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CPT 55250 Vasectomy Billing: What Applies, What Doesn’t, and What Changed in 2026

CPT code 55250 vasectomy billing 2026 hero banner: one code for unilateral or bilateral with semen analysis bundled in the 90-day global, Z30.2 on the procedure claim not Z98.52, Modifier GA for Medicare ABN, no Modifier 50, and the 52597 prostate bundling rule new in 2026, from One O Seven RCM.

CPT 55250: The Code That Covers Every Standard Vasectomy

CPT 55250 is the procedure code for vasectomy. The American Medical Association defines 55250 as vasectomy, unilateral or bilateral (separate procedure), including postoperative semen examination(s). One code applies whether your surgeon treats one side or both. The semen analyses that confirm sterility fall inside the code, so the same provider can’t bill them separately during the global period.

That parenthetical matters more than it looks. The vasectomy cpt code sits in Surgery, Male Genital System, Excision Procedures on the Vas Deferens. The phrase “separate procedure” tells your billing coordinator when 55250 stands alone and when a larger procedure absorbs it. That rule governs any prostate-plus-vasectomy session.

The 2026 CPT update left the 55250 descriptor alone. No new primary vasectomy cpt code 2026 exists, so practices bill the same 55250 they used last year. What moved is the Medicare payment rate, payer policy on elective sterilization, and one new prostate bundling rule covered in Section 9.

High-volume urology practices catch the costly errors, wrong modifiers, mismatched ICD-10 codes, and unbundled semen analysis, at the claim-scrub stage, not after the ERA lands. One O Seven’s urology billing and coding support team checks the full billing package before a vasectomy claim ever leaves the queue.

The AAPC code lookup describes 55250 as cutting the vas deferens and suturing the ends on both the left and right sides, followed by a postoperative semen examination. That description confirms the bilateral scope and explains why semen analysis rides inside the code instead of a separate line.

ProcedureCPT CodeNotes
Standard vasectomy (any technique)55250Unilateral or bilateral. Semen analysis bundled.
Laparoscopic vasectomy55559Unlisted. Benchmarked to 55250. Special report required.
Vasectomy reversal (vas-to-vas)55400Vasovasostomy. The standard reversal.
Vasectomy reversal (vas-to-epididymis)54900 / 54901Vasoepididymostomy, unilateral or bilateral. More complex, higher work value.

Source: AMA CPT 2026. Standard vasectomy maps to 55250 regardless of surgical technique. CPT 55450, the old percutaneous ligation code, was deleted at the end of 2017; all approaches now report 55250.

The Global Surgical Package: What 55250 Bundles and What Stays Separately Billable

CPT 55250 carries a 90-day global period for Medicare. That window covers the day-of-surgery pre-op visit, the procedure, and routine post-op care for 90 days. Billing a semen analysis (89321) alongside 55250 from the same provider draws a CO-234 bundling denial, because that analysis is a component of the vasectomy’s global package.

The 90-day clock shapes how your team works every vasectomy cpt code claim. Any related service your practice provides inside that window, a wound check, a phone follow-up, a semen-result discussion, reads as bundled unless a modifier separates it. Your coordinator tracks the procedure date and opens a 90-day window on each case.

ServiceBundled into 55250?If billed separately
Surgical procedure (scalpel or no-scalpel)YesN/A, this is the primary service
Local anesthesia (surgeon-provided)YesCO-97 if billed on its own line
Same-day pre-op E/M (routine)Yes, 90-day globalCO-97 unless Modifier 57 applies
Post-op semen analysis (same provider)Yes, global periodCO-234 component bundling denial
Routine post-op office visitsYes, 90-day globalCO-97 unless Modifier 24 applies
Pathology of the vas specimenNo, the surgeon can’t bill itOnly the pathologist bills, under 88302
MAC or general anesthesiaNo, separate providerThe anesthesia provider bills it
E/M for a separate problemNo, with Modifier 25CO-97 without Modifier 25
A distinct second procedureNo, when it stands aloneNeeds its own clinical justification

Source: AMA CPT 2026 descriptor, CMS NCCI Policy Manual 2026, and the CMS MPFS global-period file for CPT 55250.

Pathology is its own billing path. When your surgeon sends a vas deferens specimen for review, the surgeon can’t bill that work. The specimen goes to a pathologist, who reports CPT 88302, a Level II surgical pathology exam, on a separate claim. If you route specimens to an in-house lab, confirm which provider bills the professional component.

Staged cases follow a different rule. When your surgeon completes one side, then defers the second to a later session for a clinical reason like scrotal swelling, each session bills 55250 on its own. Document the staged plan in the operative note. Modifier 58 fits a planned second session; Modifier 79 fits an unplanned one.

Technique Doesn’t Change the Code: No-Scalpel, Conventional, and Laparoscopic

CPT 55250 applies regardless of surgical approach for a standard vasectomy. The vasectomy cpt code stays 55250 across a conventional incisional approach, a no-scalpel approach, and an open-ended approach. The AAPC Urology Coding Alert confirms that CPT doesn’t distinguish between these techniques. Whatever your surgeon writes in the operative note, the code selection holds.

No-Scalpel Vasectomy CPT Code

No-scalpel vasectomy uses a small puncture instead of a skin incision to reach the vas deferens. The entry method changes; the billed service, occlusion of the vas for sterilization, stays the same. Bill 55250.

Your coordinator doesn’t need a separate code, an unlisted code, or a modifier to flag the technique. It lives in the operative note and never touches the claim.

Surgical approachCPT CodeModifier needed?
Standard incisional (scalpel)55250No
No-scalpel (NSV)55250No
Open-ended vasectomy55250No
In-office under local only55250No
Laparoscopic or robotic55559Yes, see below

Source: AAPC Urology Coding Alert (December 13, 2023). AMA CPT 2026 does not differentiate vasectomy by surgical approach.

Laparoscopic Vasectomy: The One Technique That Changes the Code

Laparoscopic vasectomy is rare, and surgeons usually do it alongside another laparoscopic procedure. No dedicated CPT code exists for it. The AAPC points to CPT 55559 (unlisted laparoscopy or robotic procedure, spermatic cord), benchmarked to 55250 for a payment comparison.

An unlisted code like 55559 needs a special report. The report spells out the nature, extent, and medical necessity of the work, plus the time and equipment involved. Some payers deny 55559 when that report is thin, so attach the operative note and a short cover letter before you submit.

Modifier Rules for CPT 55250: The 2026 Decision Table

Modifier misuse ranks just behind unbundled semen analysis as a vasectomy cpt code denial source. Six modifiers attach to 55250 in specific situations. Three more attach to related lines, the E/M code or a return to the OR. Knowing which modifier goes on which line, in which scenario, separates a clean claim from a denied one.

Does CPT 55250 Require a Modifier?

CPT 55250 doesn’t require a modifier for a standard bilateral vasectomy. The descriptor already covers unilateral or bilateral work, so you don’t append Modifier 50. The CMS Medicare Claims Processing Manual states that bilateral payment adjustments don’t apply to codes labeled “unilateral or bilateral.” Put Modifier 50 on 55250, and most payers return a claim edit or a reduced payment.

ModifierNameApply to 55250?When and why
50Bilateral procedureNeverThe code already covers bilateral
52Reduced servicesNoThe code covers unilateral too
22Increased complexityYes, on 55250Anatomical variation or prior surgery. Needs a detailed note
53Discontinued procedureYes, on 55250Procedure stopped after anesthesia for a patient-safety event
58Staged procedureYes, on 55250Second session planned at the first encounter
78Unplanned return to ORYes, on 55250Return for hematoma or infection. Does not start a new global period
79Unrelated procedure, post-opYes, on the 2nd sessionUnplanned second session. Starts a new global period
25Significant separate E/MYes, on the E/MNot on 55250. For a distinct same-day E/M problem
57Decision for surgeryYes, on the E/MNot on 55250. When the E/M leads to the decision to operate
GAABN on fileYes, on 55250Medicare elective sterilization. ABN must be signed

Source: AMA CPT 2026 modifier guidelines and the CMS Medicare Claims Processing Manual, Chapter 12, Section 40.1 (bilateral payment adjustment policy).

Modifier 57: The Day-of-Surgery E/M Rule

CPT 55250 has a 90-day global period, so a pre-procedure E/M on the day of or the day before surgery sits inside the package unless you document a significant, separately identifiable service beyond the decision to operate.

When that visit produces the decision to perform the vasectomy, bill the E/M with Modifier 57. That pulls it out of the global package. When the visit is pure pre-op evaluation with no separate work, it’s bundled, and you don’t bill it.

A pre-vasectomy counseling visit on a different day works differently. Code it as a standard office visit with Z30.09 (contraceptive counseling), outside the global period, with no Modifier 57. For the MDM and time thresholds that set the level 3 and level 4 office visit, see One O Seven’s 99204 E/M billing guide.

ICD-10 Codes for Vasectomy: A Decision Table by Encounter Type

The ICD-10 code you pair with the vasectomy cpt code decides whether the claim pays, denies as not medically necessary, or routes into Medicare non-coverage processing.

Most coders know Z30.2. Fewer know that Z98.52 on the procedure claim is a billing error, and that Z48.816 belongs on the post-op visit. The wrong code on the wrong encounter triggers a CO-50 or CO-96 denial that a quick correction prevents.

Encounter typeCorrect ICD-10 codeNever use here
Pre-vasectomy counseling (contraceptive discussion)Z30.09 (other contraceptive counseling)Z30.2 (saved for the procedure day)
Day of the vasectomy (the 55250 claim)Z30.2 (encounter for sterilization)Z98.52 (a status code only)
Post-op follow-up visitZ48.816 (surgical aftercare, GU system)Z30.2 (that’s the procedure day)
Patient with a prior vasectomy, unrelated visitZ98.52 (vasectomy status)Z30.2 (the procedure already happened)
Vasectomy for a medical reason (Medicare pathway)N45.x (epididymitis or orchitis)Z30.2 (Medicare denies elective sterilization)

Source: ICD-10-CM 2026 (effective October 1, 2025). Z48.816 is the encounter for surgical aftercare following surgery on the genitourinary system, which belongs on the post-vasectomy follow-up visit.

Z30.2 is the procedure-day code. It tells the payer the reason for surgery is elective sterilization. Z98.52 is a status code for a past vasectomy. Put Z98.52 on the procedure claim, and the payer reads a historical condition, not a current procedure, and returns a CO-50 medical necessity denial.

Z48.816 belongs on the post-op follow-up claim, not the procedure claim. When your coordinator schedules a two-week wound check, that visit carries Z48.816, not Z30.2 and not Z98.52. Current ICD-10-CM guidance names Z48.816 as the genitourinary surgical-aftercare code, and most competing billing guides skip it.

Medicare won’t cover a vasectomy coded Z30.2 for elective sterilization. It may cover one that treats a documented condition. Chronic epididymitis or orchitis (N45.x), or another inflammatory disorder backed by the chart, can move the claim from non-covered elective sterilization to covered surgical treatment. The diagnosis you submit decides which Medicare pathway opens.

Urology practices billing both office and facility vasectomies need ICD-10 workflows built for both places of service. The 55250 rate differs between POS 11 (the office) and POS 24 (an ASC). One O Seven’s urology private practice billing team sets up separate charge-capture rules for each setting.

Post-Vasectomy Semen Analysis: The Global Period Trap and the Outside Lab Problem

The 90-day global period for the vasectomy cpt code 55250 includes the semen analyses that confirm sterility. Submit a separate semen analysis alongside 55250 from the same provider, and the payer returns a CO-234 component bundling denial on that line.

Which Semen Analysis Code Applies After Vasectomy

When your own practice performs the vasectomy, the post-op semen analysis is bundled into 55250 during the global period, and you don’t code it separately. The semen analysis code comes into play when the analysis sits outside that bundle. The right code then is CPT 89321 (semen analysis; sperm presence and motility of sperm, if performed).

For Medicare and for an in-office check, HCPCS G0027 (semen analysis; presence and/or motility of sperm excluding Huhner) is the equivalent code, and payer preference decides which you report. Both apply only when the vasectomy was performed elsewhere. The full G0027-versus-89321 decision, with the ICD-10 pairings, sits in the Reproductive Health Access Project vasectomy coding guide.

ScenarioCodeNotes
Same provider, same practice, inside the 90-day globalNone, bundledDon’t bill it. CO-234 fires on submission
Outside lab runs the analysis (sent out)89321, lab billsThe lab bills 89321 on its own claim. The surgeon can’t rebill it
Global period ended, your practice runs it89321Now separately billable. Pair with Z98.52 as appropriate
In-office analysis, vasectomy done elsewhereG0027Verify payer acceptance. Not every payer recognizes G0027 in every setting

Source: AMA CPT 2026, the Reproductive Health Access Project vasectomy coding guide, and the CMS HCPCS file for G0027.

When Semen Analysis Becomes Separately Billable

Three situations move the analysis onto its own claim. The global period has ended and your practice runs a late confirmatory check. An outside lab runs the analysis and bills 89321 itself. Or a patient comes in for a semen analysis after a vasectomy performed somewhere else.

The outside-lab case isn’t double-billing, and your front office should be ready to explain it. The patient gets two statements, one from the urologist for 55250 and one from the lab for 89321. Both are correct. Patients call when they see two bills, so set the expectation before you route the specimen out.

Anesthesia Code 00921 and Pre-Vasectomy E/M Billing

Anesthesia billing on a vasectomy comes down to who provides it. When your surgeon uses local only, that’s inside 55250 and nobody bills a separate anesthesia line. When an anesthesiologist or CRNA runs sedation or general anesthesia, that provider bills on a separate claim. Set up the vasectomy cpt code charge logic around that split.

Anesthesia for Vasectomy Under Sedation or General Anesthesia

CPT 00921 (anesthesia for procedures on male genitalia; vasectomy) applies when an anesthesiologist or CRNA provides MAC or general anesthesia for a vasectomy. Your surgeon bills 55250. The anesthesia provider bills 00921 with the appropriate time units. Local anesthesia is included in 55250, so no separate anesthesia code applies when the surgeon administers local only.

Who administers the sedation decides the code set, not the type of sedation. When your surgeon provides the moderate sedation, the moderate-sedation codes 99151 through 99153 apply instead of 00921.

Anesthesia typeWho provides itCodeBilled by
Local anesthesia onlySurgeonNone (included)The surgeon’s 55250 covers it
Moderate sedation (surgeon)Surgeon99151 to 99153Surgeon
Moderate sedation (CRNA or anesthesiologist)Anesthesia team00921Anesthesia provider
General anesthesiaAnesthesia team00921Anesthesia provider

Source: AMA CPT 2026. CPT 00921 sits in the Anesthesia section for male genitalia; the moderate-sedation codes 99151 to 99153 sit in the Medicine section.

Coding the Pre-Vasectomy Consultation Visit

The pre-vasectomy consultation bills as a standard E/M visit. Medicare stopped recognizing consultation codes in the 99241 through 99255 range back in 2010, so a pre-vasectomy discussion bills as a new or established office visit, whatever the payer.

For an otherwise healthy patient, that visit usually supports a level 3 office visit, 99203 for a new patient or 99213 for an established one, on low medical decision-making. The presenting problem isn’t trivial. The patient is weighing a permanent change, and that supports more than a quick-check level.

Code the counseling visit with Z30.09 (encounter for other general counseling and advice on contraception) when it covers contraceptive options. For related ICD-10 patterns across urology billing, including same-day E/M and procedure documentation, see One O Seven’s urology ICD-10 billing guide.

Medicare, Medicaid, and Insurance Coverage: Compliance Rules That Determine Payment

Correct coding doesn’t guarantee payment on a vasectomy. Coverage policy does. The vasectomy cpt code can be flawless and still go unpaid, because Medicare, Medicaid, and commercial payers each run a different rulebook on elective sterilization. The three subsections below walk each one.

Medicare and Vasectomy: The Non-Coverage Rule and the ABN Requirement

CMS Medicare Coverage Database article A53356 limits sterilization coverage to necessary treatment of an illness or injury. An elective vasectomy, absent a disease for which sterilization is an effective treatment, isn’t covered. You can read the full policy in the CMS Medicare Coverage Database on sterilization.

So your coordinator gets a signed Advance Beneficiary Notice of Noncoverage (ABN) before the procedure for any Medicare patient choosing elective vasectomy. After surgery, bill 55250 with Modifier GA to show the waiver is on file. If Medicare denies, you bill the patient. Without that pre-procedure ABN, the practice eats the cost.

A denied elective-vasectomy claim comes back as a CO-96 non-covered service denial. The fix is ABN management and patient billing, not an appeal of the coverage decision.

When a vasectomy treats a documented medical condition, submit the medical diagnosis, not Z30.2. Chronic epididymitis or orchitis (N45.x), or another covered inflammatory disorder, can shift the claim from non-covered elective sterilization to covered treatment of a disease. The diagnosis on the claim decides which Medicare pathway applies.

States That Require Commercial Plans to Cover Vasectomy

A growing number of states require state-regulated commercial plans to cover vasectomy, several of them with no patient cost-sharing. Maryland’s 2016 law was the first of its kind, and states such as California, Illinois, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Vermont, and Washington have added contraceptive-equity or male-sterilization coverage rules since.

Two cautions apply. These mandates reach state-regulated plans only; a self-funded ERISA plan answers to federal law, not state insurance rules, so verify the plan type first. And because these laws change, confirm the current rule in the patient’s state before you count on mandate coverage.

Medicaid Sterilization Billing: The 30-to-180-Day Consent Window

Medicaid covers vasectomy as a sterilization service, but federal rules under 42 CFR Part 441, Subpart F control payment. Federal funding applies only when four conditions are met: the patient is at least 21 at consent, gives voluntary informed consent, isn’t mentally incompetent, and 30 to 180 days passed between consent and the procedure.

One exception shortens the wait. When premature delivery or emergency abdominal surgery sets the context, a 72-hour minimum replaces the 30-day rule. Miss the consent requirements, though, and the claim denies no matter how clean the CPT coding is. That denial returns as a CO-16 documentation denial, and the fix is documentation, not a code change.

Urology practices billing vasectomy across Medicare, Medicaid, and commercial payers juggle three different documentation timelines. A Medicaid consent packet, a Medicare ABN tracker, and commercial prior-auth checks don’t share a workflow. One O Seven’s urology billing and denial recovery team builds the pre-service checklist that catches coverage gaps before the procedure date, not after it.

2026 Changes, Rate Data, Reversal Codes, and the Pre-Submission Compliance Checklist

The vasectomy cpt code 2026 descriptor reads the same as it did in 2025. The fee schedule and one bundling rule are what moved. Two pieces matter for 2026 claims: new Medicare conversion factors and a new prostate code that absorbs vasectomy in the same session. Reversal codes and a checklist follow.

The 2026 Bundling Rule for Combined Prostate and Vasectomy Procedures

CPT 52597 is new for 2026, and its descriptor names vasectomy as an included component. When your urologist performs a waterjet prostate resection and a vasectomy in the same session, don’t bill 55250 alongside 52597. The combined claim draws a CO-97 bundling denial, because vasectomy is part of 52597 when done concurrently.

That rule is specific to 52597. Other transurethral prostate procedures don’t bundle a vasectomy, so confirm the exact code pair before each combined case. Practices that run combined prostate and vasectomy cases should make sure their charge-capture templates pull 55250 out of a 52597 session. A urology billing audit surfaces that pairing in the first review cycle.

2026 Medicare Reimbursement Rates for CPT 55250

Medicare set two conversion factors for 2026 under its final rule (CMS-1832-F): about $33.59 for clinicians in a qualifying alternative payment model and about $33.42 for everyone else. The factor that applies to your billing provider sets the exact allowed amount per RVU for 55250.

The allowed amount itself varies by locality, because Geographic Practice Cost Index adjustments move the number by region. For the exact locality-adjusted 2026 figure in your area, run the code through the CMS Physician Fee Schedule lookup. Medicaid pays on its own state fee schedule, so that amount varies by state too.

Vasectomy Reversal CPT Codes: 55400 and 54900/54901

Reversal coding works differently from the vasectomy itself. These are per-side procedures, so bilateral work follows payer rules on Modifier 50 or two units, unlike 55250, where bilateral lives in a single code.

CodeProcedureWhen to use
55400Vasovasostomy (vasovasorrhaphy)Direct vas-to-vas reconnection. The standard reversal
54900 / 54901Vasoepididymostomy, unilateral / bilateralVas joined to the epididymis when scarring or blockage blocks a direct reconnection. More complex, higher work value

Source: AMA CPT 2026. 55400 reconnects vas to vas; 54900 (unilateral) and 54901 (bilateral) join vas to epididymis. These reversal codes report per side, so bilateral work follows payer rules on Modifier 50.

The Vasectomy CPT Code Pre-Submission Checklist for Your Billing Team

Run this six-step check on every vasectomy cpt code claim before it leaves your queue. Each step names the action and the denial it heads off.

StepConfirm before submissionIf you skip it
1Diagnosis matches the encounter: Z30.2 on the procedure claim, not Z98.52 and not Z30.09Z98.52 reads as history and draws a CO-50
2No semen analysis line on the 55250 claim from the same provider inside the global period89321 alongside 55250 fires a CO-234 every time
3Modifier 50 is absent from 55250Modifier 50 triggers a claim edit or reduced payment
4Any same-day E/M carries Modifier 57 (decision to operate) or Modifier 25 (separate problem)An unmodified E/M denies as bundled into the global package
5For Medicare, a signed ABN is on file and 55250 carries Modifier GANo ABN means the practice absorbs the denial
6For Medicaid, the consent date is 30 to 180 days before the procedureAn out-of-window consent draws a CO-16; hold and check first

Source: One O Seven RCM compliance workflow, built on AMA CPT 2026, CMS, and ICD-10-CM 2026 guidance. Treat this as the final gate before a vasectomy claim goes out.

Frequently Asked Questions About Vasectomy CPT Code Billing

What Is CPT Code 55250 for Vasectomy?

CPT 55250 is the procedure code for vasectomy, unilateral or bilateral (separate procedure), including postoperative semen examination(s). One code covers every standard technique. The semen analyses that confirm sterility stay bundled into this vasectomy cpt code during the 90-day global period, so the same provider can’t bill them separately.

Does the CPT Code 55250 Require a Modifier?

For a standard bilateral vasectomy, 55250 needs no modifier, because the descriptor already covers unilateral and bilateral work, so you skip Modifier 50. Others apply in specific cases: Modifier 57 for a day-of-surgery E/M, Modifier 22 for an unusually complex case, and Modifier GA for a Medicare claim with a signed ABN on file.

What Is the ICD-10 Code for Vasectomy?

Use Z30.2 (encounter for sterilization) on the vasectomy cpt code procedure claim. Don’t use Z98.52 on the procedure day; it’s a status code for a past vasectomy. For the post-op follow-up visit, use Z48.816 (surgical aftercare, genitourinary system). For pre-procedure contraceptive counseling, use Z30.09.

How Is a Vasectomy Billed to Insurance?

It depends on the payer. For commercial plans, submit 55250 with Z30.2 and verify prior authorization. For Medicare, get a signed ABN, append Modifier GA, and expect non-coverage of an elective Z30.2 claim. For Medicaid, confirm the consent form was signed 30 to 180 days before the procedure.

How Do You Code a Vasectomy?

Bill 55250 once, even for a bilateral procedure. Pair it with Z30.2. Don’t bill semen analysis separately inside the global period. Don’t add Modifier 50. When an E/M happens the same day, put Modifier 25 or Modifier 57 on the E/M, never on 55250.

Does Medicare Cover Vasectomy?

Not for elective sterilization. CMS Medicare Coverage Database article A53356 limits sterilization coverage to treatment of an illness or injury. When a vasectomy treats a documented condition like chronic epididymitis or orchitis (N45.x), bill the medical diagnosis instead of Z30.2. For elective cases, get a signed ABN and bill 55250 with Modifier GA.

About the author. Carter Hensley, CPC, writes for One O Seven RCM, a full-service revenue cycle management company that handles urology, primary care, and surgical-specialty billing for independent and multi-specialty practices. This guide reflects AMA, CMS, and AAPC guidance current as of June 2026. Verify all codes and payer policies against current CMS and AMA sources before you submit.

About the Author

Carter Hensley

Carter Hensley is a professional medical billing content writer with a strong focus on coding accuracy, compliance, and revenue optimization. He develops detailed content around CPT procedures, ICD-10 classifications, AR follow-up, credentialing processes, and denial resolution strategies. His writing is designed to support healthcare providers with practical knowledge that improves clean claim rates and ensures adherence to payer guidelines. At One O Seven RCM, Carter produces expert-level content that bridges the gap between clinical documentation and efficient revenue cycle performance.

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