Emergency Room Billing Services in New York

New York's emergency room practices face unique billing challenges shaped by Empire BlueCross BlueShield's commercial rules, NY Medicaid Managed Care requirements, and National Government Services (NGS) (Jurisdiction K) Medicare policies. Our AAPC-certified coders specialize in both NY payer rules and emergency room coding complexity.

AAPC Certified
NY Payer Expert
Emergency Room Specialists
2.49% Rate
Last reviewed: May 2026Reviewed by the Go Medical Billing Editorial TeamAAPC-certified coders
90,000+NY Physicians
2.49%Starting Rate
7Medicaid MCOs
98%+Clean Claim Rate

Why New York Emergency Room Practices Need Specialized Billing

New York's healthcare market includes 90,000+ physicians, and emergency room practices here face a payer market dominated by Empire BlueCross BlueShield on the commercial side and NY Medicaid Managed Care on the public payer side. Medicare claims are processed through National Government Services (NGS) (Jurisdiction K), which applies its own Local Coverage Determinations that directly affect emergency room procedure coverage and medical necessity requirements. Generic billing teams without NY specific knowledge leave revenue on the table.

Emergency Room billing itself is complex. ED billing uses the 99281-99285 code range with different documentation requirements than office-based E/M. Critical care (99291-99292) is time-based. Observation services have specific admission criteria. The No Surprises Act affects OON emergency billing. When you combine this coding complexity with New York's specific payer rules, authorization requirements, and 7 NY Medicaid Managed Care managed care plans that each have their own billing rules, you need a team that understands both dimensions. Go Medical Billing provides that expertise at 2.49% of collections, serving emergency room practices from New York City to Yonkers and across New York.

2026 New York Medicare Allowables for Emergency Room CPT Codes

These are the 2026 Medicare allowable amounts for emergency room CPT codes in New York, processed under National Government Services (NGS) (Jurisdiction K). Allowables are locality-adjusted, so NYrates differ from other states — the highest-value emergency room code below pays $417.63 non-facility here. Compare any code across states with our Medicare fee calculator by state.

Code
Description
Non-Facility
Facility
Emergency department visit, minor problem
$11.97
$11.97
Emergency department visit, straightforward MDM
$43.86
$43.86
Emergency department visit, low MDM
$75.49
$75.49
Emergency department visit, moderate MDM
$128.52
$128.52
Emergency department visit, high MDM
$185.95
$185.95
Critical care, first 30-74 minutes
$338.17
$215.58
Critical care, each additional 30 minutes
$146.17
$108.54
Central venous catheter insertion (age 5+)
$263.28
$84.43
Endotracheal intubation, emergency
$145.54
$145.54
Cardiopulmonary resuscitation
$417.63
$184.74

Source: 2026 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule, NY locality (National Government Services (NGS) (Jurisdiction K)). Commercial Empire BlueCross BlueShield rates typically run above these benchmarks; NY Medicaid Managed Care rates run below. Figures for reference, not a guarantee of payment.

The New York Market Context for Emergency Room Practices

New York has more than 90,000 physicians and one of the most fragmented commercial insurance markets in the country. The state has its own Surprise Bill Law that predates the federal No Surprises Act by several years, and the New York Independent Dispute Resolution process is one of the most active state-level arbitration systems for out-of-network claims. Empire BlueCross BlueShield is the largest commercial carrier statewide. EmblemHealth, Oxford, and Aetna also hold significant share. New York City has a separate Medicaid managed care market from upstate. MetroPlus and Healthfirst dominate inside the five boroughs while Fidelis Care, MVP, and UnitedHealthcare are more prominent upstate. The state has at least seven active Medicaid managed care organizations, each with its own provider portal, prior authorization rules, and reimbursement schedule.

New York-specific factors that shape emergency room reimbursement: New York's Surprise Bill Law went into effect in 2015, predating the federal No Surprises Act by seven years. The state IDR process has issued thousands of binding decisions.; Empire BlueCross BlueShield is one of the largest BCBS plans in the country by membership. Its rules differ from BCBS plans in neighboring states like New Jersey (Horizon BCBS) and Connecticut (Anthem BCBS).; New York is the largest single state for Medicare beneficiaries in the Northeast. The Medicare MAC is National Government Services (NGS) under Jurisdiction K, which also serves Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont.. Our NY coders build these into every emergency roomclaim — see how this works alongside our New York medical billing and emergency room billing teams.

New York Payer Challenges for Emergency Room

Every NY payer has specific rules for emergency room claims. Here's how we navigate them.

Empire BlueCross BlueShield Emergency Room Claims

Empire BlueCross BlueShield processes the largest share of New York commercial emergency room claims. We know their NY specific fee schedules, prior authorization requirements for emergency room procedures, and their appeal timelines when claims are denied. 99281-99285 has facility-specific documentation guidelines different from outpatient E/M.

NY Medicaid Managed Care Emergency Room Billing

NY Medicaid Managed Care routes emergency room patients through 7 managed care plans: Fidelis Care, Healthfirst, MetroPlus, and 4 more. Each MCO has its own emergency room authorization and billing rules that we manage.

Medicare (National Government Services (NGS) (Jurisdiction K)) Emergency Room Coverage

National Government Services (NGS) (Jurisdiction K) processes Medicare emergency room claims in New York with its own Local Coverage Determinations. We navigate National Government Services (NGS) (Jurisdiction K)'s policies around critical care time to prevent medical necessity denials.

Denial Prevention for New York Emergency Room

Common emergency room denials in New York include 99281-99285 has facility-specific documentation guidelines different from outpatient e/m and 99291 requires 30+ min of documented critical care time. Our team catches these issues before submission and appeals aggressively with NY payer-specific documentation when denials occur.

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What We Handle for New York Emergency Room Practices

ED E/M coding (99281-99285)
Critical care time capture
Observation services billing
Facility and professional fee billing
No Surprises Act compliance
Trauma activation coding

New York Emergency Room Billing Cost Comparison

Hiring an in-house biller with emergency room expertise in New York costs $45K-$62K annually in salary alone. Add benefits, software, clearinghouse fees, and office space, and the true cost is even higher. At 2.49% of collections, Go Medical Billing provides an entire team of AAPC-certified emergency room coders and NY payer specialists for a fraction of that cost.

$45K-$62K

In-House Biller Salary

+ benefits, software, space

2.49%

Go Medical Billing Rate

Full team, all services included

60-80%

Typical Cost Reduction

With better results

Frequently Asked Questions

All major NY payers: Empire BlueCross BlueShield, Aetna, Cigna, UHC, EmblemHealth, Oxford Health Plans, Healthfirst (commercial), MVP, NY Medicaid Managed Care (including Fidelis Care, Healthfirst, MetroPlus), and Medicare through National Government Services (NGS) (Jurisdiction K). If a payer accepts emergency room patients in New York, we submit and follow-up on claims with them.
The most frequent emergency room denials we see from NY payers include 99281-99285 has facility-specific documentation guidelines different from outpatient e/m, 99291 requires 30+ min of documented critical care time, admission criteria, time tracking, and conversion to inpatient have specific rules. Our team catches these before submission by applying both emergency room coding expertise and NY payer-specific rules to every claim.
NY Medicaid Managed Care routes emergency room patients through 7 managed care plans: Fidelis Care, Healthfirst, MetroPlus, Molina Healthcare, MVP Health Care, UnitedHealthcare Community Plan, Empire BlueCross BlueShield HealthPlus. Each MCO has its own emergency room authorization requirements, fee schedules, and billing rules. We credential and bill with all of them so your emergency room practice gets paid correctly.
Most NY emergency room practices are fully transitioned within two to three weeks. We connect to your EHR, learn your emergency room workflows, and start submitting claims to Empire BlueCross BlueShield, NY Medicaid Managed Care, Medicare, and all your NY payers with no downtime.

Fix Your New York Emergency Room Billing

Call 888-701-6090 for a free billing assessment specific to your NY emergency room practice. We'll show you where revenue is leaking and how to fix it.