Medicare reimbursement reference
CPT 76856: $109
Pelvic ultrasound, non-OB, complete. The federally-set baseline for what this code costs when Medicare pays — the standard public-domain reference for self-pay or insured bill review.
National average
$109
Per CMS Physician Fee Schedule, effective 2026-01-01. Non-facility national-average. Real Medicare payments adjust by ±15% based on Geographic Practice Cost Index.
Rates by modifier
- Global rate$109
- Modifier TC — Technical component (the procedure itself)$76
- Modifier 26 — Professional component (interpretation only)$33
Modifiers split a procedure’s payment between the technical (equipment / facility) and professional (interpretation / clinician) components, or signal special circumstances. The modifier on your bill should match what was actually performed.
What CPT 76856 actually is
Pelvic ultrasound, non-OB, complete (CPT 76856). This code falls in the "Imaging" service family. Medicare's national-average non-facility allowed amount is the federally-set baseline; commercial insurance and hospital cash-pay rates often run multiples of this number for the same code, depending on the facility and contract.
The number above is one piece of context. The other two benchmarks worth knowing:
Hospital cash-pay rate
Federally required to be published by every US hospital under 45 CFR §180.50 (the Hospital Price Transparency rule). The hospital’s own machine-readable file is the authoritative source. Same code; rates vary widely by facility.
Insurance-negotiated rate
Whatever your specific insurance plan and the specific facility have contracted for the same code. Visible on your Explanation of Benefits (EOB) after the claim posts.
Medicare allowed amount (this page)
$109 for code 76856, set in federal law and updated annually by CMS. Used as the floor benchmark in most bill-review work.
Where CPT 76856 commonly shows up on a bill
Common patterns to look at when reviewing this code:
- 01.An imaging study where both the technical and professional components are billed at the global rate (effectively double-billing).
- 02.A scan billed twice under slightly different code variants for the same body part.
- 03.Contrast billed as a separate line item when the global rate already includes contrast.
These patterns are documented in CMS billing guidance, the National Correct Coding Initiative (NCCI) edits, and Office of Inspector General audit reports. None of them are accusations about any specific bill or facility — they’re the checks that exist because the patterns themselves exist.
What hospitals charge for CPT 76856
Distribution across 72 US hospitals reporting this code under federal Hospital Price Transparency rules (45 CFR §180.50). Gross charges shown here are the chargemaster prices — the starting point before insurance discounts or self-pay reductions. Medicare allowed amount: $109.
Hospital gross (median)
$1,177
25th $729 · 75th $1,603
Cash / self-pay (median)
$577
What hospitals accept directly
Commercial (median)
$161
Range $20–$3,172
Medicare allowed
$109
Federal-rate floor
Range across all reporting hospitals: $201 to $5,031. That’s a 25× spread for the same procedure code — one of the reasons federal price-transparency rules exist.
Hospitals at the lower end of the distribution
Sorted by published chargemaster price only. Chargemaster is the starting point before insurance discounts or self-pay reductions; the actual amount any specific patient pays depends on case mix, charity-care policy, and insurance contract.
If your bill has this code
See exactly how your charge compares to $109— in just a few minutes.
Upload a photo or PDF of your bill. Our system reads every line, compares each charge to six federal data sources (CMS PFS, NADAC drug benchmarks, federally-required Hospital Price Transparency files, the National Correct Coding Initiative, CMS Hospital Compare quality data, and IRS Publication 78 for charity-care eligibility), and drafts dispute letters for anything worth questioning — with the codes, the math, and the federal-law citations already inside.
- ✓Line-by-line audit, every charge benchmarked.
- ✓Up to 5 dispute letters drafted — sign and mail.
- ✓Charity-care application if your hospital is non-profit.
- ✓30-day money-back guarantee on single audits.
Related codes
Codes in the same numerical neighborhood — often appear together on the same bill or get billed in place of each other:
Common questions about CPT 76856
How much does CPT 76856 cost?
Why is my CPT 76856 bill higher than $109?
Can I dispute a CPT 76856 charge?
What's the source of this number?
P.S. If you’re holding a bill with code 76856on it right now, the fastest path is to run it through the audit — it takes just a few minutes and shows the exact gap between what was charged and the $109 benchmark above. Start the audit →
P.P.S. If the bill came from a non-profit hospital, federal law (ACA §501(r)) requires them to offer charity care to patients below specific income thresholds. We auto-check 501(c)(3) status against the IRS Publication 78 database and draft the application letter when applicable.
P.P.P.S. The $109number above is a benchmark, not a verdict. The right question on any specific bill is whether the documentation in your medical record supports the code that was billed — that’s what every bill-review process ultimately comes down to.
Source & methodology
Rate from the CMS Physician Fee Schedule, refreshed quarterly from cms.gov. National-average non-facility allowed amount; real Medicare payment adjusts by ±15% per locality (GPCI). The CMS PFS is in the public domain (17 USC §105). Full data-source register at /data-sources.