Changes in E&M Coding for 2027

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is continuing its multi-year push toward payment accuracy, documentation integrity, and value-based care.

While the most visible 2027 updates so far focus on Medicare Advantage (MA) and broader payment policy, the ripple effects for evaluation and management (E&M) coding are significant. Providers should expect tighter documentation standards, expanded use of complexity-based add-on codes, and heightened scrutiny of medical necessity. To be clear, there is no finalized 2027 Physician Fee Schedule, but recent CMS policies emphasize upcoming changes.

Before changes in 2021, the last changes to E&M codes were in 1995 and 1997. Then changes occurred in 2021, 2023, and 2025. For 2027, I predict the following:

1. Increased Emphasis on Documentation Accuracy

CMS is doubling down on documentation as the foundation of payment. Recent policy direction highlights that unsupported diagnoses and insufficient clinical detail will not be counted toward reimbursement or risk adjustment.

For E&M services, this reinforces a shift already underway: coding must be fully supported by clear, contemporaneous documentation reflecting medical decision-making (MDM) or time.

2. Continued Expansion of Longitudinal Care Coding

CMS has been expanding the use of add-on codes such as G2211 to better capture the complexity of ongoing patient relationships, including care delivered outside traditional office settings.

By 2027, these policies are expected to be more widely adopted and scrutinized. Providers delivering longitudinal, team-based, or home-based care will need to ensure that documentation clearly demonstrates continuity and complexity.

3. Alignment with Value-Based Payment and Risk Adjustment

Although CMS did not introduce a new risk-adjustment model for 2027, it is placing greater emphasis on accurate condition capture and audit readiness.

E&M coding will increasingly serve as the backbone for risk scoring, quality reporting, and payment. This means that coding errors are no longer just billing issues; they directly affect revenue, compliance, and performance metrics.

4. Increased Program Integrity and Audit Activity

CMS has signaled a broader move toward payment precision and increased oversight.

Given that incorrect coding and insufficient documentation already account for a large share of improper E&M payments, nearly half due to coding errors alone, providers should expect more audits and stricter enforcement.

Some common pitfalls providers must avoid include the following:

1. Overreliance on Templates without Clinical Specificity

Generic templates that fail to reflect the individualized patient encounter remain a major compliance risk. Auditors increasingly look for evidence that documentation supports the level of MDM billed – not just that required fields are filled in.

2. Misuse of Time-Based Coding

While time-based coding offers flexibility, it must include total time spent and clearly document qualifying activities. Vague statements such as “spent significant time counseling” are insufficient and frequently denied.

3. Improper Use of Add-On Codes (e.g., G2211)

As CMS expands recognition of longitudinal care, misuse of add-on codes will draw scrutiny. Providers must demonstrate ongoing responsibility for patient care and medical complexity, not just a single visit.

4. Incomplete Capture of Patient Complexity

Under-coding remains a hidden risk. Failure to document comorbidities, social determinants of health (SDoH), or care coordination can lead to lost revenue and inaccurate risk adjustment.

5. Lack of Audit Readiness

With CMS emphasizing accountability, providers should assume that any high-level E&M service could be reviewed. Missing documentation, cloned notes, or inconsistencies between the record and claim can trigger recoupments.

To succeed under the 2027 framework, providers should take a proactive approach:

  • Invest in documentation training focused on MDM and medical necessity;
  • Audit high-risk E&M codes regularly to identify patterns of error;
  • Leverage technology ensuring that templates support, not replace, clinical reasoning; and
  • Align coding practices with value-based care goals, including risk-adjustment accuracy.

The 2027 CMS updates do not radically redefine E&M coding, but they significantly raise the stakes. The direction is clear: better documentation, tighter compliance, and more accurate representation of patient complexity.

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