Billing For 97110

Understanding CPT 97110 is essential for accurate billing and proper reimbursement. This code describes therapeutic exercises provided with direct, one-on-one contact, designed to improve strength, endurance, range of motion, and flexibility.

Examples of When 97110 Is Appropriate

  • Address join stiffness or decreased ROM after injury
  • Range-of-motion stretching for post-surgical patients
  • Core stabilization drills for back pain

What Your Documentation Must Include

Because 97110 is a cornerstone code in physical therapy—and heavily scrutinized—your notes must clearly demonstrate the work performed and why it was medically necessary. Be sure to document:

  • Type of Exercise
    Describe each exercise (e.g., seated leg raises, planks, resistance band rows).
  • Body Parts Addressed
    Identify targeted muscle groups or joints.
  • Purpose/Functional Goal
    Example: improving ROM to support gait or increasing strength for lifting tolerance.
  • Progress Metrics
    Include objective data such as reps, resistance level, duration, strength grading, or degrees of motion.
  • Time Spent
    Document minutes for each exercise and total time.
  • Medical Necessity
    Explain how the exercises relate to the patient’s functional deficits or impairments.

Example Note for a Chronic Low Back Pain Patient

“Pt performed planks and bird-dog exercises for 15 minutes to improve trunk stability and reduce low-back pain. Pt required minimal assistance to maintain neutral spine alignment and progressed hold times from 15s to 25s for 3 reps. Goal: improve sitting and standing tolerance for daily activities, currently limited due to pain.”


Final Reminder

Using strong documentation practices ensures:

  • You clearly show the therapeutic work performed
  • You demonstrate patient progress
  • You establish medical necessity
  • You get paid for the services you deliver

Properly documented 97110 not only supports reimbursement—it reflects the real, measurable value of the care you provide.