CPT 12007 is appropriate when the sum of all simple repairs performed in a single session on the scalp, neck, axillae, external genitalia, trunk, or extremities exceeds 30.0 cm. Three conditions must be met simultaneously: the wounds are superficial (epidermis, dermis, or subcutaneous tissue only), closure is single-layer, and the anatomic sites fall within this grouping.
Common clinical presentations include multiple lacerations from motor vehicle accidents, large post-Mohs or excision closures, animal bite repairs after debridement, and degloving injuries where the wound is superficial in depth but large in surface area. Settings include the emergency department, office surgery suite, urgent care centers, and ambulatory surgery centers.
Scope boundaries:
Acceptable closure methods: sutures (absorbable or nonabsorbable), staples, tissue adhesive such as Dermabond, or any combination of these with or without adhesive strips. Adhesive strips alone, chemical cautery alone, or electrocautery alone are NOT reportable as wound repair; they are bundled into the E/M service [1].
| Code | Description | When to Use Instead |
|---|---|---|
| 12007 | Simple repair, scalp/neck/axillae/genitalia/trunk/extremities; over 30.0 cm | Total simple wound lengths in this anatomic group exceed 30.0 cm |
| 12006 | Simple repair, same group; 20.1 to 30.0 cm | Total simple wound lengths sum to 20.1 to 30.0 cm |
| 12005 | Simple repair, same group; 12.6 to 20.0 cm | Total simple wound lengths sum to 12.6 to 20.0 cm |
| 12037 | Intermediate repair, scalp/axillae/trunk/extremities; over 30.0 cm | Wound requires layered closure of subcutaneous tissue and fascia, OR single-layer closure of a heavily contaminated wound needing extensive cleaning; Global 010 applies |
| 12018 | Simple repair, face/ears/eyelids/nose/lips/mucous membranes; over 30.0 cm | Wound is on the face, ears, eyelids, nose, lips, or mucous membranes; lengths in this series are never combined with 12001-12007 |
The critical differentiator between 12007 and 12037 is documentation of closure technique and wound condition, not wound size. A 35 cm clean laceration closed in one layer is 12007. A 35 cm wound requiring suturing of the subcutaneous layer before skin closure is 12037. Auditors will downcode 12037 to 12007 when the operative note documents only skin-level closure [1].
flowchart TD
A[Wound on scalp, neck, axillae, genitalia, trunk, or extremity?] -->|No| B[Use face series 12011-12018 or other code]
A -->|Yes| C[Layered closure or extensive contamination?]
C -->|Yes| D[Intermediate: 12031-12037]
C -->|No| E[Sum all simple wound lengths in this group]
E --> F{Total length}
F -->|Over 30.0 cm| G[CPT 12007]
F -->|20.1 to 30.0 cm| H[CPT 12006]
F -->|12.6 to 20.0 cm| I[CPT 12005]
F -->|7.6 to 12.5 cm| J[CPT 12004]
F -->|2.6 to 7.5 cm| K[CPT 12002]
F -->|2.5 cm or less| L[CPT 12001]
MUE and unit rule: CMS assigns an MUE of 1 to CPT 12007. Only one unit may be billed per date of service. All wound lengths qualifying for the 12001-12007 series must be summed; billing 12006 and 12007 on the same date for the same patient is an NCCI violation [5].
Modifier usage:
| Modifier | Indication | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 25 | Same-day E/M service | Required when billing any E/M on the same date. The E/M must represent a significant, separately identifiable evaluation beyond the wound repair [2]. |
| 51 | Multiple procedures, different complexity | Apply to the lower-value procedure when also billing an intermediate or complex repair (e.g., 12037 or 13100) in the same session. Do NOT use 51 within the 12001-12007 series; those lengths are summed, not stacked. |
| 59 or XS | Distinct procedural service | Overcomes NCCI bundling when wound repair is at a distinct anatomic structure from another same-day surgical procedure. CMS prefers XS over 59 when the site distinction is the basis for separation. |
| 62 | Co-surgeon | Permitted with supporting documentation per CMS; applicable when multi-site repair complexity requires simultaneous work by two surgeons [2]. |
| 58/79 | During global period of another procedure | Use 58 if the repair is staged or related; use 79 if unrelated to a prior procedure still within its global period. |
Modifier 50 does not apply. CMS bilateral indicator is 0 for this code. Bilateral wounds in the same anatomic group are length-summed; the 150% bilateral payment adjustment is not available [2].
Bundled services: Local anesthesia is included in wound repair codes and is not separately reportable. Wound debridement (97597, 97598) performed at the same wound site in preparation for closure is integral to the repair under NCCI policy. Debridement is separately reportable only when performed on a distinct wound that is not being surgically closed [4].
Global period contrast:
| Code | Global Days | Postoperative care included |
|---|---|---|
| 12007 | 000 | None; all follow-up visits billable separately |
| 12037 | 010 | 10 days of wound checks and suture removal bundled |
This distinction directly affects billing strategy: a patient returning three days after a simple repair can have that visit billed separately. A return visit within the global period of an intermediate repair of the same wound length cannot.
Required elements for a supportable 12007 claim:
Audit red flags for 12007 specifically:
Medicare:
CPT 12007 carries Global 000 status per the CMS Physician Fee Schedule, Type of Service 2 (Surgery), and BETOS P5A (Ambulatory procedures, skin) [2]. It appears on the ASC approved procedure list with payment based on OPPS relative payment weight, making it reimbursable in ambulatory surgery center settings. No NCD or CMS-specific code substitution applies.
CMS enforces the MUE of 1 through automated claim edits; billing more than one unit on a single date results in automatic denial [5]. Under CMS Global Surgery rules, the 0-day global package for 12007 includes only the procedure itself and related services provided on the same day [3].
No local coverage determination specific to CPT 12007 was identified in this research; coverage is presumed under medical necessity for lacerations, traumatic wounds, and post-excision closures. Verify with the applicable MAC for any regional LCD affecting wound repair in your jurisdiction.
Commercial payers:
No payer-specific policy exceptions were identified in the research for commercial plans. Standard NCCI and AMA CPT guidelines apply. When reporting alongside an E/M code, Modifier 25 requirements mirror Medicare policy. Verify prior authorization requirements for large wound repairs in elective or non-emergent settings with individual payers.
Denial: Unbundling (NCCI violation) Multiple codes from the 12001-12007 series are billed on the same date for wounds in the same anatomic group. The root cause is failure to sum wound lengths before code selection. Prevention: document each wound length individually, sum all simple repairs in the scalp-neck-axillae-genitalia-trunk-extremity group, then select one code from the series. On appeal, cite AMA CPT wound repair guidelines documenting the length summation rule [1].
Denial: Insufficient documentation for wound length threshold A claim for 12007 is denied or downcoded because the record does not contain measured wound lengths. Prevention: the operative or ED note must record individual wound lengths in centimeters and a stated total when multiple wounds are combined.
Denial: E/M bundled without Modifier 25 Same-day E/M is denied because Modifier 25 was not appended and the payer applied automatic bundling with the surgical procedure. Prevention: always append Modifier 25 to the E/M when it is separately documented and supports a distinct or significant evaluation beyond wound management [2].
Denial: Claim upgraded to intermediate on audit An auditor reviews the operative note and finds documentation of subcutaneous layer closure or extensive debridement, then recodes the claim to 12037. Prevention: if the repair genuinely required layered closure, bill 12037 with supporting documentation at the time of service. If the repair was truly single-layer and the note language is ambiguous, clarify documentation with the provider before submission.
Scenario: A patient presents to the ED after a motor vehicle accident with three lacerations on the trunk: 12 cm, 11 cm, and 10 cm. All wounds are confirmed superficial (dermis only) with no deep structure involvement. The emergency physician performs single-layer suture closure of all three wounds. An evaluation for chest contusion is separately documented in the ED record.
Correct coding: 12007 plus 99284-25
Why: The three trunk wounds sum to 33 cm, placing them above the 30.0 cm threshold. All are simple complexity and the same anatomic group (trunk), so lengths are summed into one code. Modifier 25 is required on the ED E/M because it documents a separately identifiable evaluation for a distinct complaint [1][2].
Scenario: A patient has a 32 cm simple repair on the back (trunk) and a 4 cm intermediate repair on the left forearm requiring layered closure of subcutaneous tissue and skin in the same session.
Correct coding: 12007 plus 12032-51
Why: Simple and intermediate repairs are different complexity levels and are coded separately; their lengths are never combined. The 32 cm trunk repair codes as 12007; the 4 cm forearm intermediate repair codes as 12032. Modifier 51 is appended to 12032 as the lower-value procedure [1].
Scenario: A patient has a 14 cm laceration on the cheek (face group) and a 20 cm laceration on the left arm (extremity group), both simple single-layer closures in the same session.
Correct coding: 12013 plus 12005
Why: Face and extremity wounds belong to separate anatomic series with separate length summations. The 14 cm cheek laceration codes to 12013 (face series, 12.6 to 20.0 cm); the 20 cm arm laceration codes to 12005 (trunk and extremity series, 12.6 to 20.0 cm). Combining both totals to reach 34 cm and billing 12007 would be incorrect [1].
Scenario: A patient has a 31 cm superficial wound on the back closed with tissue adhesive alone.
Correct coding: 12007
Why: Tissue adhesive is a recognized, separately reportable closure method under AMA CPT guidelines, equivalent to suture repair for code selection purposes. The wound length exceeds 30.0 cm on the trunk (within the 12007 anatomic group) and depth is superficial. Documentation must state "tissue adhesive, single layer" as the closure method [1].
AMA CPT 2025 Code Set, Wound Repair Section — American Medical Association — Official CPT descriptors, wound repair general guidelines, complexity classification, length summation rules, and acceptable closure methods.
CMS Physician Fee Schedule — Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services — Global days, bilateral indicator, MUE, co-surgery indicator, ASC status, and BETOS designation for CPT 12007. Database-verified: Global 000, MUE 1, bilateral indicator 0, co-surgery indicator 1.
CMS Global Surgery Booklet (MLN ICN 907166) — CMS Medicare Learning Network — Global surgical package rules; defines services included in 0-day and 10-day global periods.
CMS NCCI Policy Manual, Integumentary System Chapter — Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services — NCCI bundling rules for wound debridement, local anesthesia, and E/M services in relation to wound repair codes.
CMS NCCI Edit Files, PTP and MUE Quarterly Tables — Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services — MUE values and NCCI edit pairs for CPT 12007; MUE of 1 confirmed via internal database.
© Copyright 2026 American Medical Association. All rights reserved.
The CPT® Code 12007 refers to the simple repair of superficial wounds located on various parts of the body, including the scalp, neck, axillae, external genitalia, trunk, and extremities, such as hands and feet. This procedure is specifically indicated for wounds that exceed 30.0 cm in length. A simple repair is characterized by its focus on superficial layers of the skin, which may include the epidermis, dermis, or subcutaneous tissue, without any involvement of deeper tissues. The procedure begins with the cleansing of the wound to prevent infection, followed by the administration of a local anesthetic to ensure patient comfort during the repair process. During the repair, the wound is carefully inspected to confirm its superficial nature and to assess the best method for closure. The closure is performed using a simple, one-layer technique, which may involve sutures, staples, or tissue adhesive. These closure methods can be utilized individually or in combination, including the use of adhesive strips to enhance the repair. It is important to note that certain methods, such as chemical cautery, electrocautery, or the use of adhesive strips alone, do not qualify as a simple repair and should not be reported under this code. Instead, they would be included as part of an evaluation and management service. For accurate coding, it is essential to differentiate between the various codes available for simple repairs based on the size of the wound, with specific codes designated for wounds of different lengths, ensuring proper documentation and billing practices.
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