CO-97 Denial Code: Service is bundled into another procedure's payment
The payer considers this service part of another procedure that was already paid, so it is not separately reimbursable. This is usually driven by correct-coding (NCCI) bundling edits.
- Group code
- CO - Contractual Obligation
- Code type
- CARC
- Billable to patient?
- No - contractual write-off
- Appealable?
- Sometimes - with the right modifier
- Category
- Bundling & NCCI Edits
- Common pairing
- N130
CAS*CO*97*125.00On a paper EOB it shows as CO-97.What CO-97 means
CO-97 means the service was bundled into another line on the same or a related claim. Most often it reflects a National Correct Coding Initiative (NCCI) Procedure-to-Procedure edit, where one code is considered a component of a more comprehensive code. Sometimes the bundling is correct; sometimes a distinct service was wrongly bundled and an appropriate modifier (such as 59 or an X{EPSU} modifier) would unbundle it when the documentation supports a separate, distinct service.
Common causes
- An NCCI Procedure-to-Procedure edit treats this code as a component of another code billed the same day.
- Two services were genuinely part of one global package (for example, within a surgical global period).
- A distinct, separately identifiable service was billed without the modifier needed to indicate it.
- Incorrect code selection that overlaps with a more comprehensive code already paid.
How to fix it
- Check whether an NCCI PTP edit pairs the two codes and whether the edit allows a modifier (modifier indicator 1) to override it.
- If documentation supports a separate, distinct service, resubmit a corrected claim with the appropriate modifier (59 or X{EPSU}) and supporting notes.
- If the bundling is correct, post the write-off. CO is contractual and cannot be billed to the patient.
- If billed during a surgical global period, confirm whether a modifier (such as 24, 25, or 79) applies.
How to prevent it
- Scrub claims against current NCCI PTP edits before submission so bundled pairs are caught up front.
- Train coders on when modifier 59 / X{EPSU} is and is not supported by documentation. Overuse triggers audits.
- Verify global-period rules before billing related services around a procedure.
Appeal letter template
Fill in the bracketed fields, attach your supporting documentation, and send through the payer's appeal channel. This is a starting point — adjust to your payer's requirements.
Re: Appeal of Bundling Denial (CO-97) - Claim [Claim Number] Patient: [Patient Name] | Member ID: [Member ID] Date(s) of Service: [DOS] | Codes at issue: [CPT A] and [CPT B] To Whom It May Concern: CPT [CPT B] was denied under CO-97 as included in CPT [CPT A]. These services were separate and distinct: [briefly describe the distinct service - different site/session/encounter]. Per the documentation enclosed, modifier [59 / XS / XE / XP / XU] is appropriate. [Confirm the NCCI edit for this pair carries a modifier indicator of 1 (modifier override allowed) before submitting.] We request that CPT [CPT B] be reprocessed and paid as a distinct procedural service. The operative/procedure note is enclosed. Sincerely, [Your Name], [Practice Name] | [Phone] | [NPI/TIN]