OB-GYN Billing · Georgia

OB-GYN billing and revenue cycle for Georgia providers.

Georgia operates 775 OB-GYN billing organizations registered in NPPES, representing 3.1 percent of the U.S. OB-GYN billing footprint. Georgia is a major OB-GYN billing market. OB-GYN revenue cycle blends global OB package management, delivery coding, well-woman preventive billing, LARC + contraception billing, and pelvic surgery coding. Georgia OB-GYN practices need coders with depth across all of these.

775
NPPES orgs in GA
3.1%
of US market
#10
national rank
90%+
Realization target
Last updated: May 31, 2026 · Authored by ASP-RCM Solutions Team

What good OB-GYN billing execution looks like for Georgia providers.

The Georgia OB-GYN billing market has its own quirks. Here is the operating discipline we install on every Georgia engagement.

  1. Global OB package billing and antepartum visit trackingGlobal OB package (59400, 59510, 59610, 59618) bundles antepartum, delivery, and postpartum care. Georgia OB-GYN practices need accurate antepartum visit tracking to determine global vs separate billing.
  2. Newborn delivery coding for vaginal vs C-sectionVaginal delivery (59409 with global, 59410 with postpartum) vs C-section (59514, 59515) carry distinct codes. Twin and complex deliveries add code complexity.
  3. Ultrasound and antepartum diagnostic billingOB ultrasound (76801-76817) and BPP, NST, and antepartum surveillance billing require precise study-type coding and appropriate modifier use.
  4. Annual well-woman visit + preventive codingAnnual well-woman visit (99396-99397, plus G0101 / Q0091 for Medicare screening pap) bills distinctly from problem-oriented visits. Modifier 25 needed when same-day E/M occurs.
  5. LARC and contraception codingIUD insertion (58300), removal (58301), and Nexplanon (11981-11983) plus device J-codes (J7297, J7298, J7300, J7301) require accurate placement and inventory billing.
  6. Pelvic surgery and laparoscopic procedure codingHysterectomy, myomectomy, oophorectomy, and pelvic floor procedures carry complex code stacks with bundling rules. Georgia OB-GYN practices doing surgery need specialty coders.

More Southeast state guides.

Sister Southeast state pages for OB-GYN billing.

FAQ: OB-GYN billing in Georgia.

How many OB-GYN billing providers operate in Georgia?

NPPES lists 775 OB-GYN billing organizations in Georgia, representing 3.1% of the U.S. footprint. Top concentrations are in Atlanta (135), Savannah (37), Augusta (26).

Does Georgia Medicaid cover OB-GYN billing services?

Yes. Georgia Medicaid covers OB-GYN billing services for eligible beneficiaries, with plan-specific authorization rules and rate structures that vary by year.

What commercial payers cover OB-GYN billing in Georgia?

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

Does ASP-RCM serve OB-GYN billing providers in Georgia?

Yes. ASP-RCM Solutions provides OB-GYN and women's health billing services for providers in Georgia 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 Georgia OB-GYN 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