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CPT Coding

What is the Global Surgical Package? Everything Beginners Must Know

📅 March 2026 📖 5 min read ✍️ Clear CPC Team
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The global surgical package is one of the most heavily tested concepts on the CPC exam — and one of the most misunderstood by beginner coders. Understanding it thoroughly is essential not just for the exam, but for accurate real-world coding. This article breaks it down completely, from what the global package includes to how modifiers are used to break it apart when necessary.

What is the Global Surgical Package?

When a surgeon performs a procedure and bills a CPT surgical code, that code does not just cover the operation itself. It covers a bundle of related services provided before, during, and after the surgery — all included in a single payment. This bundle is called the global surgical package.

The concept was created by Medicare and adopted widely across payers to simplify payment for surgical care. Instead of billing separately for every pre-operative visit, the surgery, and every post-operative follow-up, the surgeon receives one global payment that covers all of it within the global period.

What Is Included in the Global Surgical Package?

The following services are bundled into the global surgical fee and cannot be billed separately:

  • Pre-operative visits the day before or the day of surgery (for major procedures)
  • The surgical procedure itself including local infiltration and topical anesthesia
  • Immediate post-operative care in the recovery room
  • Complications following surgery that do not require a return to the operating room
  • Post-operative visits during the global period that are related to the surgery
  • Post-surgical pain management by the operating surgeon
  • Supplies typically included with surgical procedures
  • Miscellaneous services such as dressing changes and removal of sutures
💡 Key Point: Services that are part of the normal recovery from a surgery are included in the global package. You cannot bill an office visit separately just because the patient came in after surgery — it must be for an unrelated condition to be separately billable.

What Is NOT Included in the Global Surgical Package?

Certain services can still be billed separately even during the global period:

  • Treatment of a condition completely unrelated to the surgery
  • Complications requiring a return to the operating room
  • Services of other physicians who are not the operating surgeon
  • Diagnostic tests and procedures ordered during the post-op period
  • Clearly distinct surgical procedures during the global period (modifier -79)
  • The initial consultation or evaluation that led to the decision for surgery (with modifier -57 for major procedures)

The Three Types of Global Periods

Not all surgical procedures have the same global period. Medicare assigns each surgical code one of three global period designations:

Global Period What It Means Examples
0-Day Global No post-operative period. The surgical package only covers the procedure itself and same-day care. Minor procedures like shave removals, needle biopsies
10-Day Global Post-operative period lasts 10 days after the procedure date. Related follow-up visits within 10 days are included. Excision of skin lesions, simple repairs
90-Day Global Post-operative period lasts 90 days. Also includes one pre-operative day. Major surgical procedures fall here. Appendectomy, CABG, total knee replacement, hysterectomy

Key Modifiers for the Global Surgical Package

Modifiers are used to signal to payers that a service should be paid separately despite the global period rules. These are among the most tested modifiers on the CPC exam:

Modifier When to Use It
-24 Unrelated E&M service during a post-operative period. The visit is for a completely different condition than the surgery.
-25 Significant, separately identifiable E&M service on the same day as a minor procedure (0 or 10-day global). The E&M must be above and beyond what is included in the procedure.
-57 Decision for surgery. The E&M visit resulted in the initial decision to perform a major (90-day global) surgery. Appended to the E&M code, not the surgery code.
-58 Staged or related procedure during the post-operative period. The follow-up procedure was planned or is more extensive than expected.
-78 Unplanned return to the OR for a related complication during the post-operative period.
-79 Unrelated procedure during the post-operative period. The new surgery is for a completely different condition.
⭐ CPC Exam Tip: The most commonly confused modifiers are -57 vs -25 and -58 vs -78 vs -79. Remember: -57 is for the decision to perform MAJOR surgery (90-day global). -25 is for the same day as a MINOR procedure. Practice distinguishing these with scenario questions.

Practical Example — Putting It All Together

Here is a scenario that illustrates global package rules in action:

A patient sees Dr. Smith on Monday for abdominal pain. After evaluation, Dr. Smith decides the patient needs an appendectomy (a 90-day global procedure). Surgery is performed on Wednesday. The patient returns two weeks later with a wound infection that Dr. Smith treats in the office. Four weeks later, the patient comes in for a completely unrelated sinus infection.

  • Monday E&M visit: Bill with modifier -57 (decision for major surgery)
  • Wednesday appendectomy: Bill the surgical CPT code — covers 90 days of related follow-up
  • Wound infection visit: This is a complication related to the surgery — included in the global package, cannot bill separately
  • Sinus infection visit: Completely unrelated — bill the E&M with modifier -24
⚠️ Common Mistake: Many beginners try to bill post-operative visits separately during the global period. Unless the visit is for an unrelated condition (modifier -24) or a complication requiring a return to the OR (modifier -78), post-op visits are bundled and not separately billable.
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