Panic disorder is a primary anxiety disorder characterized by recurrent, unexpected panic attacks and persistent concern about having additional attacks or their consequences. Accurate ICD-10 coding for panic disorder matters because it drives clinical communication, supports medical necessity for treatment, and directly affects reimbursement and compliance. For revenue cycle professionals, correct coding reduces denials, supports appropriate utilization review, and ensures accurate quality reporting.
This guide explains the ICD-10-CM code for Panic disorder without agoraphobia, provides practical coding scenarios, highlights when not to use the code, lists related codes for differential selection, and offers actionable documentation and billing best practices to improve first-pass claim acceptance.
The ICD-10-CM Code for Panic disorder without agoraphobia is F41.0.
Panic disorder without agoraphobia is diagnosed when a patient experiences recurrent, unexpected panic attacks—discrete episodes of intense fear or discomfort with somatic symptoms such as palpitations, sweating, trembling, shortness of breath, chest pain, dizziness, or fear of losing control—and there is persistent concern or maladaptive behavior related to the attacks lasting at least one month. F41.0 in ICD-10-CM classifies panic disorder as a primary anxiety disorder that does not have coexisting agoraphobia documented. Use F41.0 only when the clinician has explicitly indicated that agoraphobia is absent or not diagnosed.
Use F41.0 when a patient presents to the emergency department or urgent care with multiple spontaneous panic attacks and the clinician documents a diagnosis of Panic disorder without agoraphobia. The record should note the characteristic attack features, onset pattern (unexpected), and persistent worry about future attacks or behavior changes due to the attacks.
Apply F41.0 for scheduled psychiatry or mental health follow-up visits when the care plan addresses ongoing treatment (medication management, CBT) for a previously established diagnosis of Panic disorder without agoraphobia. Documentation should reference the established diagnosis and current symptom status or treatment response.
In primary care visits where the clinician addresses an acute increase in panic symptoms for a patient with a known Panic disorder without agoraphobia diagnosis, code F41.0 when the encounter centers on management of the disorder (adjusting anxiolytic dosage, brief counseling) and no agoraphobia is documented.
Use F41.0 after a behavioral health assessment confirms recurrent panic attacks and explicitly rules out agoraphobia. The clinician’s note should state the absence of agoraphobic avoidance or fear related to places or situations, validating F41.0 selection.
Do not use F41.0 if the clinician documents Panic disorder with agoraphobia. Instead, select the code for Panic disorder with agoraphobia (e.g., F40.01 or appropriate combined code per ICD-10-CM) because the presence of agoraphobia changes treatment needs and risk stratification.
Avoid F41.0 if the panic-like symptoms are attributable to another medical condition (e.g., hyperthyroidism, pulmonary embolism) or substance/medication use. In those cases, use an appropriate code for the underlying medical condition or substance-induced anxiety disorder.
Do not code F41.0 when the record documents a single, isolated panic attack without persistent worry, behavioral change, or recurrent episodes. Use the code for panic attack or an encounter code until diagnostic criteria for Panic disorder without agoraphobia are met.
If the clinician documents generalized anxiety disorder, social anxiety disorder, specific phobia, or unspecified anxiety disorder, do not use F41.0. Select the specific anxiety disorder code that matches the clinician’s documented diagnosis.
| Condition | Code | When It Is Used | When It Is Not Used |
|---|---|---|---|
| Panic disorder without agoraphobia | F41.0 | Recurrent unexpected panic attacks with persistent concern about additional attacks or behavior change, and documentation explicitly states agoraphobia is not present | When agoraphobia is documented, when symptoms are secondary to a medical condition or substance, or when only a single panic attack is described |
| Panic disorder with agoraphobia | F40.01 | Recurrent panic attacks with documented agoraphobic avoidance or fear of places/situations related to attacks | When agoraphobia is absent; do not use if clinician explicitly documents Panic disorder without agoraphobia |
| Anxiety disorder, unspecified | F41.9 | When clinician documents an anxiety disorder but does not specify subtype or when diagnostic criteria are not fully assessed | When a specific anxiety disorder (panic disorder, GAD, social anxiety) is clearly documented and meets criteria |
| Anxiety disorder due to another medical condition | F06.4 | When panic-like symptoms are attributable to an identified medical disorder and clinician links symptoms to that condition | When panic disorder is primary and not caused by a medical condition; do not use if substance-induced causes are documented (use substance-induced codes) |
Explicitly document key diagnostic elements: number and nature of panic attacks, whether they are unexpected, duration of persistent worry or behavior change, and clinician’s statement that agoraphobia is absent. This supports medical necessity and code selection.
Show clear connection between interventions (medication changes, psychotherapy, safety planning) and the diagnosis of Panic disorder without agoraphobia. Linkage strengthens medical necessity for outpatient and procedural billing.
Document assessment for medical and substance causes when relevant and note ruling out or confirmation. If secondary causes are identified, code those primary causes instead of F41.0 to avoid incorrect claims and denials.
Ensure the problem list matches visit diagnoses and that the diagnosis is active when billing for related services. Inconsistent documentation between problem list and encounter increases audit risk and denials.
Leverage CombineHealth.ai’s AI-powered platform and CombineHealth.ai's intelligent platform to validate coding choices, run automated claim scrubbing, and detect documentation gaps prior to submission. These tools reduce denials and improve claims accuracy.
Coding for panic disorder has direct impact on revenue cycle outcomes:
Accurate ICD-10 coding is critical for healthcare revenue cycle performance. CombineHealth.ai's AI-powered platform helps RCM teams ensure coding accuracy, reduce denials, and optimize reimbursement through intelligent denial management and claim validation. CombineHealth.ai's intelligent platform provides automated claim scrubbing and coding validation to catch errors before submission, reducing denials and improving first-pass acceptance rates.
Q1: What is the ICD-10 code for panic disorder?
The ICD-10-CM code for Panic disorder without agoraphobia is F41.0. This code applies when a clinician documents recurrent unexpected panic attacks plus persistent concern or behavior change, and explicitly notes agoraphobia is absent.
Q2: When should I use F41.0 vs related codes?
Use F41.0 when the diagnosis is Panic disorder without agoraphobia. Choose Panic disorder with agoraphobia when avoidance or fear of places/situations is documented. Use anxiety disorder due to another medical condition when a medical cause is identified, and anxiety disorder unspecified when the clinician does not specify the subtype.
Q3: What documentation is required when coding for panic disorder?
Document the number and nature of panic attacks, whether they are unexpected, duration of ongoing concern or behavioral change, treatments ordered, and an explicit statement addressing presence or absence of agoraphobia. Link treatment actions to the diagnosis.
Q4: What are common denial reasons when coding for panic disorder?
Denials commonly result from missing diagnostic detail, documentation that suggests a medical or substance cause, inconsistent problem lists, or failure to proof linkage between diagnosis and billed services. See our guide on denial management for strategies to reduce these denials.