Medical Billing for Oral Surgery & Dental Practices

Dental & Oral Surgery Billing That Pays What You Earn

Dental and oral surgery practices have a unique billing challenge: procedures with a clear medical necessity basis — jaw surgery, cleft palate repair, impacted tooth removal, sleep apnea oral appliances, and dental implants required by trauma — can be billed to medical insurance rather than (or in addition to) dental insurance. Most practices leave this dual-billing revenue on the table. 360Solutions provides dental medical billing specialists who identify medically billable procedures, obtain medical insurance prior auth, and submit correct claims to recover revenue most dental practices never capture.

68%
of dental procedures with medical billing potential never billed to medical insurance
$2,400
avg additional revenue per orthognathic surgery case with medical billing
89%
first-pass rate for medically necessary oral surgery claims
Dental & Oral Surgery Billing Challenges
Where practices lose the most revenue:
Medically Necessary Procedures
Orthognathic Surgery Billing
Sleep Apnea Oral Appliance Billing
Coordination of Benefits
Dental & Oral Surgery Billing Challenges

Where Dental & Oral Surgery Practices Lose Revenue

These are the coding and billing pitfalls that cost dental & oral surgery practices the most — and where our specialised billers add the most value.

Medically Necessary Procedures

Impacted tooth removal, alveoloplasty, frenectomy, incision and drainage of oral abscesses, and oral biopsy all have medical insurance billing codes. Submitting these only to dental insurance when medical insurance would pay significantly reduces total reimbursement.

Orthognathic Surgery Billing

Jaw surgery (21141-21295 for LeFort osteotomies; 21193-21198 for mandibular osteotomies) is frequently covered by medical insurance when performed for functional indications affecting speech, chewing, or airway. Prior auth with orthodontic and functional documentation is required.

Sleep Apnea Oral Appliance Billing

Mandibular advancement devices (HCPCS E0486) for sleep apnea are covered by medical insurance when a sleep study confirms OSA and CPAP has been tried and failed. Most practices bill only to dental insurance — missing the medical insurance coverage that often provides better reimbursement.

Coordination of Benefits

When both dental and medical insurance apply to an oral surgery procedure, coordination of benefits rules determine which pays primary and which pays secondary. Incorrect COB ordering results in one payer refusing to pay their portion. We manage COB for every dual-insured claim.

Coding Intelligence

High-Risk CPT Groups

Code ranges payers audit most aggressively in Dental & Oral Surgery.

21141–21155
LeFort osteotomy — Type I, II, III — maxillary orthognathic surgery
21193–21247
Mandibular osteotomy — ramus, sagittal split, body — various techniques
40804 / 41112
Foreign body removal / excision of lesion of tongue — medical coding
21085 / 21086
Oral surgical splint / nasal prosthesis fabrication — post-surgical
E0486 / E0485
Oral appliance for OSA — custom / prefabricated — medical HCPCS
Denial Intelligence

Common Denial Patterns

Knowing these before submission is the difference between a 60% and a 96% first-pass rate.

Orthognathic surgery auth obtained without orthodontic documentation of functional impairment

Oral appliance E0486 billed without supporting sleep study confirming OSA diagnosis

Dental CDT code submitted to medical insurance (requires CPT/HCPCS crosswalk)

Coordination of benefits ordering incorrect — medical payer listed as secondary when primary

Cleft palate repair diagnosis not linked to supporting congenital ICD-10 code

Free Denial Audit

Send us your last 90 days of remittance data — we'll identify your top 3 fixable denial sources at no cost.

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Our Process

How 360Solutions Works for Dental & Oral Surgery Practices

01

Free 2-Week Billing Audit

We review your last 90 days: denial breakdown by category, AR aging by payer, charge lag, collection rate, and any recurring coding issues specific to your specialty. No commitment required.

02

Specialty Coder Assignment

You are paired with a coder trained specifically in dental & oral surgery coding. They learn your providers, your documentation patterns, and your payer mix before touching a claim.

03

Parallel Billing Transition

We run alongside your current billing for 10–14 days with zero cash flow disruption. Claims keep moving during the transition. Your account manager provides daily status updates.

04

Live KPI Dashboard

Real-time visibility into billed, paid, denied, AR aging, and collection rate — segmented by provider and payer. No black box, no month-end surprises.

05

Weekly Account Manager Call

Every week your dedicated account manager walks through last week's KPIs, denial trends, and any action items. Critical issues are escalated the same day — not at the next scheduled call.

Dental & Oral Surgery Billing FAQ

Questions From Dental & Oral Surgery Practices

We review each procedure for medical necessity indicators: trauma-related treatment, congenital condition repair, functional impairment, systemic disease-related oral conditions, and sleep-disordered breathing treatment. Procedures that meet medical necessity criteria are crosswalked to the appropriate CPT or HCPCS code and submitted to medical insurance.
Yes. We operate as a parallel medical billing layer without disrupting the existing dental claims process. We identify medically billable claims from the procedure log, crosswalk to medical codes, obtain necessary prior auth, and submit to medical insurance — often recovering revenue the dental billing workflow never captures.
We prepare auth requests with orthodontic records, cephalometric analysis, functional assessment documentation, and medical necessity letters from the oral surgeon. We coordinate between the surgeon's office and the medical insurer's surgical review team to obtain and manage the authorization.
Yes. Hospital-based oral surgery requires coordination between the surgeon's professional claim and the facility claim. We manage the surgeon's professional billing using medical CPT codes and coordinate with the hospital's billing for the anesthesia and facility components.
Ready to Fix Your Dental & Oral Surgery Billing?

Start With a Free,
No-Obligation Audit

Two weeks, no contract. A certified dental & oral surgery billing specialist reviews your claims, denial patterns, and AR — and shows you exactly what is recoverable.