family practice is often the only outpatient provider in the community. What Outsourcing Family Practice Billing in Florida Costs — and What It Returns Most Florida family practices pay their billing vendor 3 – 6% of net collections. MBC operates on a per- collection model — you pay only on revenue recovered, not on claims submitted. There are no setup fees and no long-term contracts before we have demonstrated results. The more useful question is what your current billing process costs you. A Florida family practice billing $500,000 per month with an 11% error rate — the national average for the specialty — is generating $55,000 per month in avoidable revenue leakage. The G2211 Modifier 25 conflict alone, if left uncorrected, compounds across every procedure-day encounter in the practice. CCM undercapture on a 2,000-patient panel with 40% chronic disease prevalence can represent $15,000 – $30,000 in missed monthly revenue. Our Revenue Diagnostic gives you those specific numbers for your practice before you commit to anything. For a deeper look at what optimized RCM does to long-term financial performance, see our guide to yielding your EBITDA through RCM. Family Practice Billing in Florida: Frequently Asked Questions What changed with G2211 billing for family practices in 2026? CMS introduced two significant G2211 changes effective January 1, 2026. First, G2211 generally cannot be billed on the same day as an E/M service that also carries Modifier 25 for a minor procedure with a 0-day global period — a rule that affects every family practice encounter where the Visit our website: Click here Follow us: Call now 888 - 357 - 3226 (Toll Free) info@medicalbillersandcoders.com C op yr i g h t © Medical Billers and Coders. Al l R i g h ts Rese r v e d 6 provider performs an in-office procedure alongside an E/M visit. Second, G2211 eligibility was expanded to include home and residence E/M visits (CPT 99341 – 99350), creating a new revenue opportunity for practices with home visit or domiciliary care programs. Practices that did not update billing protocols on January 1 are generating systematic denials on the first rule and leaving revenue uncaptured on the second. Can I bill a preventive visit and a problem-focused visit on the same day in Florida? Yes — but only when Modifier 25 is applied correctly to the problem-focused E/M service, establishing it as a significant, separately identifiable service performed on the same day as the preventive visit. Without Modifier 25, Florida payers — particularly Florida Blue and Humana — automatically bundle the problem-focused E/M into the preventive code and deny or reduce payment for the separate service. The billing logic must also correctly assign the preventive code and E/M code to their respective claim lines, with the modifier on the right code. This is one of the most consistently denied code combinations in Florida family practice. What is chronic care management billing and is my Florida family practice eligible? Chronic care management (CPT 99490) reimburses for at least 20 minutes of non-face-to-face care coordination per month for patients with two or more chronic conditions expected to last at least 12 months. Florida family practices with large panels of elderly patients — common g iven the state’s demographics — typically have significant CCM-eligible populations. The barriers to billing it are documentation and workflow, not eligibility: the 20-minute threshold must be documented, the patient must consent to CCM enrollment, and the billing team must flag eligible patients and submit the code monthly. MBC sets up CCM capture workflows as part of the billing engagement. How is family practice billing different from primary care billing in Florida? Family practice covers a broader patient population than primary care as typically defined — from pediatric well-child visits through geriatric care, including minor in-office procedures, behavioral health integration, and a wider range of preventive services. This breadth creates more billing complexity: pediatric coding has its own preventive visit code set (99381 – 99385 for new patients), behavioral health integration billing (BHI codes) applies alongside standard E/M visits, and the range of in-office procedures billed with Modifier 25 is wider, increasing G2211 conflict exposure. Family practices also typically bill home and residence visits more frequently than narrower primary care practices, making the 2026 G2211 expansion directly relevant. How much does outsourced family practice billing cost in Florida? Most Florida family practices pay 3 – 6% of net collections for outsourced billing. MBC operates on a per-collection model — you pay only on revenue recovered, not on claims submitted. There are no setup fees or long-term contracts before results are demonstrated. For practices running billing error rates at or above the 11% national average for the specialty, the revenue recovered through structural denial correction, CCM capture, and E/M level optimization typically offsets the billing fee within the first quarter. Visit our website: Click here Follow us: Call now 888 - 357 - 3226 (Toll Free) info@medicalbillersandcoders.com C op yr i g h t © Medical Billers and Coders. Al l R i g h ts Rese r v e d 7 Primary Care Medical Billing Services in Florida Phone: 888-357-3226 Fax: 888-316-4566 Email: sales@medicalbillersandcoders.com