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Diagnostic Codes

ICD-10 Codes F30-F39: Mood [Affective] Disorders (2026)

Key Takeaways

Key Takeaways

ICD-10 codes F30-F39 classify all mood [affective] disorders

F39 (Unspecified Mood Disorder) is billable for insurance claims

Code selection requires DSM-5 criteria and clinical documentation

MS-DRG groupings impact reimbursement for inpatient mood disorders

Annual CMS updates release October 1st each year

Introduction to ICD-10 F30-F39 Mood Disorders

ICD-10-CM codes F30-F39 represent the classification system for mood [affective] disorders maintained by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) and the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS). These codes cover conditions where disturbance in mood is the predominant clinical feature. The series includes manic episodes, bipolar disorders, depressive episodes, persistent mood disorders, and unspecified mood conditions.

Behavioral health practices use these codes for diagnosis documentation, insurance claims submission, and clinical record-keeping. Code selection directly impacts reimbursement accuracy and compliance with payer documentation requirements. Understanding the hierarchy and billable status of each code prevents claim denials and supports evidence-based treatment planning.

ICD-10-CM F30-F39 Code Structure and Hierarchy

The F30-F39 code range follows a hierarchical structure defined by the CDC’s ICD-10-CM classification system. Three-character category codes (F30, F31, F32) serve as headers and are non-billable. Four-character subcategory codes and beyond provide the specificity required for claims processing.

According to CMS coding guidelines, behavioral health practices must code to the highest level of specificity documented in the clinical record. A diagnosis of “major depressive disorder, single episode, mild” requires code F32., not the parent category F32. Incomplete coding triggers payer edits and claim returns.

ICD-10 Code F30: Manic Episode

F30 codes classify manic episodes characterized by elevated mood, increased activity, and inflated self-esteem lasting at least one week. Subcategories distinguish episodes with or without psychotic symptoms and specify severity levels. Psychiatric EMR systems map these codes to DSM-5 diagnostic criteria for clinical decision support.

ICD-10 Code F31: Bipolar Disorder

F31 codes document bipolar affective disorder across current episode presentations. The code structure requires specifying current episode type (manic, depressed, mixed) and severity (mild, moderate, severe). Bipolar disorder codes capture longitudinal patterns rather than isolated episodes.

ICD-10 Code F32: Depressive Episode

F32 codes apply to single major depressive episodes meeting DSM-5 duration and symptom criteria. The series includes severity modifiers (mild, moderate, severe) and psychotic feature indicators. Practices treating first-episode depression use F32 codes rather than recurrent depression codes.

ICD-10 Code F33: Major Depressive Disorder, Recurrent

F33 codes document recurrent major depressive disorder when two or more episodes occur separated by at least two months of symptom remission. Current episode severity and the presence of psychotic features determine fourth and fifth character selections. Mental health EMR platforms often auto-suggest F33 codes based on documented episode history.

ICD-10 Code F34: Persistent Mood [Affective] Disorders

F34 codes classify chronic mood conditions including cyclothymic disorder (F34.0) and dysthymic disorder (F34.1). These codes apply when mood symptoms persist for at least two years but do not meet full criteria for major depressive or manic episodes.

ICD-10 Code F39: Unspecified Mood [Affective] Disorder

F39 serves as the catch-all code for mood disorders when insufficient information exists to assign a more specific code. While billable, payers may request additional documentation to support medical necessity. Use F39 only when clinical presentation genuinely prevents more specific diagnosis.

ICD-10 Code Description Billable Status Character Length
F30 Manic episode Non-billable (header) 3
F30.10 Manic episode without psychotic symptoms, unspecified Billable 5
F31 Bipolar disorder Non-billable (header) 3
F31.31 Bipolar disorder, current episode depressed, mild Billable 5
F32 Major depressive disorder, single episode Non-billable (header) 3
F32.0 Major depressive disorder, single episode, mild Billable 4
F33 Major depressive disorder, recurrent Non-billable (header) 3
F33.1 Major depressive disorder, recurrent, moderate Billable 4
F34 Persistent mood [affective] disorders Non-billable (header) 3
F34.0 Cyclothymic disorder Billable 4
F39 Unspecified mood [affective] disorder Billable 3

Clinical Criteria for ICD-10 Mood Disorder Codes

Code selection for mood [affective] disorders requires alignment between ICD-10-CM codes and DSM-5 diagnostic criteria. The AAPC’s ICD-10 code range lookup provides cross-references between coding systems, but clinicians must document specific diagnostic features to support code assignment.

Major depressive episodes documented under F32 or F33 codes require five or more DSM-5 symptoms present during a two-week period, with at least one symptom being depressed mood or loss of interest. Severity modifiers (mild, moderate, severe) reflect functional impairment level rather than symptom count alone.

Manic episodes coded under F30 require abnormally elevated or irritable mood plus three or more additional symptoms lasting at least one week. The presence or absence of psychotic features determines subcategory selection. Hypomania receives different coding under F31 bipolar codes rather than standalone manic episode codes.

Differential diagnosis coding becomes critical when multiple mood presentations overlap. A patient with both current depressive symptoms and past manic episodes receives F31 (bipolar disorder) codes rather than F32 codes, even when the current episode is depressed. Psychology practice management platforms often include diagnosis validation rules to catch these clinical coding scenarios.

Pro Tip

Filter diagnosis code searches by episode history and current presentation simultaneously. Most behavioral health EMRs allow multi-criteria searches that prevent miscoding first episodes as recurrent conditions or assigning single-episode codes to established bipolar patterns. Save your most-used code combinations as favourites for faster documentation workflows.

Billable vs Non-Billable ICD-10 Mood Disorder Codes

CMS defines billable codes as those meeting the specificity requirements for claims processing. Within the F30-F39 range, three-character category codes (F30, F31, F32, F33, F34) serve as organizational headers and cannot be submitted on claims. Four-character and five-character codes meet billable standards.

According to the WHO’s ICD-10 browser, the international version of ICD-10 uses different decimal placement than the U.S. clinical modification. U.S. practices must reference CMS files rather than WHO resources for claims coding. The CDC maintains the official U.S. ICD-10-CM code files with annual October 1st update cycles.

F39 (Unspecified mood disorder) is billable despite being a three-character code. This exception exists because no further subdivision exists within that category. Payers accept F39 claims but often flag them for medical necessity review when diagnosis history suggests a more specific code could apply.

Claims submitted with non-billable codes receive automatic rejections from clearinghouses before reaching the payer. Most practice management systems validate code structure during charge entry, but manual coding workflows may bypass these checks. Regular audits of rejected claims prevent revenue leakage from billable status errors.

Document mood disorder diagnoses with clinical decision support

Pabau's mental health EMR validates ICD-10 code structure and maps DSM-5 criteria to appropriate diagnosis codes during clinical documentation.

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MS-DRG Groupings for ICD-10 Mood Disorders

Medicare Severity Diagnosis-Related Groups (MS-DRGs) classify inpatient stays for payment purposes based on principal diagnosis, procedures performed, and comorbidities. ICD-10 codes F30-F39 map to behavioral health MS-DRG categories that determine hospital reimbursement rates.

The presence of major comorbidities or complications (MCCs) or comorbidities/complications (CCs) documented alongside mood disorder codes can shift MS-DRG assignment to higher-weighted categories. A principal diagnosis of F33.2 (major depressive disorder, recurrent, severe without psychotic features) groups differently than F33.3 (with psychotic features) due to resource intensity differences.

Outpatient coding does not use MS-DRG groupings. Ambulatory practices focus on code specificity for fee-for-service billing or value-based payment models. However, understanding MS-DRG logic helps practices recognize which diagnostic details matter most for inpatient referrals and care coordination.

According to CMS MS-DRG grouper files, mood disorders with MCCs may group to DRG 876 (OR Procedures with Principal Diagnoses of Mental Illness) when surgical intervention occurs, or DRG 880-882 (Acute Adjustment Reaction and Psychosocial Dysfunction) depending on episode characteristics. Principal diagnosis sequencing drives group assignment more than code count.

Pro Tip

Document severity modifiers and psychotic feature indicators precisely. These code components shift MS-DRG assignments and impact prior authorization requirements for intensive outpatient programs or partial hospitalization. Query clinicians when documentation describes severe symptoms but selected codes reflect mild or moderate severity levels.

Documentation Requirements for F30-F39 Mood Disorder Codes

Payers require clinical documentation to support ICD-10 mood disorder code selection. AI-powered clinical documentation tools help capture the narrative details needed to justify diagnosis codes, but clinicians must still document specific criteria.

For F32 (depressive episode) and F33 (recurrent major depressive disorder) codes, documentation must include symptom duration, symptom count meeting DSM-5 thresholds, and functional impairment assessment. Severity modifiers require explicit statements about occupational, social, or self-care limitations.

Manic episode codes under F30 require documentation of mood elevation duration, associated symptoms from the DSM-5 criterion B list, and impact on functioning. The presence or absence of psychotic features must be clearly stated to support subcategory selection. Ambiguous documentation defaults reviewers to questioning code accuracy.

When coding F39 (unspecified mood disorder), documentation should explain why a more specific code cannot be assigned. Phrases like “insufficient information at this time” or “diagnostic clarification in progress” support F39 use better than simply leaving the diagnosis vague. Payers view unexplained F39 codes as potential upcoding when medical history suggests a diagnosable pattern.

Digital intake forms structured around DSM-5 criteria streamline documentation workflows. When patients complete symptom checklists before appointments, clinicians spend less time gathering diagnostic information and more time on treatment planning.

ICD-11 Transition Considerations for Mood Disorders

The World Health Organization released ICD-11 in 2022, but the United States has not set a mandatory compliance date. CMS continues updating ICD-10-CM annually while monitoring international ICD-11 adoption. Behavioral health practices should track transition timelines but maintain focus on current ICD-10-CM coding accuracy.

ICD-11 restructures mood disorder classifications with new code prefixes and different hierarchical logic. The current F30-F39 range will not map one-to-one to ICD-11 equivalents. Practices using hardcoded diagnosis lists in their EMR systems will need vendor support for future transitions.

According to ICD List’s transition resources, crosswalk tables will link ICD-10-CM codes to ICD-11 categories, but many relationships will be many-to-one or one-to-many rather than exact matches. Historical diagnosis data may require recoding for longitudinal analysis post-transition.

The gap between WHO ICD-11 release and U.S. CMS adoption creates a waiting period for practices. Rather than preparing for uncertain future coding systems, focus on maximizing current ICD-10-CM documentation quality. Strong clinical documentation translates across coding system changes better than memorizing specific code numbers.

Expert Picks

Expert Picks

Need guidance on coding related mental health conditions? ICD-10 Code for Autistic Disorder explains neurodevelopmental diagnosis coding that often co-occurs with mood disorders.

Looking for anxiety disorder coding resources? Situational Anxiety ICD-10 Code covers F41 anxiety codes frequently documented alongside F30-F39 mood conditions.

Want to streamline behavioral health documentation? Mental Health EMR provides integrated ICD-10 code libraries with clinical decision support for diagnosis selection.

Conclusion

ICD-10-CM codes F30-F39 provide the classification framework for mood [affective] disorders in U.S. healthcare documentation and billing. Code selection requires clinical knowledge of DSM-5 diagnostic criteria, understanding of CMS coding guidelines, and documentation practices that support medical necessity. Behavioral health practices must code to the highest level of specificity, distinguish billable from non-billable codes, and maintain documentation that justifies severity modifiers and episode characteristics.

As CMS updates the code set annually and the healthcare industry tracks ICD-11 transition timelines, practices benefit from clinical documentation systems that adapt to coding changes without disrupting care delivery workflows. The intersection of diagnosis coding, clinical criteria, and reimbursement rules demands both clinical expertise and operational attention to detail.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between F32 and F33 depression codes?

F32 codes classify major depressive disorder, single episode, while F33 codes document recurrent major depressive disorder. Use F32 for first-time major depressive episodes. Switch to F33 when a patient has experienced two or more major depressive episodes separated by at least two months of remission. The distinction matters for treatment planning and insurance authorization, as recurrent depression often requires different intervention strategies than single episodes.

Is F39 (unspecified mood disorder) a billable code?

Yes, F39 is billable for insurance claims despite being a three-character code. However, payers may request additional documentation to justify why a more specific mood disorder code cannot be assigned. Use F39 only when clinical information genuinely prevents more specific diagnosis coding, not as a default when documentation is incomplete.

How do severity modifiers impact ICD-10 mood disorder coding?

Severity modifiers (mild, moderate, severe) determine fourth or fifth character code selection within F30-F39 series. These modifiers reflect functional impairment level rather than symptom count alone. Documentation must explicitly describe occupational, social, or self-care limitations to support severity code assignment. Severity coding affects MS-DRG grouping for inpatient stays and may trigger different prior authorization requirements for intensive treatment programs.

When should I code bipolar disorder (F31) versus manic episode (F30)?

Use F31 codes when a patient has an established bipolar disorder diagnosis and you are documenting the current episode type and severity. Use F30 codes for manic episodes when no prior mood episode history exists or when coding a standalone manic episode without established bipolar pattern. Longitudinal diagnosis history drives this coding decision more than current symptom presentation alone.

Do ICD-10 mood disorder codes require DSM-5 criteria documentation?

While ICD-10-CM does not legally mandate DSM-5 documentation, payers expect clinical records to support diagnosis code selection with recognized diagnostic criteria. DSM-5 provides the standard framework for mood disorder diagnosis in U.S. behavioral health practice. Documentation matching DSM-5 criteria prevents claim denials and supports medical necessity during utilization review.

How often do CMS ICD-10 mood disorder codes update?

CMS releases ICD-10-CM code updates annually on October 1st. Updates may include new codes, revised descriptors, or changes to coding guidelines. Behavioral health practices must implement these updates by the compliance date to avoid claim rejections. Most practice management systems receive vendor updates automatically, but practices should verify successful implementation each year.

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