PMHNP Practice Operations
PMHNP Superbill: What to Include (2026 Guide)
If you run a self-pay or out-of-network psychiatric practice, a clean superbill is what lets your patients seek reimbursement from their own insurance. Here is what belongs on it, a labeled example, and how it differs from an insurance claim.
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What a Superbill Actually Is
A superbill is an itemized receipt for the clinical services you provided during a visit. It is not a bill you send to an insurer, and it is not a claim. It is a detailed document you give to the patient, who then submits it to their own insurance company to request reimbursement or to have the visit applied toward an out-of-network deductible.
For a Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse Practitioner (PMHNP), the superbill most often comes into play in a cash-pay or out-of-network model. You collect payment from the patient at the time of service, and the superbill gives them the coded documentation their plan requires to consider reimbursement. Whether the patient is reimbursed, and how much, is entirely between the patient and their insurer. Your job is to produce an accurate, complete document.
If you are still deciding between billing insurance directly and staying out-of-network, our overview of cash-pay versus insurance for a PMHNP practice walks through the trade-offs, and our broader PMHNP practice resources put superbills in context.
When It Applies
When a PMHNP Provides a Superbill
Self-Pay Patients Seeking Reimbursement
The patient pays you directly but has insurance with out-of-network mental health benefits. The superbill is what they attach to a reimbursement request.
Out-of-Network Practices
You are not contracted with the patient’s plan. You are not submitting claims, so the patient needs a coded receipt to pursue any out-of-network benefit themselves.
Deductible and HSA/FSA Documentation
Even when reimbursement is unlikely, patients often need a superbill to apply spending toward a deductible or to substantiate an HSA or FSA expense.
If you are contracted with a payer and submitting claims on the patient’s behalf, you generally do not provide a superbill for that visit. The claim replaces it. Superbills exist for the situations where the patient, not the practice, is the one asking the insurer for money.
The Core Fields
What to Include on a PMHNP Superbill
Payers reject reimbursement requests for missing information far more often than for anything clinical. A superbill that omits a taxonomy element, a diagnosis code, or a valid CPT code gives the insurer an easy reason to deny. The elements below are the ones most out-of-network mental health plans expect to see.
| Section | Fields to Include |
|---|---|
| Provider / Practice | Legal name and credentials (for example, Jane Doe, PMHNP-BC), practice name, full address, phone, individual NPI, and where required the practice Tax ID (EIN). Some payers also want the taxonomy code and a state license number. |
| Patient | Full legal name, date of birth, address, and the insurance member ID or policy number, plus the relationship to the subscriber if the patient is a dependent. |
| Visit | Date of service, place of service, and the rendering provider if different from the billing provider. |
| Services (CPT) | One line per service using the correct CPT or HCPCS code, for example an evaluation and management code plus a psychotherapy add-on where applicable, with units and any relevant modifiers. |
| Diagnoses (ICD-10) | The ICD-10-CM diagnosis code or codes that support each service line, linked to the appropriate CPT line. |
| Charges | The fee for each line, the total charged, the amount the patient paid, and the balance (usually zero for cash-pay). |
Which exact codes apply to a given psychiatric visit is a coding question, not a template question, and it depends on the service documented and each payer’s rules. Do not copy codes from an example page. Defer to the current AMA CPT code set and the specific payer’s guidance, and see our PMHNP billing and coding overview.
A Labeled Example
What a Completed Superbill Looks Like
The layout below is illustrative only. The codes and fees are placeholders to show structure, not a recommendation of what to bill.
| Provider | Jane Doe, PMHNP-BC | Riverside Behavioral Health, PLLC |
| Address | 123 Example St, Suite 200, Portland, OR 97201 | (503) 555-0100 |
| NPI | 1[XXXXXXXXX] | Tax ID (EIN) XX-XXXXXXX | Taxonomy [PMHNP taxonomy code] |
| Patient | John Q. Patient | DOB 01/15/1985 | Member ID [XXXXXXXX] |
| Date of Service | July 2, 2026 | Place of Service Office (or Telehealth, coded appropriately) |
| CPT | Description (illustrative) | ICD-10 link | Units | Fee |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [E/M code] | Established patient medication management | [F-code] | 1 | $XXX |
| [add-on code] | Psychotherapy add-on (if provided and documented) | [F-code] | 1 | $XX |
| Total charged / Paid by patient / Balance | $XXX / $XXX / $0 | |||
A footer line such as “This is a receipt for services rendered. Payment was collected in full at the time of service. Submit to your insurer for possible out-of-network reimbursement.” helps the patient and the insurer understand what they are looking at.
Know the Difference
Superbill vs. Insurance Claim
| Superbill | Insurance Claim | |
|---|---|---|
| Who submits it | The patient, to their own insurer | The practice, to the payer |
| Who gets paid | The patient (reimbursement), if the plan allows | The practice, per the contracted rate |
| Format | An itemized receipt, given to the patient | A standardized electronic claim (for example, the 837 professional format) |
| Contract needed | No; used out-of-network | Usually an in-network contract and credentialing |
| Who carries the A/R | The patient chases their own reimbursement | The practice manages accounts receivable and denials |
The practical takeaway is that a superbill shifts the reimbursement work, and the reimbursement risk, onto the patient. That is the whole point of an out-of-network model. If you would rather submit claims yourself, that path runs through credentialing and a claims workflow instead.
Common Questions
Frequently Asked Questions
Does giving a patient a superbill guarantee they get reimbursed?
No. A superbill only gives the patient the coded documentation to request reimbursement. Whether they are paid, and how much, depends entirely on their plan’s out-of-network mental health benefits, deductible, and rules.
Do I need to be credentialed with the patient’s insurer to provide a superbill?
No. Superbills are used precisely because you are out-of-network. If you were contracted and submitting claims, the claim would replace the superbill. Credentialing matters for in-network billing, which we cover under PMHNP credentialing.
Which CPT and ICD-10 codes should go on my superbills?
That depends on the service you documented and the payer’s rules, so it is a coding decision rather than a template one. Use the current AMA CPT code set and the applicable ICD-10-CM codes, and confirm specifics with the payer.
Can I provide a superbill for a telehealth psychiatric visit?
Yes. The service is documented and coded the same way, with the place of service and any modifiers reflecting that it was delivered by telehealth. Prescribing rules for telehealth are covered in our telehealth prescribing guide.
How is a superbill different from just a paid receipt?
A plain receipt shows a payment. A superbill adds the coded clinical detail, provider NPI and tax ID, CPT codes, and ICD-10 diagnoses that an insurer needs to evaluate a reimbursement request. Without those elements, most plans will not process it.
Set Up Your Billing Correctly
Get Your Superbill and Coding Workflow Reviewed
A clean superbill template and a sound coding process prevent avoidable reimbursement headaches. If you are launching or refining a PMHNP practice, we can help you set it up right. See how a new practice comes together in our guide to starting a PMHNP practice.
Informational only, not billing, legal, tax, or medical advice. Coding and reimbursement rules change and vary by payer and jurisdiction; confirm specifics with the current AMA CPT code set, the applicable payer, and a qualified professional. Last reviewed: July 2026.