By Evan Gwilliam DC MBA QCC CPC CCPC CPMA CPCO AAPC Fellow, Senior Vice President, Practisync
The official ICD-10 updates for Fiscal Year 2026 took effect on October 1, 2025.
The update contains 487 new, 28 deleted, and 38 revised ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes. These 2026 ICD-10-CM codes will be used for patient encounters from Oct. 1, 2025, through Sept. 30, 2026. The changes that are relevant to chiropractic are few, but there are a few that might apply that are symptom codes and codes that describe a patient’s socioeconomic status.
Symptom codes
Chapter 18 in ICD-10 is for “Symptoms, signs and abnormal clinical and laboratory findings, not elsewhere classified (R00-R99)”. The instructions for this chapter tell us that “symptoms and signs, as opposed to diagnoses, are acceptable for reporting purposes when a related definitive diagnosis has not been established (confirmed) by the provider.” (ICD-10-CM Official Guidelines for Coding and Reporting FY 2026, section 1.B.4). Most, but not all, of the codes for symptoms are found in this chapter. If the reported codes only repeat the symptoms that the patient sought treatment for, that would indicate that the provider is unable to identify the cause. This provides a weaker justification for most kinds of treatment.
R10.2 for pelvic and perineal pain was expanded to include five more options that report more location detail. The additions look like this (new codes in bold)
R10.2- Pelvic and perineal pain
R10.20 Pelvic and perineal pain unspecified side
R10.21 Pelvic and perineal pain right side
R10.22 Pelvic and perineal pain left side
R10.23 Pelvic and perineal pain bilateral
R10.24 Suprapubic pain
Keep in mind that, as of Oct. 1, 2025, R10.2 is no longer a complete code. A fifth character is required. Claims with the old code, foir dates of service prior to 10/1, will be denied. Be sure to update your billing software to reflect this change.
R10.8- for other abdominal pain was also expanded. (changes in bold)
R10.8- Other abdominal pain
R10.85 Abdominal pain of multiple sites
Excludes1: abdominal rigidity NOS (R19.3)
generalized abdominal pain associated with acute abdomen (R10.0)
generalized abdominal pain NOS (R10.84)
localized abdominal pain (R10.1-R10.4-)
R10.8A- Flank tenderness
R10.8A1 Right flank tenderness
R10.8A2 Left flank tenderness
R10.8A3 Suprapubic tenderness
R10.8A9 Flank tenderness, unspecified
Flank tenderness NOS
R10.A- Pain localized to flank
Lateral abdomen pain
Lateral flank pain
Latus region pain
Excludes2: pain localized to other parts of lower abdomen (R10.3-)
pain localized to upper abdomen (R10.1-)
R10.A0 Flank pain, unspecified side
R10.A1 Flank pain, right side
R10.A2 Flank pain, left side
R10.A3 Flank pain, bilateral
Socioeconomic circumstance codes
Chapter 21 includes codes that start with “Z”, and they represent reasons for encounters and factors influencing health status. The section of codes from Z55-Z65 are for “Persons with potential health hazards related to socioeconomic and psychosocial circumstances.” These codes can be used to report “social determinants of health”, which can be a factor that may indicate a moderate level of risk of morbidity, one element of medical decision making in support of a level 4 evaluation and management code. Reporting this additional detail on the claim form may reduce the need for payers to request records.
Inclusion terms, as defined in the ICD-10 guidelines, “may be synonyms of the code title” or “a list of the various conditions assigned to that code”. There are some new codes in the socioeconomic section of chapter 21, and some existing codes that got new inclusion terms, which are depicted below, in bold.
Z56.6 Other physical and mental strain related to work
Workplace stress
Z56.89 Other problems related to employment
Furloughed
Underemployed
Z59.02 Unsheltered homelessness
Lives in a homeless encampment
Z59.19 Other inadequate housing
Poor housing weatherization
Z59.86 Financial insecurity
Z59.861 Financial insecurity, difficulty paying for utilities
Difficulty paying for electricity
Difficulty paying for heat
Difficulty paying for oil
Difficulty paying water bill
Utility disconnect notice due to inability to pay
Excludes2: inadequate housing utilities (Z59.12)
Z59.868 Other specified financial insecurity
Bankruptcy
Z59.869 Financial insecurity, unspecified
Keep in mind that there are many other Z codes that include other details that may be helpful to report along with a condition. These are just some of the changes for 2026.
ICD-10 Tips
- Excludes1 – The new code R10.85 Abdominal pain of multiple sites has several listings under the Excludes1. This means that it can’t be used if those other codes are, and vice versa. They are mutually exclusive.
- Excludes2 – The new code Z59.861 Financial insecurity, difficulty paying for utilities has one code listed under Excludes2. This indicates that Z59.12 inadequate housing utilities is not included in Z59.861 and could be coded in addition.
- NOS – this abbreviation, found in many code descriptions, means “not otherwise specified”, and is synonymous with “unspecified”. It indicates that the code was chosen because the documentation does not specify detail enough to choose one of the other, more specific, codes. In many cases, unspecified codes should be a last resort, as it could indicate that the documentation is lacking.
- If you do not yet use diagnosis pointing when filling out box 24E on the CMS-1500 claim form, you might be getting denials that are easily avoidable.
There were many other changes to the code set for 2026, but these are the ones most likely to be relevant to chiropractors and physical medicine providers. To see the complete list of changes, go to CMS.gov.
Dr. Gwilliam is the Senior Vice President of Practisync, which helps practices improve efficiency and collect more through outsourced expert billing services. As a member of your state association, you can qualify for special rates. If you would like to see if Practisync could be a good fit, reach out to Dr. Gwilliam at evan.gwilliam@practisync.com or visit the website for more details.
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