Vision Exam vs Medical Eye Exam

Vision Exam vs Medical Eye Exam

Difference, Billing Codes & Common Mistakes

Understanding the difference between a vision exam and a medical eye exam is critical for accurate ophthalmology billing.

๐Ÿ”น What is a Vision Exam?

A vision exam is routine and refractive in nature.

Purpose:

  • Check visual acuity
  • Update glasses/contact lens prescription

Common CPT Code:

  • 92015 โ€“ Refraction (almost always patient responsibility)

๐Ÿ‘‰ Key Point:
Vision exams are usually billed to vision insurance (VSP, EyeMed), not medical insurance.


๐Ÿ”น What is a Medical Eye Exam?

A medical exam evaluates eye diseases or symptoms.

Examples:

  • Eye pain
  • Diabetes-related eye issues
  • Glaucoma
  • Cataracts

Common CPT Codes:

  • 92002โ€“92004 (new patients)
  • 92012โ€“92014 (established patients)

OR

  • 99202โ€“99215 (E/M codes for medical complexity)

๐Ÿ”น Key Billing Differences

FeatureVision ExamMedical Exam
InsuranceVision planMedical insurance
DiagnosisRoutine (Z01.00)Disease-based (H, E codes)
Refraction (92015)IncludedBilled separately (non-covered)
Medical necessityโŒ Not requiredโœ… Required

๐Ÿ”น Common Billing Mistakes

  • Billing 92015 to medical insurance โ†’ Denial
  • Using routine diagnosis with medical CPT
  • Not separating refraction from exam

๐Ÿ”น Pro Tip

If a patient comes for routine exam but has a complaint (e.g., blurry vision due to diabetes), you may switch to medical billing โ€” if properly documented.

Share: