
Superbill Generator for Therapists in Montana
Generate professional, insurance-compliant superbill PDFs for your Montana clients in under 60 seconds. 900+ therapists in MT use superbills for out-of-network billing.
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What Is a Superbill in Montana?
A superbill is an itemized insurance receipt that therapists in Montana provide to out-of-network clients. It includes your NPI, MT 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 Montana Therapist Superbills
- ✓Provider full name and practice name
- ✓MT 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
Montana Licensing Board
The Montana Board of Behavioral Health oversees licensed therapists in Montana. Your MT license number must appear on every superbill.
Telehealth Rules in Montana
Montana has telehealth parity laws and given its vast rural geography, telehealth is essential for access to behavioral health. Use modifier 95. Montana Medicaid covers behavioral health telehealth broadly. The state has been proactive in supporting telehealth as a solution to provider shortages in rural areas.
Insurance Landscape in Montana
Montana's market is primarily served by Blue Cross Blue Shield of Montana, PacificSource Health Plans, and Mountain Health CO-OP. The market is small and OON benefits are available through PPO plans. Many rural Montanans face limited in-network options, which increases the value of OON therapy and superbill-based reimbursement.
Average Reimbursement Rates in Montana
CPT 90837 OON reimbursement in Montana typically ranges from $90 to $130. BCBS Montana PPO subscribers receive the most consistent OON mental health reimbursements. Provider shortages in rural Montana can result in insurers being more flexible on OON approvals.