Key Takeaways
ICD-10 Code E66.01 is a billable ICD-10-CM diagnosis code for morbid (severe) obesity due to excess calories, valid through the 2026 code year.
A BMI of 40 or above, or BMI 35-39.9 with a documented comorbidity, typically supports E66.01 assignment per clinical guidelines.
E66.01 has a Type 1 Excludes note for E66.2 (obesity hypoventilation syndrome): these two codes cannot be assigned together.
Pabau’s claims management software and measurements tracking tools help weight loss clinics document BMI, comorbidities, and obesity codes accurately for clean claim submission.
Obesity documentation errors cost practices more than most coders realize. When a chart says “morbid obesity” but the claim goes out with E66.9 (obesity, unspecified), payers flag the discrepancy and denials follow. For clinics managing weight loss clinic software workflows and treating Class III obesity patients, choosing between E66.01, E66.09, and E66.9 is one of the most common sources of audit risk.
This reference covers ICD-10 Code E66.01 in full: its clinical definition, billable status, BMI assignment criteria, excludes notes, related code comparisons, documentation requirements, and what changed in FY2025/2026. Whether you are a physician, NP, or medical coder, this guide gives you what you need to assign the code correctly and defend it at audit.
ICD-10 Code E66.01: Clinical Definition and Billable Status
Official description: Morbid (severe) obesity due to excess calories. ICD-10 Code E66.01 is a fully billable, specific ICD-10-CM diagnosis code maintained by the CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) and valid from the 2016 code year through the 2026 code year with no deletions or expiry.
It falls within Chapter 4: Endocrine, nutritional and metabolic diseases (E00-E89), specifically the subcategory E65-E68 (overweight, obesity, and other hyperalimentation). The immediate parent code is E66.0 (obesity due to excess calories), which branches into two child codes: E66.01 for morbid/severe obesity and E66.09 for other obesity due to excess calories.
Synonyms and inclusion terms recognized under ICD-10 Code E66.01 include morbid obesity, obese class III, and severe obesity. These terms are interchangeable in the alphabetic index and can support the code assignment when used in physician documentation.
Type 1 Excludes Note
ICD-10 Code E66.01 carries a Type 1 Excludes note for E66.2 (morbid obesity with alveolar hypoventilation, also known as Obesity Hypoventilation Syndrome or Pickwickian Syndrome). A Type 1 Excludes note means these two codes cannot be used together on the same claim. When a patient has both severe obesity and OHS, E66.2 is the correct and only assignable code from this category. Documentation that mentions both conditions should direct coders to E66.2 exclusively.
E66.01 Code Hierarchy and Related Obesity Codes
Understanding where ICD-10 Code E66.01 sits in the E66 hierarchy prevents the most common mismatch errors. The full E66 family, as listed in the CMS ICD-10-CM code files, is as follows:
For ICD-10 coding reference across other diagnostic categories, see our ICD-10 coding reference articles covering additional code families.
Documentation Requirements for E66.01 Claims
Payers require specific documentation elements to accept ICD-10 Code E66.01 without challenge. The three core requirements are a physician-documented diagnosis, a recorded BMI value, and clinical justification for the severity classification.
- Physician diagnosis statement: The treating provider must explicitly document morbid obesity, severe obesity, or Class III obesity. A note stating only “obese” or “overweight” does not support E66.01. The digital intake forms workflow can standardize how obesity severity is captured at each visit.
- BMI value in the record: Z68 codes (BMI assignment) should accompany E66.01 when a numeric BMI appears in the documentation. Coders can assign the relevant Z68 subcategory based on the recorded BMI. Clinics can use measurements tracking tools to record and trend BMI values across visits automatically.
- Comorbidity documentation (when BMI is 35-39.9): At BMI 35-39.9, the record must identify at least one qualifying comorbidity such as type 2 diabetes, hypertension, sleep apnea, or severe musculoskeletal disease. Without a documented comorbidity at this BMI range, E66.01 is not defensible; E66.09 would be more appropriate.
- Exclusion of hypoventilation: If any documentation references Pickwickian syndrome, OHS, or alveolar hypoventilation, the coder must switch to E66.2 and cannot assign E66.01 on the same claim.
Practices managing obesity populations benefit from structured note templates that prompt providers to record each of these elements at every relevant encounter. Missing any one of them is the fastest route to a denial or a post-payment audit recovery request.
Pro Tip
Audit your last 30 E66.01 claims and check whether each one has: (1) an explicit severity term in the provider note, (2) a Z68 BMI code, and (3) at least one comorbidity listed when BMI is below 40. Most claim-level errors appear at the documentation stage, not the coding stage.
Selecting ICD-10 Code E66.01: BMI Thresholds and Comorbidity Criteria
The most common coding question around ICD-10 Code E66.01 involves when to use it versus E66.09 or E66.9. The decision follows two clinical pathways based on BMI and comorbidity documentation.
E66.9 (obesity, unspecified) is equivalent to Obesity NOS and should not be used when documentation supports a more specific code. Per Blue Cross Blue Shield provider education guidance, E66.9 is appropriate only when documentation is genuinely insufficient to support E66.01 or E66.09. Defaulting to E66.9 for convenience is a coding accuracy issue that may trigger payer queries.
Practices using a metabolic health EMR platform can embed BMI thresholds and comorbidity checklists directly into visit templates, reducing the risk that a physician forgets to document the severity classifier at point of care.
Streamline obesity diagnosis coding with Pabau
Pabau's claims management tools and structured clinical documentation workflows help weight management practices assign E66.01 accurately, track BMI over time, and submit clean claims. See how it works in your clinic.
Payer Guidelines and Reimbursement Context
ICD-10 Code E66.01 is recognized by Medicare, Medicaid, and most commercial payers as a valid principal or secondary diagnosis. However, reimbursement depends heavily on medical necessity documentation and the specific service being billed alongside it.
For bariatric surgery claims, most payers require E66.01 (or E66.2 when OHS is present) as a supporting diagnosis to establish medical necessity. Pairing it with the relevant comorbidity codes (such as E11.9 for type 2 diabetes or I10 for essential hypertension) strengthens the claim narrative. The claims management software workflow should flag encounters where E66.9 appears in the record but E66.01 might be more appropriate based on documented BMI and comorbidity data.
For intensive behavioral therapy (IBT) for obesity, CMS covers up to 22 sessions per year for beneficiaries with a BMI of 30 or above, using specific G-codes. ICD-10 Code E66.01 supports medical necessity for these visits. Payer-specific Local Coverage Determinations (LCDs) may impose additional documentation requirements, so reviewing the relevant LCD before billing is advisable. For guidance on managing pharmacologic and lifestyle-based obesity treatment workflows, the Pabau guide on managing metabolic health covers clinical decision-making frameworks for this patient population.
ICD-9-CM Crosswalk
The historical ICD-9-CM equivalent for the E66 obesity category is code 278 (obesity). The more specific ICD-9 subcode 278.01 (morbid obesity) maps most closely to ICD-10 Code E66.01. This crosswalk is relevant for practices reviewing legacy claims data, retrospective chart audits, or payer correspondence referencing pre-2015 coding. The AAPC Codify ICD-10-CM lookup provides bidirectional crosswalk tools for these conversions.
Pro Tip
Review any E66.9 claims from the past 12 months against your clinical records. If provider notes document morbid obesity or a BMI of 40 or above, a corrected claim with ICD-10 Code E66.01 may be appropriate. Run this reconciliation quarterly to prevent systematic undercoding.
FY2025/2026 Obesity Coding Updates and E66.01 Impact
Effective October 1, 2024 (FY2025), the CMS ICD-10-CM tabular list added new obesity codes under the E66.8 and E66.89 subcategories. These additions were intended to capture obesity types not classifiable under E66.01 or E66.9, including specific documented obesity subtypes not attributable to excess caloric intake alone.
ICD-10 Code E66.01 itself was not modified, deleted, or restructured in FY2025 or the FY2026 code year. It remains the correct code for morbid or severe obesity due to excess calories with its longstanding clinical criteria. The new E66.89 code applies to other specified obesity types and should not be used as a substitute for E66.01 when the documentation clearly supports a caloric excess etiology with morbid severity.
Some confusion arose in coding communities after the October 2024 update about whether E66.89 could replace E66.01 in certain contexts. Per the official ICD-10-CM guidelines, E66.01 remains the appropriate assignment when documentation meets its criteria. Coders uncertain about specific edge cases should consult the current year’s CDC/NCHS ICD-10-CM tool for the authoritative tabular list and any new instructional notes.
For practices treating patients with GLP-1 receptor agonists (semaglutide, tirzepatide), the obesity coding landscape is evolving. Drug therapy coding involves separate J-codes or NDC-based billing, and the obesity diagnosis code (E66.01 where appropriate) continues to support medical necessity for these treatments. Given the rapid pace of payer policy updates in this area, clinicians should check their specific payer’s current prior authorization requirements. Weight management clinics using ICD-10 diagnostic coding reference resources can cross-reference comorbid mental health diagnoses that frequently accompany obesity treatment episodes.
Expert Picks
Managing a weight loss or metabolic health clinic? Weight Loss Clinic Software covers how Pabau supports patient tracking, clinical documentation, and billing workflows for obesity-focused practices.
Need to track BMI and body measurements across patient visits? Measurements Tracking Software explains how to log and trend clinical measurements automatically within patient records.
Looking to streamline claims submission for obesity-related encounters? Claims Management Software outlines how Pabau supports accurate diagnosis code pairing and clean claim workflows.
Conclusion
Morbid obesity documentation is where many practices lose revenue they should be capturing. When the clinical record supports ICD-10 Code E66.01 but the claim goes out with E66.9, practices leave accurate reimbursement on the table and introduce audit risk simultaneously.
Pabau’s claims management software and measurements tracking tools give weight management clinics the infrastructure to document BMI, record comorbidities, and assign E66.01 correctly at every visit. To see how Pabau handles obesity coding workflows end to end, book a demo.
Frequently Asked Questions
Use ICD-10 Code E66.01 when the physician documents morbid obesity, severe obesity, or Class III obesity with a BMI of 40 or above, or BMI 35-39.9 plus a qualifying comorbidity. Use E66.09 when obesity due to excess calories is documented but does not meet E66.01 severity criteria. Reserve E66.9 (obesity, unspecified) only when documentation is insufficient to support a more specific code. Defaulting to E66.9 when the record supports E66.01 is a coding accuracy error.
A BMI of 40 or above supports E66.01 without requiring a documented comorbidity. BMI 35-39.9 can also support E66.01 when the physician documents at least one qualifying comorbidity such as type 2 diabetes, hypertension, obstructive sleep apnea, or severe osteoarthritis. The BMI value should appear in the clinical record and may be paired with a Z68 BMI code.
Yes. ICD-10 Code E66.01 is a fully billable, specific ICD-10-CM diagnosis code recognized by Medicare, Medicaid, and commercial payers. It has been valid since the 2016 code year and remains active through the 2026 code year with no deletions or expiry.
FY2025 additions expanded the E66.8 subcategory, introducing E66.89 (other obesity, specified type NEC) for obesity types not captured by existing codes. These new codes do not replace E66.01 for morbid obesity due to excess calories. E66.01 criteria and clinical thresholds were unchanged. Coders should continue assigning E66.01 when documentation supports it and use E66.89 only for other specified obesity types that fall outside existing categories.
The closest ICD-9-CM equivalent is code 278.01 (morbid obesity), which falls under the 278 obesity category. This crosswalk is relevant for legacy claims review, retrospective audits, or payer correspondence referencing pre-October 2015 encounters.