Medicare reimbursement reference

CPT 49594: $680

Surgery. The federally-set baseline for what this code costs when Medicare pays — used by every bill-review professional as the starting point when reviewing the same code on a hospital, ER, or clinic bill.

National average

$680

Per CMS Physician Fee Schedule, effective 2026-01-01. Non-facility national-average. Real Medicare payments adjust by ±15% based on Geographic Practice Cost Index.

What CPT 49594 actually is

Surgical procedure (CPT 49594). Surgery codes cover everything from minor in-office procedures to major operating-room work. The Medicare global package generally bundles pre-op and routine post-op care into the surgery payment.

The number above is one piece of context. The other two benchmarks worth knowing:

  • Hospital cash-pay rate

    Federally required to be published by every US hospital under 45 CFR §180.50 (the Hospital Price Transparency rule). The hospital’s own machine-readable file is the authoritative source. Same code; rates vary widely by facility.

  • Insurance-negotiated rate

    Whatever your specific insurance plan and the specific facility have contracted for the same code. Visible on your Explanation of Benefits (EOB) after the claim posts.

  • Medicare allowed amount (this page)

    $680 for code 49594, set in federal law and updated annually by CMS. Used as the floor benchmark in most bill-review work.

Where CPT 49594 commonly shows up on a bill

Patterns bill-review professionals look at first when they see this code:

  • 01.Surgery codes billed alongside the components they already include — the CMS global package generally bundles pre-op visits and routine post-op care into the surgical fee.
  • 02.Bilateral procedures billed twice instead of once with the bilateral modifier (-50).
  • 03.Co-surgeons or assistants billed at full fee where federal rules allow only a percentage.

These patterns are documented in CMS billing guidance, the National Correct Coding Initiative (NCCI) edits, and Office of Inspector General audit reports. None of them are accusations about any specific bill or facility — they’re the checks that exist because the patterns themselves exist.

If your bill has this code

See exactly how your charge compares to $680— in 60 seconds.

Upload a photo or PDF of your bill. Our system reads every line, compares each charge to four federal data sources (CMS PFS, NADAC drug benchmarks, federally-required Hospital Price Transparency files, and the National Correct Coding Initiative), and drafts dispute letters for anything worth questioning — with the codes, the math, and the federal-law citations already inside.

  • Line-by-line audit, every charge benchmarked.
  • Up to 5 dispute letters drafted — sign and mail.
  • Charity-care application if your hospital is non-profit.
  • We Found Something or You Don’t Pay.
Analyze my bill — $19.9730-day money-back. No account needed to start.

Related codes

Codes in the same numerical neighborhood — often appear together on the same bill or get billed in place of each other:

Common questions about CPT 49594

How much does CPT 49594 cost?
Medicare's national-average non-facility allowed amount for CPT 49594 is approximately $680 as of 2026-01-01. Hospital cash-pay rates and commercial-insurance contracted rates for the same code are typically higher; the gap is what most billing reviews focus on.
Why is my CPT 49594 bill higher than $680?
Three common reasons: (1) the rate above is non-facility — bills from inpatient hospital settings can be paid differently, (2) commercial insurance contracts and hospital chargemasters are not bound by Medicare rates and often run several multiples higher, and (3) modifiers on the bill may add or subtract from the base rate. The federally-mandated Hospital Price Transparency file for the facility that billed you is the authoritative source for the cash-pay and insurance-negotiated rates at that specific hospital.
Can I dispute a CPT 49594 charge?
Yes. Federal and state consumer-protection law gives every patient the right to (1) request an itemized statement (HIPAA §164.524), (2) receive a Good Faith Estimate before scheduled service (No Surprises Act, 2022), (3) dispute amounts billed without prior consent or proper notice, and (4) apply for charity care if the facility is a 501(c)(3) non-profit (ACA §501(r)). The benchmark above is one piece of evidence; the hospital's own HPT file is another.
What's the source of this number?
The CMS Physician Fee Schedule (PFS) — published annually by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and required by 42 USC §1395w-4 to be publicly available. We refresh from CMS quarterly. Last updated: 2026-01-01.

P.S.If you’re holding a bill with code 49594on it right now, the fastest path is to scan it — the audit takes under a minute and shows the exact gap between what was charged and the $680 benchmark above. Start the audit →

P.P.S. If the bill came from a non-profit hospital, federal law (ACA §501(r)) requires them to offer charity care to patients below specific income thresholds. We auto-check 501(c)(3) status against the IRS Publication 78 database and draft the application letter when applicable.

P.P.P.S. The $680number above is a benchmark, not a verdict. The right question on any specific bill is whether the documentation in your medical record supports the code that was billed — that’s what every bill-review process ultimately comes down to.

Source & methodology

Rate from the CMS Physician Fee Schedule, refreshed quarterly from cms.gov. National-average non-facility allowed amount; real Medicare payment adjusts by ±15% per locality (GPCI). The CMS PFS is in the public domain (17 USC §105). Full data-source register at /data-sources.