CPT 70450 applies when a CT scan of the head or brain is performed and no IV contrast material is administered at any point during the study. Code selection is determined by the technique section of the radiology report, not the order or clinical indication. If contrast is introduced at any point, the code changes regardless of when during the session it was given.
Clinical indications where non-contrast CT head is first-line:
When contrast is contraindicated, 70450 is the only viable CT head option: renal insufficiency precluding contrast, known contrast allergy without adequate premedication time, or hemodynamic instability requiring rapid imaging without delay for contrast preparation.
Provider and setting context: 70450 is payable across hospital inpatient (POS 21), hospital outpatient (POS 22), ASC (POS 24), and freestanding imaging center (POS 11, 49) settings. Payment rates differ by setting because facility and non-facility practice expense RVUs apply differently. In hospital outpatient settings, the technical component is paid under the OPPS APC system (APC Status Indicator: Codes That May Be Paid Through a Composite APC); in non-facility settings, the full MPFS non-facility rate applies [7].
| Code | Description | When to Use Instead |
|---|---|---|
| 70450 | CT head/brain without contrast | No IV contrast at any point; acute trauma, hemorrhage triage, seizure, hydrocephalus, contrast contraindicated |
| 70460 | CT head/brain with contrast | IV contrast administered prior to scanning; no non-contrast phase performed; tumor follow-up, infection surveillance |
| 70470 | CT head/brain without contrast followed by contrast and further sections | Both phases performed in the same session; non-contrast images acquired first, then contrast administered; never substitute separate 70450 and 70460 billing for this code |
| 70496 | CTA head with contrast | Vascular question: aneurysm, AVM, intracranial arterial occlusion; commonly ordered same-day with 70450 in stroke protocol and separately reportable |
| 70498 | CTA neck with contrast | Carotid or vertebral artery disease; frequently paired with 70450 and 70496 in acute stroke workup |
| 70551 | MRI brain without contrast | Superior soft-tissue contrast; preferred for white matter disease, MS, subacute infarct, tumor characterization when radiation is a concern or CT is inconclusive |
The single most critical differentiator in the 70450 to 70470 family is contrast status within the session. Read the technique section of every report before selecting a code; do not rely on the order or the clinical indication alone.
flowchart TD
A[CT Head Ordered] --> B{Contrast administered?}
B -- No --> C[70450\nWithout contrast]
B -- Yes --> D{Non-contrast phase\nperformed first?}
D -- No --> E[70460\nWith contrast only]
D -- Yes --> F[70470\nWithout then with contrast\nDo NOT split into 70450 plus 70460]
PC/TC Split Billing
PC/TC Indicator 1 confirms that 70450 is subject to professional and technical component billing [1]. The correct approach depends on who provides each component:
| Billing Scenario | Modifier | Who Uses It |
|---|---|---|
| Interpreting radiologist bills interpretation only | 26 | Radiology group, teleradiology, academic radiologist in hospital setting |
| Equipment owner or facility bills technical service | TC | Hospital outpatient department, freestanding imaging center billing facility component |
| Same entity provides both components | None (global) | Freestanding imaging center where radiologist owns equipment and interprets all studies |
Billing both 70450-26 and 70450-TC on the same claim from the same provider constitutes duplicate billing.
Multiple Procedure Payment Reduction
70450 carries Multiple Procedures Indicator 4 [1], meaning the technical component of the lower-valued code is reduced by 50% when imaging codes from the same diagnostic imaging family (family 88) are billed on the same date. This applies to same-day billing of 70450-TC alongside 70496-TC, 70498-TC, or other family-88 imaging codes. The professional component (modifier 26) is exempt from MPPR [3].
Add-On Code
0722T (Quantitative CT tissue characterization, including interpretation and report) is a listed add-on to 70450 per CPT guidelines. Use 0722T in conjunction with 70450 when quantitative tissue characterization is performed concurrently. Do not report 0721T in conjunction with 70450 on the same anatomy; that pairing is excluded per CPT codebook guidance.
MUE: 3 per date of service [2]. Claims billing more than 3 units deny automatically at the MAC. The MUE reflects the clinical improbability of more than three separate CT head studies on a single date; documentation must establish distinct clinical justification for each unit billed above one.
Modifier 59 and X-modifiers. When 70450 is billed on the same date as another imaging service that may appear bundled, modifier 59 or the more specific XE (separate encounter), XS (separate structure), XP (separate practitioner), or XU (unusual non-overlapping service) may be necessary to establish clinical distinction. Per NCCI policy, use the most specific modifier available before defaulting to 59 [3].
Global period: XXX. The global period concept does not apply to 70450. An E&M service billed on the same date as 70450 may be reported separately when it is a significant, separately identifiable service above and beyond the work inherent in ordering and interpreting the imaging study; modifier 25 applies to the E&M code, not to 70450.
Required elements in the radiology interpretation report:
CMS requires a valid written or electronic order from the treating provider prior to the study; verbal-only orders are insufficient for Medicare billing [5].
Audit red flags specific to 70450:
Medical necessity and LCD criteria:
CMS has not issued a National Coverage Determination for CT head or brain [6]. Coverage is governed by the Medicare reasonable and necessary standard under Social Security Act §1862(a)(1)(A). Local Coverage Determinations are MAC-specific; providers must search the CMS Medicare Coverage Database by HCPCS code 70450 for the applicable MAC jurisdiction (Noridian, Novitas, CGS, WPS, Palmetto GBA, or NGS). Vague ICD-10-CM codes such as R51.9 (Headache, unspecified) for routine chronic headache without documented red flags may not satisfy LCD criteria; the ordering physician's record must establish the clinical necessity for advanced imaging.
Medicare
No NCD governs 70450 [6]; coverage is MAC-specific. Traditional Medicare does not require prior authorization. The MUE is 3 per date of service [2].
2026 MPFS national payment rates before geographic adjustment [1]:
| Modifier | Total RVU | Approximate Payment |
|---|---|---|
| None (global) | 3.19 | $106.55 |
| 26 (professional) | 1.18 | $39.41 |
| TC (technical) | 2.01 | $67.14 |
The 2026 conversion factor of $33.4009 represents approximately a 3.3% increase over 2025, partially offsetting the minor RVU reduction (work RVU decreased from 0.85 to 0.83) [1].
In hospital outpatient settings, the TC is paid under OPPS as a Composite APC; in ASC settings, 70450 is paid as a radiology service based on OPPS relative payment weight [7]. Place of service selection directly affects payment rate; billing non-facility practice expense RVUs for a study performed in a hospital creates overpayment and recoupment risk.
BETOS classification I2A (Advanced imaging: CAT/CT/CTA brain/head/neck) and CCS Classification 177 (CT scan head) govern how CMS and quality programs categorize and benchmark utilization of this code.
AUC/PAMA: All three CT head codes (70450, 70460, 70470) are classified as advanced diagnostic imaging under PAMA. Ordering providers must consult a qualified CDSM and document the consultation outcome on the claim using the appropriate AUC modifier [8]. CMS continues phased implementation; monitor cms.gov for the full enforcement timeline.
Commercial Payers
Commercial payers generally follow CPT coding conventions for 70450. Key distinctions from Medicare:
Medicaid
Medicaid coverage for 70450 is state-specific. Managed Medicaid plans may impose prior authorization requirements, frequency caps, or preferred provider restrictions for advanced diagnostic imaging. Verify applicable state Medicaid policy and managed care plan requirements prior to service.
Contrast mismatch between code and report The radiology report documents contrast administration but 70450 was billed, or the report confirms no contrast but 70460 was submitted. This documentation-to-claim mismatch is identified on post-payment medical review and triggers both denial and overpayment assessment. Prevention: Read the technique section of every radiology report before selecting the code. Do not code from the order or the clinical indication; only the report governs contrast status.
NCCI PTP bundling: 70450 and 70460 billed same date for same session Billing both 70450 and 70460 for a two-phase study triggers an automatic NCCI PTP denial; both codes are components of 70470 when performed sequentially in a single session [3]. Prevention: When both non-contrast and post-contrast sequences appear in the same report for the same session, bill 70470 only. If two genuinely distinct studies were performed at different times of day for separate clinical reasons, modifier XE with supporting documentation may establish a distinct encounter; verify payer policy before appending.
Missing or unsigned interpretation report Medicare requires a final signed interpretation; claims where only a preliminary read or unsigned attestation exists in the record will deny on medical review [5]. Prevention: Implement a billing hold for radiology claims until the final signed report is confirmed in the EHR or RIS. Do not bill from preliminary reads or dictation-pending status.
Medical necessity denial: unsupported ICD-10-CM R51.9 (Headache, unspecified) or other vague diagnosis codes submitted without supporting clinical documentation may not satisfy MAC LCD criteria for advanced diagnostic imaging [6]. Prevention: Query the ordering provider for specificity when the documentation supports a more precise diagnosis. The ordering physician's clinical note must document the clinical indication (sudden onset, neurological signs, or other red flags) and the diagnosis code must accurately reflect that documented indication. If the record does not support medical necessity for CT head, the claim is at risk for denial regardless of whether the study was performed.
MUE exceeded Billing more than 3 units of 70450 on the same date triggers automatic denial at the MUE threshold [2]. Prevention: Claims requiring more than 3 units require contemporaneous documentation of distinct clinical justification for each separate study. Contact the MAC prior to submission for claims that may approach this threshold.
Scenario 1: Acute Ischemic Stroke Protocol A 68-year-old presents to the ED with sudden onset left-sided hemiplegia. The emergency physician orders a stat CT head without contrast, followed immediately by CTA head and CTA neck as part of a large vessel occlusion protocol. CT head shows no hemorrhage; CTA head demonstrates M2 occlusion.
Correct coding: 70450-TC + 70496-TC + 70498-TC (hospital billing); radiologist bills 70450-26 + 70496-26 + 70498-26. Diagnosis: I63.9.
Why: 70450 (non-contrast CT head), 70496 (CTA head), and 70498 (CTA neck) are distinct studies serving different diagnostic purposes and are separately reportable. MPPR applies to the TC side: the lowest-valued TC code is reduced by 50% under diagnostic imaging family 88 rules [3]. The professional components are not subject to MPPR. Do not use 70470 here; the CTA codes use contrast for vascular imaging, which is a separate clinical function from the non-contrast CT head, not a continuation of the same study.
Scenario 2: Two-Phase Study Misidentified as Separate Codes A neurologist orders CT head for a patient with known lung cancer and new confusion. The radiologist acquires non-contrast sequences, then administers IV contrast and acquires post-contrast sequences in the same session to evaluate for brain metastases.
Correct coding: 70470 only. Diagnosis: C71.9.
Why: Both phases were performed in a single session; 70470 captures the complete two-phase study. Separately billing 70450 and 70460 violates NCCI PTP bundling rules and generates automatic denial [3]. Had only post-contrast images been acquired with no prior non-contrast phase, 70460 would apply; had only non-contrast images been acquired, 70450 would apply.
Scenario 3: Freestanding Imaging Center with Global Billing A 34-year-old with new-onset tonic-clonic seizures is referred by neurology for outpatient CT head without contrast. The study is performed and interpreted at a freestanding imaging center where the radiologist is an owner-employee who interprets all studies performed on site.
Correct coding: 70450 (global, no modifier). Diagnosis: G40.909.
Why: The same entity provides both the technical service (equipment, technologist, PACS) and the professional interpretation; global billing applies and is the only correct approach. Splitting into 70450-26 and 70450-TC from the same practice constitutes duplicate billing. Approximate 2026 non-facility payment: $106.55 (3.19 total RVU x $33.4009 conversion factor) [1].
Scenario 4: Headache with Medical Necessity Risk A PCP orders CT head for a 55-year-old with chronic daily headaches unresponsive to NSAIDs. No neurological deficits, no sudden onset, no fever. Study is normal. Claim is submitted with R51.9.
Correct coding: 70450 if performed; however, R51.9 alone for chronic headache without documented red flags carries substantial medical necessity denial risk. If the clinical record supports migraine, use G43.909.
Why: R51.9 for routine chronic headache without red flags (thunderclap onset, neurological signs, papilledema, fever, age-related vascular risk) may not satisfy MAC LCD criteria for advanced diagnostic imaging [6]. The ordering physician's note must document the clinical justification for CT head specifically; absence of that documentation leaves the claim vulnerable regardless of whether the study was completed.
© Copyright 2026 American Medical Association. All rights reserved.
Computed tomography (CT), commonly known as a CT scan, is a diagnostic imaging procedure that employs advanced X-ray technology and computer processing to generate detailed cross-sectional images of the head or brain. This non-invasive technique allows for the visualization of internal structures, providing critical information for the diagnosis and management of various medical conditions. During the procedure, the patient is carefully positioned on a specialized examination table, which is then moved through the CT scanner. An initial scan is conducted to establish the starting position for the imaging process. As the table progresses through the scanner, multiple X-ray beams are emitted and detected by electronic sensors that rotate around the area being examined. The system measures the amount of radiation absorbed by different tissues, which varies based on their density. This data is subsequently processed by a computer, resulting in high-resolution 2D images that depict the anatomy of the head or brain. These images are displayed on a monitor for the physician's review, who may request additional scans of specific areas to obtain further detail. The procedure is performed without the use of contrast material, distinguishing it from other CT scans that may require intravenous contrast for enhanced visualization. For coding purposes, the appropriate CPT® code for this procedure is 70450, while codes 70460 and 70470 are designated for CT scans that involve the use of contrast material.
© Copyright 2026 Coding Ahead. All rights reserved.
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