CPT 95908: Nerve conduction studies, 3-4 studies
What this code means, what it should cost, and how to dispute an overcharge.
Fair Price Reference
What is CPT 95908?
CPT 95908 (Nerve conduction studies, 3-4 studies) is a neurology billing code defined by the American Medical Association. It's used to bill your insurance or you directly for this service.
What CPT 95908 should cost
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) pays approximately $80 for CPT 95908 under the 2025 Physician Fee Schedule. This is what the federal government has determined is a reasonable payment for this service.
Private insurance typically pays 1.2–1.8x Medicare rates ($96–$144). Hospital chargemaster prices for CPT 95908 often range from $180 to $800 — a markup of 2.3x to 10x over Medicare.
Common overcharges on CPT 95908
Billing limited EMG (95885) without the required nerve conduction study primary code. Billing both a limited and complete EMG on the same extremity. Billing EEG with activation (95819) alongside a standard EEG (95816) for the same session. Over-reporting the number of nerve studies performed to bill a higher-tier NCS code.
About Neurology billing
Nerve conduction studies (NCS) and electromyography (EMG) are among the most overcharged diagnostic tests. The combination study — NCS + needle EMG — is routinely billed at 5–10× Medicare rates, and improper unbundling of EMG components is extremely common.
Request the NCS/EMG report — it documents every nerve tested and every muscle needled. Count the nerves to verify the NCS code tier (95907–95913). Confirm that needle EMG add-on codes (95885/95886) have a qualifying primary NCS code on the same claim.
How to dispute a CPT 95908 overcharge
- Request the itemized bill. You are entitled to a detailed line-by-line bill showing every CPT code billed. Ask in writing.
- Compare to Medicare allowable. If the charge exceeds 150% of Medicare ($120), you have grounds to dispute.
- Request documentation. For E&M codes, ask for the visit note. For procedures, ask for the operative report. The documentation must justify the code billed.
- Send a formal dispute letter. Cite the specific discrepancy between the documentation and the code. Reference Medicare rates and NCCI edits where applicable.
- Follow up in writing. Give the provider 30 days to respond. If they don't, escalate to the state attorney general and insurance commissioner.
Got CPT 95908 on your bill?
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