Dermatology Billing · North Carolina

Dermatology billing and revenue cycle for North Carolina providers.

North Carolina operates 242 dermatology billing organizations registered in NPPES, representing 2.7 percent of the U.S. dermatology billing footprint. North Carolina is a mid-sized dermatology billing market. Dermatology revenue cycle requires precision: lesion removal sizing, Mohs stage billing, cosmetic vs medical separation, modifier 25 discipline, and biologic PA management. North Carolina dermatology practices need RCM that handles this granularity reliably.

242
NPPES orgs in NC
2.7%
of US market
#12
national rank
90%+
Realization target
Last updated: May 31, 2026 · Authored by ASP-RCM Solutions Team

What good dermatology billing execution looks like for North Carolina providers.

The North Carolina dermatology billing market has its own quirks. Here is the operating discipline we install on every North Carolina engagement.

  1. Lesion removal coding by size and methodDermatology lesion removal billing requires precise capture of lesion size, anatomic location, benign vs malignant pathology, and removal method (excision, destruction, shave). North Carolina derm practices need coders who can read op notes accurately.
  2. Mohs surgery billing and stage trackingMohs micrographic surgery bills per stage with specific CPT codes (17311-17315). Accurate stage tracking and same-day reconstruction coding are essential.
  3. Cosmetic vs medical service separationNorth Carolina dermatology practices often mix cosmetic (cash pay) and medical (insurance) services. Clean separation in scheduling, billing, and patient consent prevents claim disputes and audit risk.
  4. Modifier 25 discipline for E/M + procedureSame-day E/M plus procedure (biopsy, destruction, injection) is daily reality in dermatology. Modifier 25 must be defensible with clear separate E/M documentation.
  5. Path lab billing for in-house specimensNorth Carolina dermatology practices with in-house pathology need accurate 88305 / 88312 billing, professional + technical component awareness, and CLIA compliance.
  6. Specialty drug PA for biologics (Dupixent, Cosentyx, etc.)Dermatologic biologics carry significant PA burden and specialty pharmacy coordination. PA automation reduces patient access delays significantly.

More Southeast state guides.

Sister Southeast state pages for dermatology billing.

FAQ: dermatology billing in North Carolina.

How many dermatology billing providers operate in North Carolina?

NPPES lists 242 dermatology billing organizations in North Carolina, representing 2.7% of the U.S. footprint. Top concentrations are in Charlotte (41), Raleigh (15), Greensboro (11).

Does NC Medicaid Managed Care cover dermatology billing services?

Yes. NC Medicaid Managed Care covers dermatology billing services for eligible beneficiaries, with plan-specific authorization rules and rate structures that vary by year.

What commercial payers cover dermatology billing in North Carolina?

All major national commercial payers cover dermatology billing in North Carolina, including UnitedHealthcare/Optum, Aetna, Cigna/Evernorth, the dominant North Carolina Blue Cross Blue Shield plan, and (where active) Humana.

Does ASP-RCM serve dermatology billing providers in North Carolina?

Yes. ASP-RCM Solutions provides dermatology billing and revenue cycle services for providers in North Carolina and across all 50 states. Senior partners on every account. Request a free 30-day audit.

How do I get started?

Request a free 30-day RCM audit. We assess your current state, identify revenue leakage, and produce a written prioritized recommendations list.

Free 30-day audit for North Carolina dermatology billing providers.

Send us your last 90 days of claim data. We will send back a 4-page audit with prioritized recommendations and dollar estimates.

Request audit Talk to a senior partner