How and When to Use M54.50: Best Practices for Low Back Pain ICD-10 Coding
Not all low back pain is the same. Learn how and when to use M54.50 in your clinical notes to reflect patient complexity and meet payer expectations.
August 5, 2025
9 min. read

Clear, detailed documentation is essential in outpatient rehab settings, where coding accuracy directly influences both patient outcomes and reimbursement. When assigning a low back pain ICD‑10 code, clinicians must ensure the diagnosis is specific and medically justified to support both care planning and payer compliance.
This becomes especially critical when using M54.50, the code for “low back pain, unspecified.” While appropriate in early-stage or nonspecific presentations, M54.50 requires documentation that clearly explains clinical reasoning and justifies the absence of a more defined diagnosis.
In this article, we’ll break down how and when to use M54.50, outline best practices for documentation, and highlight common pitfalls so your notes remain compliant, defensible, and aligned with evolving payer expectations.
Understanding low back pain ICD‑10 codes
When coding low back pain, specificity is everything. The ICD‑10 system offers a range of diagnosis codes that describe not just the presence of pain, but its cause, presentation, and anatomical origin, enabling more precise documentation and treatment planning.
Here are some of the most commonly used low back pain ICD‑10 codes in outpatient rehab:
M54.50: Low back pain, unspecified
M54.4x: Lumbago with sciatica (side-specific: right, left, unspecified)
M51.36x–M51.379: Lumbar/lumbosacral disc degeneration (with or without lower extremity pain)
S39.012: Low back strain
M62.85: Dysfunction of the multifidus muscle, lumbar region
Each of these codes supports a different type of clinical picture, from mechanical strain to disc pathology to neuromuscular dysfunction. The key is to align your diagnosis with evaluation findings rather than defaulting to a general code.
For a quick-reference summary of these and other frequently used rehab codes, you can download our free ICD-10 Codes List PDF below. This free resource is designed to help you stay compliant and efficient, with code groupings by region, documentation reminders, and key Excludes1 warnings.
ICD-10 Codes List PDF
Fill out a few quick details to access your free ICD-10 Codes List.
Now that we've covered the broader coding picture, what happens when your evaluation doesn’t point to a clear structural diagnosis or when the pain presentation is still evolving? Let’s take a closer look at how, when, and why to use M54.50 (low back pain, unspecified) and the documentation strategies that ensure it's used appropriately.
What is diagnosis code M54.50?
M54.50, or “low back pain, unspecified,” is an ICD-10 diagnosis code used when a patient presents with lower back pain that does not yet have a clearly defined cause. Typically used during initial assessments when symptoms are vague or evolving and no imaging or clear findings are yet available.
This code became effective after M54.5 was retired in 2022, following CMS’s push for greater diagnostic specificity.1 While M54.5 had long been a common go-to for rehab therapists, the new trio (M54.50, M54.51, and M54.59) was introduced to better reflect the clinical nuances of low back pain presentations and improve documentation accuracy.
When is M54.50 the right code to use?
M54.50 should be used only when your clinical evaluation doesn’t support a more specific diagnosis. It’s appropriate early in the episode of care, when symptoms are nonspecific and the condition is still evolving.
Use M54.50 when:
The patient reports generalized lumbar pain without red flags, neurological signs, or structural findings.
The clinical picture lacks clarity, and additional observation or testing is needed.
You’ve ruled out strain, disc involvement, vertebrogenic pain, or radiculopathy, at least at this point in care.
In these situations, M54.50 may serve as a temporary diagnosis; however, its use demands clear clinical reasoning that justifies why more specific codes weren’t assigned. A well-documented note should explain what was observed, what was ruled out, and why the diagnosis remains broad—for now.
When M54.50 is not the right choice
Avoid using M54.50 when your evaluation provides enough clinical detail to support a more specific diagnosis. Using this code inappropriately can misrepresent the patient’s condition and may raise compliance concerns.
Do not use M54.50 if:
Your assessment reveals tenderness in the paraspinals after heavy lifting. In this case, S39.012 (low back strain) would be more appropriate.
The patient presents with leg pain, numbness, or tingling suggestive of nerve involvement. M54.4x (lumbago with sciatica) better reflects this presentation.
Imaging shows vertebral endplate changes with symptoms of deep, midline axial pain. M54.51 (vertebrogenic low back pain) is the more accurate code.
These diagnoses provide greater specificity and are better aligned with payer documentation standards. Defaulting to M54.50 when more accurate options are available can lead to claim denials or audit issues.
Why nonspecific codes raise red flags
Payers and auditors often review claims with unspecified codes more closely. M54.50, in particular, may signal that the diagnosis lacks clinical clarity, which can trigger requests for additional documentation or result in reimbursement delays. Audits are more likely when codes are vague, repeated across multiple visits, or unsupported by thorough evaluation notes. CMS and professional associations emphasize that diagnostic specificity is key to compliant billing, helping to reduce claim denials and improve the accuracy of care data. That’s why it’s essential to document your clinical reasoning clearly when using M54.50, and to revise the diagnosis as the clinical picture evolves.
Coding compliance: Watch for Excludes1 edits
The M54.50 diagnosis code cannot be used in conjunction with certain other ICD-10 codes due to Excludes1 notes. These include:
S39.012: Low back strain
M51.2-: Lumbago due to intervertebral disc displacement
M54.4-: Lumbago with sciatica
F45.41: Psychogenic dorsalgia
Make sure your coding aligns with your clinical documentation. If your findings support one of these more specific conditions, M54.50 should not be used.
Coding best practices for M54.50
Because M54.50 is an unspecified code, it’s more likely to be flagged by payers, particularly if used frequently or without robust documentation. This can result in claim denials, requests for additional records, or delays in reimbursement.
Here’s what to include in your evaluation and treatment notes to support the use of M54.50:
1. Describe the patient’s symptoms clearly
Start with a concise but detailed description of the patient’s complaint, including:
Location of pain (e.g., central lumbar, bilateral)
Onset (sudden vs. gradual)
Pain quality (e.g., dull, sharp, aching)
Duration and frequency
Aggravating and relieving factors
Make sure to note the absence of red flags or radicular symptoms if not present, which helps explain why more specific codes (like M54.4x or M51.2-) weren’t selected.
2. Document functional impact
Explain how the low back pain is affecting the patient’s mobility, ADLs, or ability to participate in meaningful tasks. This supports medical necessity for therapy and gives context for your treatment plan.
Functional limitations you document may also inform your selection of exercises for low back pain, which should be tailored to the specific pattern, acuity, and patient capacity noted during your assessment.
3. Include objective exam findings
Support your clinical impression with relevant examination results:
Range of motion limitations
Palpation findings (e.g., tenderness, muscle tone)
Strength deficits
Gait or postural abnormalities
Neurological screening (if performed)
Even when imaging is unavailable, these findings reinforce that you’ve completed a thorough evaluation and ruled out more specific diagnoses.
4. Justify the use of M54.50 directly
When M54.50 is the most accurate representation of your findings, include a clear rationale in your documentation. A brief statement such as “Findings support nonspecific low back pain; no current evidence of discogenic or radicular involvement” can effectively communicate your clinical reasoning.
This kind of clarity demonstrates to payers and auditors that your selection of M54.50 is based on thoughtful evaluation, not on habit or convenience. If you’ve ruled out other possibilities like strain, vertebrogenic pain, or sciatica, make that explicit. The goal is to align your chosen code with your assessment in a way that reinforces both accuracy and compliance.
5. Update the code as needed
The initial use of M54.50 doesn’t lock you into that diagnosis forever. As your patient's condition evolves or new data becomes available, your coding should evolve too. If imaging later reveals intervertebral disc degeneration and symptoms correlate, update to M51.36x–M51.379. If radicular symptoms emerge, revise to M54.4x to reflect lumbago with sciatica.
These timely updates keep your documentation aligned with payer expectations and help prevent reimbursement issues.
Related ICD codes for low back pain
In cases where M54.50 is not the best fit, these closely related codes offer greater diagnostic clarity:
M54.51 – Vertebrogenic low back pain: Use when symptoms indicate vertebral endplate changes (e.g., Modic changes), typically presenting as persistent, midline axial pain worsened by sitting or activity. Imaging often supports this diagnosis.
M54.59 – Other low back pain: Use when the presentation doesn’t align with vertebrogenic or unspecified pain. This code captures less common or more complex scenarios that still merit medical attention.
Build the bridge between evaluation and reimbursement
Using M54.50 correctly isn’t just about choosing a diagnosis code—it’s about telling the story of your clinical reasoning, rooted in a sound assessment and treatment of low back pain. This code plays a valid role in early or nonspecific presentations, but it must be backed by strong documentation that clearly outlines both what’s present and what’s been ruled out.
As your patient progresses, your coding should evolve too. Timely updates to reflect new findings demonstrate good care, reduce denials and delays, and ensure your documentation keeps pace with clinical reality.
References
American Physical Therapy Association. (2021, September 29). ICD-10 update includes new codes for low back pain. https://www.apta.org/news/2021/09/29/icd-10-update
Below, watch Jared Vagy discuss the movement system in this brief clip from his Medbridge course "The Movement System: Assessment and Treatment of Low Back Pain."
