
Superbill Generator for Therapists in Arizona
Generate professional, insurance-compliant superbill PDFs for your Arizona clients in under 60 seconds. 5,800+ therapists in AZ use superbills for out-of-network billing.
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What Is a Superbill in Arizona?
A superbill is an itemized insurance receipt that therapists in Arizona provide to out-of-network clients. It includes your NPI, AZ license number, CPT codes, ICD-10 diagnosis codes, and fee information — everything your client's insurer needs to process a reimbursement claim.
Required Fields for Arizona Therapist Superbills
- ✓Provider full name and practice name
- ✓AZ license number and license type (LCSW, LPC, MFT, etc.)
- ✓NPI number (National Provider Identifier)
- ✓Tax ID / EIN
- ✓Practice address and phone number
- ✓Patient name, date of birth, and insurance member ID
- ✓Date(s) of service
- ✓CPT procedure code and description
- ✓ICD-10 diagnosis code(s)
- ✓Fee charged and amount paid
- ✓Place of service code
- ✓Provider signature
Arizona Licensing Board
The Arizona Board of Behavioral Health Examiners oversees licensed therapists in Arizona. Your AZ license number must appear on every superbill.
Telehealth Rules in Arizona
Arizona enacted strong telehealth parity legislation requiring insurers to cover telehealth at the same rate as in-person services. Use modifier 95 for live video sessions. Arizona also allows audio-only telehealth for established patients under certain plans. Document the patient's location at the time of service.
Insurance Landscape in Arizona
Arizona's major insurers include Blue Cross Blue Shield of Arizona, UnitedHealthcare, Aetna, Cigna, and Maricopa County-specific regional plans. The Phoenix and Tucson metro areas have competitive OON markets. Many therapists in Arizona report strong reimbursement from BCBS AZ PPO plans.
Average Reimbursement Rates in Arizona
OON reimbursement for CPT 90837 in Arizona typically ranges from $95 to $145. BCBS AZ PPO subscribers tend to receive higher OON benefits. Rates in metro Phoenix may be slightly higher than rural areas due to the higher provider concentration benchmarks used by insurers.