Mental Health
15 procedures in Mental Health. Medicare reimbursement averages $63.94 per service; billed charges average N/A. Source: CMS Medicare Physician & Other Practitioners 2023.
Psychotherapy and psychiatric treatment
15 procedures · Avg Medicare payment: $63.94
| Code | Procedure | Medicare | Billed |
|---|---|---|---|
| 90837 | Psychotherapy, 1 Hour | $93.58 | $201.70 |
| 90834 | Psychotherapy, 45 Minutes | $65.18 | $170.08 |
| 90832 | Psychotherapy, 30 Minutes | $48.83 | $126.49 |
| 90833 | Psychotherapy With Evaluation And Management Visit, 30... | $47.80 | $135.67 |
| 90791 | Psychiatric Diagnostic Evaluation | $111.80 | $288.68 |
| 90792 | Psychiatric Diagnostic Evaluation With Medical Services | $126.61 | $395.06 |
| 90836 | Psychotherapy With Evaluation And Management Visit, 45... | $66.35 | $170.59 |
| 90853 | Group Psychotherapy | $16.72 | $88.84 |
| 90785 | Psychiatric Services Complicated By Communication... | $9.76 | $47.13 |
| 90847 | Family Psychotherapy With Patient, 50 Minutes | $66.57 | $193.86 |
| 90838 | Psychotherapy With Evaluation And Management Visit, 1... | $85.39 | $213.70 |
| 90846 | Family Psychotherapy Without Patient, 50 Minutes | $63.72 | $191.98 |
| 90839 | Psychotherapy For Crisis, First Hour | $88.50 | $285.70 |
| 90840 | Psychotherapy For Crisis, Each Additional 30 Minutes | $46.90 | $152.05 |
| 90849 | Multiple-Family Group Psychotherapy | $21.42 | $115.48 |
Reading Mental Health Pricing Data
The 15 procedure codes grouped under Mental Health share a common clinical taxonomy in the CMS Medicare Physician & Other Practitioners dataset. Across this category, the average Medicare payment is $63.94 — the figure Medicare actually reimburses providers for the allowed amount after geographic and specialty adjustments. Psychotherapy and psychiatric treatment Each CPT/HCPCS code in the table above carries its own fee schedule value determined by CMS's Resource-Based Relative Value Scale (RBRVS), which weights physician work, practice expense, and professional liability.
Billed charges — the "Billed" column — often run several multiples above Medicare allowed amounts. This is expected under US chargemaster pricing practices: providers list a gross rate, then accept negotiated write-offs from Medicare, Medicaid, and commercial insurers under participation agreements. A high markup ratio does not necessarily indicate overcharging, because almost no payer pays the full billed charge. However, uninsured and out-of-network patients can be exposed to amounts closer to the billed rate, which is why federal rules now require providers to publish cash and negotiated prices through the Hospital Price Transparency initiative.
Volume matters when interpreting category-level data. Procedures with millions of annual services — evaluation visits, common diagnostic work — reflect stable, well-benchmarked pricing. Lower-volume codes may show wider variation across providers and settings because small sample sizes produce less stable averages. When comparing specific procedures, drill into the individual procedure page for state-level breakdowns, provider counts, and commercial pricing estimates derived from RAND 2024 research. This page presents CMS reference data for educational use; it does not constitute medical, legal, or financial advice.
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Disclaimer: This information is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute professional advice. Data is sourced from CMS (Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services). Consult a qualified professional before making decisions based on this data.
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Read our methodology — how this data is sourced, computed, and verified.