Nausea is a common symptom encountered across ambulatory, emergency, and inpatient settings. Accurate ICD-10 coding for nausea ensures that records reflect the clinical picture, supports correct reimbursement, and reduces downstream denials or audits. For revenue cycle teams and clinical coders, distinguishing simple symptomatic coding from condition-specific diagnoses is critical to medical necessity and payer compliance.
This guide explains when to assign the ICD-10 code for nausea, clinical scenarios appropriate for its use, common pitfalls, related codes, and actionable documentation and billing best practices to improve claim acceptance and compliance. Expect practical examples, exclusion scenarios, and reimbursement-focused advice tailored for coders, billers, and RCM professionals.
The ICD-10-CM Code for Nausea is R11.0.
Nausea is a subjective sensation of unease and an inclination to vomit. Clinically, it is a symptom rather than a diagnosis and can result from a broad range of etiologies including gastrointestinal disorders, metabolic disturbances, medication effects, vestibular dysfunction, pregnancy, and systemic illnesses. In the ICD-10-CM classification, R11.0 specifically represents the symptom of nausea when it is documented without concurrent vomiting and without attribution to a more specific underlying condition. Use R11.0 when the clinician documents “nausea” as the presenting complaint or diagnosis and no more definitive cause or combination code is provided.
Assign R11.0 when a patient presents with isolated nausea, the clinician documents nausea as the primary symptom, and there is no identified or suspected underlying diagnosis (for example, a viral prodrome where only nausea is recorded). This is appropriate for single-symptom encounters where workup is limited and the clinician’s assessment does not identify an etiology.
Use R11.0 for telehealth or triage notes when the clinical record documents nausea as the sole symptom and the encounter does not establish a causal diagnosis. Telephonic advice or remote assessments often justify symptomatic coding when no definitive diagnosis is made.
When an ED visit documents nausea as the complaint, providers perform history/exam and basic testing without identifying a cause and treat symptomatically (e.g., antiemetic given, observation), R11.0 is appropriate as the principal diagnosis for the encounter.
For follow-up visits where the clinician documents ongoing nausea but states no new diagnostic information or underlying condition, R11.0 is acceptable until a more specific diagnosis is determined and documented.
Do not use R11.0 when the clinician documents a specific cause (for example, gastroenteritis, medication-induced nausea, pregnancy-related nausea, or vestibular disorder). Instead, assign the code for the underlying condition (e.g., A09 for infectious gastroenteritis or O21.- series for pregnancy-related nausea) in addition to symptom codes only if clinically indicated.
If both nausea and vomiting are documented in the same encounter, select the combined code (for example, R11.2 — nausea with vomiting) rather than R11.0. Combined symptom codes capture the full clinical presentation and guide appropriate treatment coding.
If nausea is documented as an adverse effect of medication, anesthesia, or a procedure, use the appropriate external cause, adverse effect, or complication codes along with the underlying mechanism rather than R11.0 alone. This supports causal attribution for clinical management and payer review.
Avoid R11.0 when evaluation yields a specific GI diagnosis (e.g., appendicitis, pancreatitis, peptic ulcer disease). Use the definitive diagnostic code(s) that explain the nausea to ensure accurate clinical representation and reimbursement.
| Condition | Code | When It Is Used | When It Is Not Used |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nausea | R11.0 | Use when nausea is documented as an isolated symptom without vomiting and no specific underlying diagnosis is identified. Appropriate for triage, telehealth, ED visits, or short-term symptomatic care. | Not used when vomiting is also documented, when a specific cause is identified (e.g., gastroenteritis, pregnancy), or when documentation supports a more specific diagnosis. |
| Vomiting (without nausea) | R11.1 | Use when vomiting is documented without accompanying nausea, and no specific cause is identified. Appropriate for symptomatic encounters where vomiting is the primary presentation. | Not used when nausea is also documented, when vomiting is secondary to a specific diagnosis, or when documentation indicates projectile vomiting (use more specific subcodes if documented). |
| Nausea with vomiting | R11.2 | Use when the clinical record documents both nausea and vomiting together as the presenting symptoms without an identified underlying cause. Consolidates both symptoms into one code for clarity. | Not used when only nausea or only vomiting is present, or when a specific etiologic diagnosis explains the symptoms. |
| Vomiting, unspecified | R11.10 | Use when vomiting is documented but not further specified and no nausea is noted; appropriate for brief encounters lacking specificity. | Not used if nausea is also present, if vomiting is attributed to a known cause, or if documentation provides a more precise vomiting descriptor (subcodes) or underlying diagnosis. |
Ensure notes describe the differential diagnosis, tests ordered or deferred, and rationale for symptomatic coding. Clear documentation demonstrating medical decision-making supports medical necessity for R11.0 and defends against denials.
Record associated findings (dehydration, orthostatic changes, dizziness, laboratory abnormalities) and symptom severity. This contextual detail can justify higher-level E/M codes and supports any necessary inpatient escalation.
Document treatments (antiemetics, IV fluids) and show they were administered for nausea. Payers scrutinize treatment linkage; explicit documentation ties resource use to the symptom diagnosis and supports reimbursement.
If testing or clinical evolution reveals a cause, update the chart to reflect the definitive diagnosis instead of persisting with R11.0. Accurate problem list maintenance prevents inappropriate prolonged symptomatic coding.
Incorporate CombineHealth.ai’s AI-powered platform and intelligent claim scrubbing into the revenue cycle to detect conflicting codes, missing linkage, or documentation gaps before submission. Automated validation reduces denials and improves first-pass acceptance.
Coding for nausea 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 nausea?
The ICD-10-CM code for nausea is R11.0. Use it when the clinician documents nausea as an isolated symptom without vomiting or an identified underlying diagnosis.
Q2: When should I use R11.0 vs related codes?
Use R11.0 for isolated nausea. Use R11.2 when both nausea and vomiting are present. Use R11.1 (or subcodes) when vomiting occurs without nausea. When a specific etiology is documented (for example, gastroenteritis or pregnancy-related vomiting), code the underlying cause instead of R11.0.
Q3: What documentation is required when coding for nausea?
Document the presenting symptom, onset, severity, associated signs, diagnostic evaluation performed or deferred, treatments administered linked to the symptom, and the clinician’s assessment or differential. If an underlying cause is identified, update the chart to reflect the specific diagnosis.
Q4: What are common denial reasons when coding for nausea?
Common denials stem from using R11.0 when a more specific diagnosis exists, lack of documentation linking treatment to the symptom, or coding inconsistencies. See our guide on denial management for strategies to reduce these denials and improve appeal success.