CPT 20605 Joint injection/aspiration, intermediate joint
Last reviewed: May 17, 2026
RVU Values (2026 CMS Fee Schedule)
Emergency Department Use Case
CPT 20605 is commonly searched by emergency physicians, trauma teams, residents, and coders when documenting joint injection/aspiration, intermediate joint in the ED. The chart should make the indication, technique, sedation status when relevant, imaging guidance when relevant, and immediate result easy to audit.
If this code was paired with critical care, fracture care, procedural sedation, ultrasound guidance, or a separately reportable evaluation and management service, make sure the documentation supports each distinct service.
Common Modifiers
None typically required
Related ICD-10 Coding Ideas
Use diagnosis codes that match the documented emergency department indication.
Billing Tips
For ED billing, document medical necessity, consent when applicable, approach, laterality when relevant, fluoroscopy or ultrasound use when separately reportable, and whether manipulation or anesthesia was required. Weak procedure notes kill payment.
Use the Free CPT Code Finder to compare this code against neighboring reduction, access, splinting, and bedside procedure codes before final claim submission.
Related Emergency Department CPT Codes
CPT 20600 — Joint injection/aspiration, small joint CPT 20604 — Arthrocentesis aspiration/injection small joint with ultrasound guidance CPT 20606 — Arthrocentesis aspiration/injection intermediate joint with ultrasound guidanc CPT 20610 — Joint injection/aspiration, major joint CPT 20611 — Joint injection/aspiration, with ultrasound CPT 10060 — Incision and drainage of abscess; simple or singleSearch emergency procedure CPT codes, compare work RVUs, and stack related services without guesswork.
Open CPT Code Finder →Documentation and Coding Notes
AdSense readiness coding note: CPT 20605 should be treated as an educational starting point, not a final billing instruction. For joint injection/aspiration, intermediate joint, the operative note or procedure note should clearly support the approach, anatomic site, laterality when relevant, clinical indication, and any separately reportable services.
Before submitting a claim or logging the case, compare CPT 20605 with adjacent codes in the same family, confirm current AMA CPT language, check CMS/NCCI edits, and verify payer-specific bundling rules. Modifier use should be tied to documentation rather than added only to bypass an edit.
Common audit checks for emergency department procedures cases include whether the documented work matches the code descriptor, whether add-on services are separately supported, whether a global period applies, and whether ICD-10 diagnosis pairing supports medical necessity.