ICD-10 Code K81: Cholecystitis – Complete Coding & Billing Guide

ICD-10 code K81 is the category header for cholecystitis — inflammation of the gallbladder occurring without associated gallstones. K81 itself is not a billable code; it is the parent category. Reimbursable claims require one of the four valid subcodes: K81.0 (acute), K81.1 (chronic), K81.2 (acute with chronic), or K81.9 (unspecified). Selecting the wrong subcode — or defaulting to K81 instead of the K80 combo code family when gallstones are present — is one of the most frequently audited errors in gastrointestinal billing.


What Does ICD-10 Code K81 Mean?

K81 classifies cholecystitis without cholelithiasis — gallbladder inflammation in the absence of confirmed gallstone disease. The condition may be acalculous (most common inpatient presentation, often triggered by critical illness, fasting, or reduced bile flow) or result from bacterial infection, ischemia, or chemical injury.

Key attributes of the K81 code category:

  • Not billable as a standalone code — a subcode is always required for claim submission
  • Excludes1: cholecystitis with cholelithiasis (K80.-) — these two code families cannot appear on the same claim for the same episode
  • Applicable across inpatient, outpatient, and emergency department settings
  • Effective date for the 2026 edition: October 1, 2025 (CMS ICD-10-CM 2026 release)

What Subcodes Are Under K81 and When Does Each Apply?

Correct subcode selection depends entirely on provider documentation of acuity. Do not assume acute or chronic status — it must be explicitly stated in the clinical record.

SubcodeDescriptionKey Clinical Indicators
K81.0Acute cholecystitisSudden onset RUQ pain, fever, leukocytosis, positive Murphy’s sign, imaging showing gallbladder wall thickening/pericholecystic fluid
K81.1Chronic cholecystitisRecurrent episodes documented over time, gallbladder wall fibrosis on imaging or pathology
K81.2Acute cholecystitis with chronic cholecystitisProvider documents both acute flare and underlying chronic disease in same encounter
K81.9Cholecystitis, unspecifiedCholecystitis confirmed but acuity not specified in documentation

What Does K81.9 Mean and When Is It Acceptable?

K81.9 is a coding last resort, not a default. It is appropriate only when the provider documents cholecystitis but provides no indication of whether the episode is acute, chronic, or both, and a query to the provider is not feasible or returns no clarification. In practice, K81.9 should trigger a documentation improvement opportunity flag in any CDI program — acuity drives DRG assignment and reimbursement differences that make specificity worth pursuing.


When Is K81 the Right Code Family to Use?

Use K81.x when cholecystitis is confirmed and gallstones have been ruled out or are not mentioned. Follow these steps before assigning any K81 subcode:

  1. Confirm the provider explicitly diagnosed cholecystitis. Do not code from imaging alone — the physician must state the diagnosis.
  2. Check for documented cholelithiasis. If gallstones are present alongside cholecystitis, the correct code family is K80, not K81.
  3. Identify the acuity. Look for “acute,” “chronic,” or “acalculous” language in the attending note, discharge summary, or operative report.
  4. Check for complications. If gangrene of the gallbladder (K82.A1) or perforation (K82.A2) is documented, assign those codes additionally — they are required “use additional code” entries under K81.
  5. Verify the Excludes1 rule. K81 and K80.x codes cannot appear together for the same episode of cholecystitis.

How Does K81 Differ From K80 (Cholelithiasis With Cholecystitis)?

This is the most consequential distinction in gallbladder coding. In clinical practice, approximately 90% of acute cholecystitis cases involve gallstones — meaning most cases that initially appear to be K81 territory actually belong in K80. Always check imaging reports and the clinical impression before defaulting to K81.

FactorK81 (Cholecystitis Without Stones)K80 (Cholelithiasis With Cholecystitis)
Gallstones presentNoYes
Code familyK81.0–K81.9K80.00–K80.67
Obstruction detail neededNoYes (with/without obstruction subcode required)
Typical settingICU, post-surgical, critically ill patientsEmergency, general surgery, outpatient
Can appear together on claimNever (Excludes1)N/A

What Documentation Is Required to Support K81?

Inadequate documentation is the primary driver of K81 claim denials and audit findings. The record must substantiate both the diagnosis and the acuity level.

What Must the Provider Document in the Clinical Notes?

  1. Explicit diagnosis of cholecystitis — “cholecystitis,” “acalculous cholecystitis,” or a clinical equivalent stated by the provider
  2. Acuity designation — “acute,” “chronic,” or “acute on chronic” (absence of acuity supports K81.9 but is a documentation gap)
  3. Absence or non-mention of gallstones (or explicit statement “no cholelithiasis”) if K81 is to be used
  4. Any associated complications — gangrene, perforation, empyema, abscess — documented as present and confirmed
  5. Clinical basis for the diagnosis — symptoms, physical findings, or imaging correlation

Which Diagnostic Results Support K81?

  • Ultrasound or CT findings: gallbladder wall thickening (>3–4 mm), pericholecystic fluid, sonographic Murphy’s sign, absent calculi
  • Hepatobiliary iminodiacetic acid (HIDA) scan: low ejection fraction or non-visualization of gallbladder supporting acalculous disease
  • Laboratory values: leukocytosis, elevated CRP, elevated liver enzymes (ALT, AST, alkaline phosphatase, bilirubin)
  • Pathology report (post-cholecystectomy): histologic confirmation of acute or chronic inflammatory changes without stone evidence

What Is the Documentation Standard for Inpatient vs. Outpatient Settings?

SettingDocumentation RequirementCoding Principle
InpatientFinal diagnosis from attending at discharge governs code assignment; query provider if acuity unclearCode the confirmed condition per discharge summary
Outpatient/EDCode the highest-certainty diagnosis supported at time of encounter; uncertain conditions coded as signs/symptomsDo not code “probable” or “suspected” cholecystitis outpatient

How Does K81 Affect Medical Billing and Claims?

K81.x codes are typically associated with high-acuity inpatient encounters, particularly in surgical and critical care settings. Payer scrutiny is elevated because acalculous cholecystitis in critically ill patients often co-exists with sepsis — a combination that triggers DRG weight review.

Key billing considerations:

  • K81.0 maps to MS-DRG 418/419/420 (cholecystectomy with/without MCC/CC), depending on procedures performed and complication severity
  • Medical necessity for inpatient admission should be documented — acute cholecystitis generally supports inpatient level of care
  • Claims submitted with K81.9 as principal diagnosis are more likely to generate payer requests for additional documentation
  • When sepsis is the principal diagnosis and K81.0 is a secondary, sequence sepsis first per ICD-10-CM Official Coding Guidelines Section I.C.1.d (CMS ICD-10-CM Official Guidelines)

What CPT Codes Are Commonly Billed With K81?

CPT CodeDescriptionTypical Pairing Context
47600CholecystectomyOpen surgical removal for acute cholecystitis
47562Laparoscopic cholecystectomyMost common surgical intervention
47563Laparoscopic cholecystectomy with cholangiographyWhen intraoperative imaging performed
74177CT abdomen/pelvis with contrastDiagnostic imaging to confirm diagnosis
76700Abdominal ultrasoundInitial imaging workup
43260ERCPIf biliary obstruction or choledocholithiasis explored

Are There Coverage Restrictions or Prior Authorization Requirements?

  • Acute K81.0 generally does not require prior authorization for emergency surgical intervention
  • Elective cholecystectomy for chronic cholecystitis (K81.1) may require prior authorization — verify by payer and plan
  • Medicare Advantage plans vary significantly; always verify before elective procedures
  • HIDA scan (CPT 78226/78227) may require prior authorization with some commercial payers even when K81 is the working diagnosis

What Coding Errors Should You Avoid With K81?

  1. Using K81.x when gallstones are documented. This is the highest-frequency error — always check imaging. If stones are present, K80.x applies.
  2. Defaulting to K81.9 without a provider query. Unspecified codes are audit targets. Attempt to obtain acuity clarification before accepting K81.9.
  3. Coding K81.0 from imaging alone without a provider diagnosis statement. Coding guidelines require a physician diagnosis, not coder interpretation of radiological findings.
  4. Missing required additional codes for gangrene (K82.A1) or perforation (K82.A2) when documented.
  5. Sequencing K81.0 as principal when sepsis is present. Per official guidelines, sepsis sequences first with cholecystitis as a secondary diagnosis.
  6. Using K81 (parent code) instead of a subcode on a claim — K81 is a non-billable header and will reject at the payer level.

What Do Auditors Look for When Reviewing K81 Claims?

  • Claims with K81.x and an ultrasound or CT report showing cholelithiasis — an automatic flag for upcoding review
  • K81.9 billed repeatedly for the same patient — suggests documentation improvement opportunity or pattern of nonspecific coding
  • Absence of gangrene/perforation codes on records that describe these findings in operative or pathology notes
  • K81.0 as principal diagnosis on claims where the discharge summary lists sepsis or another condition as the primary reason for admission

How Does K81 Relate to Other ICD-10 Codes?

CodeRelationship to K81Key Distinction
K80.-Excludes1 (never with K81 for same episode)Use K80 when gallstones confirmed with cholecystitis
K82.A1Use additional codeGangrene of gallbladder complicating cholecystitis
K82.A2Use additional codePerforation of gallbladder complicating cholecystitis
K83.0Related biliary disorderCholangitis — inflammation of bile ducts, distinct from gallbladder
A41.-May sequence before K81.0Sepsis codes sequence first when sepsis is principal diagnosis
K82.1Distinct gallbladder conditionHydrops of gallbladder — not interchangeable with cholecystitis

What Is the Correct Code Sequencing When K81 Appears With Other Diagnoses?

  1. Sepsis + acute cholecystitis: Sequence the sepsis code (A41.x or A40.x) first; K81.0 as secondary causal/related condition
  2. Acute cholecystitis + gangrene: K81.0 sequenced first; K82.A1 as required additional code
  3. Acute cholecystitis + perforation: K81.0 sequenced first; K82.A2 as required additional code
  4. Acute on chronic cholecystitis (without stones): Assign K81.2 as a single combination code — do not separately code K81.0 and K81.1

Real-World Coding Scenario — How K81 Is Applied in Practice

Patient Encounter: A 68-year-old male is admitted to the ICU following abdominal surgery three days prior. The attending documents “acute acalculous cholecystitis” in the daily note and discharge summary. Abdominal ultrasound confirms gallbladder wall thickening and pericholecystic fluid with no evidence of gallstones. The operative note from a subsequent laparoscopic cholecystectomy notes no gallstones and early gangrenous changes. The patient was treated for gram-negative bacteremia during the same admission.

Correct Code Application

  • A41.51 (Sepsis due to Escherichia coli) — principal diagnosis per guidelines
  • K81.0 (Acute cholecystitis) — secondary diagnosis, confirmed acalculous
  • K82.A1 (Gangrene of gallbladder) — required additional code per tabular instruction
  • CPT 47562 (Laparoscopic cholecystectomy) — surgical procedure

Common Mistake in This Scenario

  • Incorrect: Assigning K81.0 as principal diagnosis and omitting K82.A1
    • Why it fails: Sepsis sequences first per ICD-10-CM guidelines; omitting gangrene code misrepresents severity and may trigger a query during audit
  • Incorrect: Assigning K80.00 because cholecystitis is present
    • Why it fails: Gallstones were explicitly ruled out; K80 requires documented cholelithiasis

Frequently Asked Questions About ICD-10 Code K81

Is ICD-10 Code K81 Valid for Use in 2026?

K81 is valid in ICD-10-CM 2026 as a category header but is not itself a billable code. Claims must use one of the valid subcodes (K81.0, K81.1, K81.2, or K81.9). Coders should verify subcode validity annually using the CMS ICD-10-CM tabular list effective October 1 each fiscal year.

What Is the Difference Between K81.0 and K81.9?

K81.0 designates acute cholecystitis, requiring provider documentation of an acute presentation. K81.9 is used when the provider confirms cholecystitis but does not specify whether the condition is acute or chronic — it should be used sparingly and treated as a documentation improvement opportunity rather than a standard assignment.

Can K81 and K80 Be Used Together on the Same Claim?

No. K81 and K80.x codes share an Excludes1 relationship, meaning they cannot appear on the same claim for the same episode of care. If cholecystitis is present with gallstones, the correct approach is always a K80 combination code — the K81 family is excluded by definition.

Does K81.0 Always Require Surgical Intervention to Be Valid?

K81.0 does not require surgery to be a valid diagnosis code. Medical management of acute cholecystitis — antibiotics, bowel rest, supportive care — is an accepted treatment pathway, particularly for high-risk surgical candidates. The code reflects the diagnosis, not the treatment approach.

When Should I Query the Provider for K81 Coding Purposes?

Query the provider when: (1) the record mentions cholecystitis without specifying acute or chronic, (2) imaging findings suggest gallstones that are not addressed in the provider’s diagnosis, or (3) gangrene or perforation is described in operative or pathology notes but not captured in the attending’s final diagnosis. Per AHA Coding Clinic guidance, coders should not assume clinical severity without explicit documentation.

What Happens If I Bill K81 (the Parent Code) Instead of a Subcode?

Submitting K81 without a subcode will result in a claim rejection at most payers because K81 is flagged as a non-billable header code in claim-editing software. The encounter will require resubmission with the appropriate fourth-character subcode. In high-volume billing environments, this error can create significant rework and payment delays.

Is Acalculous Cholecystitis Coded Differently Than Standard Cholecystitis Under K81?

“Acalculous cholecystitis” is an approximate synonym for K81 — it is not a separately coded subtype. The acalculous descriptor confirms the absence of gallstones (justifying K81 over K80) and may help clarify acuity, but the subcode selection still depends on whether the condition is documented as acute, chronic, or unspecified.


Key Takeaways

  • K81 is a non-billable parent code — always assign a subcode (K81.0, K81.1, K81.2, or K81.9) on claims
  • The K80 vs. K81 decision is the most critical step — K81 applies only when gallstones are absent; K80 applies when cholelithiasis is confirmed
  • Acuity must be provider-documented — never assume acute or chronic status from clinical context alone
  • When gangrene (K82.A1) or perforation (K82.A2) is documented, these codes are required additions, not optional
  • Sepsis sequences first when present alongside K81.0 — this is a frequent audit finding when cholecystitis is incorrectly listed as principal
  • K81.9 is appropriate for truly unspecified documentation but should trigger CDI query workflow whenever possible
  • Verify subcode validity and DRG mapping annually with the official ICD-10-CM Official Coding Guidelines from CMS

For deeper guidance on medical billing documentation requirements and coding audit preparation in gastrointestinal surgery, review the applicable sections of the ICD-10-CM Official Coding Guidelines and consult AHA Coding Clinic advisories for case-specific guidance.

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