Veterans Desk · Florida 501(c)(3) Nonprofit · Independent & Veteran-Built

DCSP Hub · Subspecialty 0
5

Medical Coding & Documentation Integrity

Translating clinical care into compliant claims · 10 roles

NAMSS

CPCS · CPMSM

NCQA

Credentialing Standards

URAC

Provider Credentialing

CAQH

ProView Platform

State Boards

Medical Board Credentialing

Inpatient Coder

An Inpatient Coder assigns ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes and ICD-10-PCS procedure codes for hospital inpatient stays — the most complex coding work in healthcare. The role requires deep clinical knowledge, mastery of two distinct code sets (ICD-10-CM for diagnoses, ICD-10-PCS for procedures), and the ability to translate complex hospital documentation into the codes that determine DRG payment, quality metrics, and federal payer reporting. Inpatient coding is the highest-compensated coding specialty for good reason.

HOW THIS WORK HAPPENS

Inpatient coder work happens in three places: as a hospital or health-system employee, as a contractor working through a practice management or services company, or as an independent business owner. This page covers all three so you can choose the path that fits your life.

Veterans Desk supports the third path. We are a Florida 501(c)(3) membership platform full of opportunities — not an employer, not a placement agency. We list independent professionals so the practices that need them can find them. Your business. Your contracts. Your rates. Your decisions.

MEMBER ACKNOWLEDGMENT

Membership in Veterans Desk's Independent Members Directory is built on these understandings about your business.

Fifteen points. Read carefully. This is the agreement.
01
You set your own rates. Veterans Desk does not suggest, publish, recommend, or facilitate the sharing of rate information between members.
02
You bill your own clients and collect your own payment. Veterans Desk does not invoice, collect, hold, distribute, or process payment between you and your clients.
03
You hold and maintain current professional liability and errors-and-omissions insurance appropriate to your specialty. Veterans Desk does not insure you, indemnify you, or provide coverage of any kind.
04
You handle your own taxes as an independent business. Veterans Desk does not withhold, report, file, or remit taxes for you. You are responsible for federal, state, and local tax obligations including estimated quarterly payments.
05
You sign your own contracts directly with your clients. Veterans Desk is never a party to, signatory of, or guarantor of your client agreements, and Veterans Desk does not negotiate, review, or approve your contract terms.
06
When your work touches Protected Health Information (PHI), you execute a Business Associate Agreement (BAA) directly with each client before beginning work. Veterans Desk is never a party to your BAAs, and Veterans Desk’s website never touches, stores, or transmits PHI.
07
You hold and maintain all federal, state, and local business licenses, registrations, and certifications your business and work require. Veterans Desk does not verify licenses on your behalf or vouch for your licensure status.
08
You complete the continuing education your credential requires and maintain current documentation. Veterans Desk does not track CE on your behalf, report CE to credentialing bodies, or guarantee that your CE meets any specific requirement.
09
You carry full professional responsibility for the quality, accuracy, and timeliness of your work product. Errors, omissions, missed deadlines, and quality disputes are between you and your client. Veterans Desk does not mediate, intervene, indemnify, or carry any liability for your work.
10
You market your own business and represent yourself accurately to clients. You do not represent yourself as employed by, certified by, endorsed by, or operating under the authority of Veterans Desk. You may accurately state that you are a listed member of Veterans Desk’s Independent Members Directory.
11
Your professional relationships are with your DCP clients. You do not have a direct service relationship with veterans through Veterans Desk, and Veterans Desk does not refer veterans to you as patients or clients.
12
You maintain your own client records, working files, and business records on systems and tools you control. Veterans Desk does not host, back up, store, or have access to your client files or business data.
13
Your membership in the Independent Members Directory is conditional on maintaining current credentials, insurance, licenses, and good standing. Veterans Desk may suspend or terminate your directory listing if these standards lapse.
14
Your membership fee pays for your listing and the educational resources Veterans Desk provides. It does not buy referrals, leads, work, or placement, and is not refundable based on the work you do or do not receive.
15
You are a member of an independent professional directory. You are not an employee, contractor, agent, partner, joint venturer, or representative of Veterans Desk. Veterans Desk does not direct, supervise, control, schedule, or assign your work.
What This Really Means

Here's what running your own business actually means, in plain words.

The same fifteen points — explained the way a friend would explain them.

01

You decide what to charge.

You research what other professionals in your specialty charge. You look at job boards. You ask peers. You decide what your work is worth, and you tell your clients that number. Veterans Desk does not tell you what to charge. We do not share rate information. That keeps us out of antitrust trouble and keeps you free to price your work the way you choose.

02

You send the bill. You collect the money.

Every month, you send your client an invoice. The client pays you directly — usually by ACH bank transfer or check. Veterans Desk does not touch the money. We never see your invoices. We never collect for you. Money flows from client to you. Period.

03

You buy your own insurance.

Professional liability insurance protects you if a client says your work cost them money. Errors and omissions insurance protects you if you make a mistake in your work product. Every working DCSP needs both. You shop for it. You pay for it. You keep it current. Veterans Desk does not insure you, and the directory does not list you as covered by us.

04

You pay your own taxes — four times a year.

As an independent business, you pay estimated taxes every quarter — April, June, September, and January. You file a Schedule C with your tax return (or your LLC’s return if you set up an LLC). Veterans Desk does not withhold anything. We do not report your income to the IRS. You are responsible for tracking your income, your expenses, and your tax payments. A bookkeeper or CPA pays for itself.

05

You sign your own contracts.

Every client gives you a contract — sometimes called a Master Service Agreement or a Statement of Work. You read it. You sign it. If something looks off, you take it to your own attorney. Veterans Desk does not read your contracts, does not negotiate them, does not approve them, and is not a party to them.

06

You sign a BAA with every client before you start.

When your work touches information about real patients — their names, dates of birth, diagnoses — that information is called PHI. The law says you have to protect it. Before any client lets you near their patient information, you sign a paper called a Business Associate Agreement, or BAA. Every client. Every time. Veterans Desk’s website never touches PHI — we educate you about it, that’s it.

07

You hold your own business licenses.

Some states require a business license to operate. Some cities require a local one. You research what your state and city require, and you hold whatever licenses apply. You keep them current. Veterans Desk does not verify your licenses for you — the verification badge on your directory profile reflects what you upload, not what we check with the state.

08

You keep your credentials and CE current.

Your professional credential needs continuing education hours to stay active. You complete the CE. You track the hours. You report them to your credentialing body. Veterans Desk does not report for you. We do not guarantee your CE is enough — that’s between you and your credentialing body.

09

You own the quality of your work.

If you make a mistake in your work, the client may lose money. They may ask you to fix it. They may charge you for the loss. They may not hire you again. Your insurance and your reputation handle this — not Veterans Desk. We are not in the middle of your work disputes. Build clean files. Communicate well. Hit your deadlines.

10

You market yourself accurately.

You can tell clients: “I am a listed member of Veterans Desk’s Independent Members Directory.” That is accurate. You cannot tell clients: “I work for Veterans Desk” or “Veterans Desk certified me.” That is not accurate. Stick to “listed member of the directory.”

11

Your clients are DCP practices. Veterans are not your clients.

You serve the doctor’s practice or the clinic — the DCP. The veteran is the DCP’s patient, not yours. Veterans Desk does not refer veterans to you. The chain goes: Veterans Desk lists DCPs. DCPs hire DCSPs. DCSPs serve DCPs. You are two steps removed from the patient, which is exactly where you should be.

12

You keep your own records.

Your client files, your invoices, your work product, your tax records — all of it lives on systems you control. Veterans Desk does not host your work. We do not back up your data. If your laptop dies, that is on you to recover from. Use cloud backup. Treat your business like a real business.

13

Your directory listing is conditional, not permanent.

If your credential lapses, your listing pauses. If your insurance expires, your listing pauses. Membership is a standing — you maintain it by keeping everything current. We send you reminders before things lapse. The directory only works if every member listed is actually current.

14

Your membership fee pays for listing — not for leads.

Veterans Desk does not promise you work. The fee you pay covers your spot in the directory and the educational resources we publish. Whether you win the work after that depends on you — your profile, your responsiveness, your rates, your references. Membership is an opportunity, not a guarantee.

15

You are a member. We are a platform. That is the whole relationship.

Veterans Desk does not employ you. We do not contract with you. We do not represent you. We list you. You operate your business. The line between us is clean and clear — and the clean line is what protects both of us.

What this role involves

Inpatient Coders review the complete inpatient medical record — admission history, daily progress notes, consultation reports, operative reports, discharge summary. They identify the principal diagnosis, secondary diagnoses, and procedures performed. They assign ICD-10-CM codes for diagnoses and ICD-10-PCS codes for procedures. They sequence codes per Official Guidelines for Coding and Reporting.

DRG assignment follows coding. The Inpatient Prospective Payment System (IPPS) uses Medicare Severity Diagnosis Related Groups (MS-DRGs) to determine inpatient reimbursement. Coding accuracy directly determines DRG assignment. The same hospital stay coded differently produces meaningfully different payments. Compliant optimization — selecting valid codes that accurately reflect the documented care and produce appropriate DRG assignment — is the senior skill.

The work intersects with CDI (Clinical Documentation Integrity) extensively. Inpatient Coders identify documentation gaps that affect coding accuracy and DRG assignment. They coordinate with CDI Specialists who query providers for documentation clarifications. They support audit response when payer or regulatory audits review inpatient coding.

THE HONEST DESCRIPTION

The Inpatient Coder role rewards deep clinical knowledge, code set mastery, and the patience for complex coding work. Members who do well in this work enjoy translating dense clinical documentation into accurate codes, take pride in clean DRG assignments, and find satisfaction in being the role hospital revenue cycle depends on for billing the most expensive cases.

The core activities

1

Review complete inpatient medical records

Read admission documentation, daily notes, consultations, operative reports, and discharge summaries. Extract all clinically supported diagnoses and procedures.

2

Assign ICD-10-CM and ICD-10-PCS codes

Apply two distinct code sets — diagnoses use ICD-10-CM, procedures use ICD-10-PCS. Sequence codes per Official Coding Guidelines.

3

Verify DRG assignment

Confirm DRG assignment reflects documented care accurately. Identify cases where additional documentation or query opportunities could affect DRG.

4

Coordinate with CDI on documentation queries

Identify documentation gaps. Coordinate with CDI Specialists on provider queries to clarify documentation.

5

Support inpatient audit response

When payer or regulatory audits review inpatient coding, provide coding rationale and documentation support.

Where this role appears in the field

In a hospital coding department

Hospital Inpatient Coders work within HIM or coding departments. Strong career progression toward senior coder, coding auditor, and CDI roles.

In a coding services or HIM services company

Companies specializing in inpatient coding services. Strong remote-work potential. Inpatient coding is one of the most established remote-coding specialties.

As an independent contractor

Inpatient coding contracts directly with hospitals or through coding services companies. Most independent inpatient coders work remote with multiple hospital clients on coding service agreements.

FEDERAL PAYER WORKFLOW
VA CCN, TRICARE & CHAMPVA authorization workflow

VA hospital coding follows standard ICD-10-CM/PCS coding with VA-specific documentation patterns. Coders supporting VA hospital coding need to understand federal payer coding requirements.

VA Community Care Network inpatient stays generate community hospital coding under VA CCN reimbursement methodologies. Coders working with VA CCN inpatient cases need to understand federal payer inpatient coding considerations.

Your roadmap to becoming an independent Inpatient Coder

This is the step-by-step path. Follow each step in order.

Step 01
Earn AHIMA CCS credential

Certified Coding Specialist is the recognized inpatient coding credential. Inpatient coding employers almost universally require CCS.

 

Step 02
Build coding experience

Most inpatient coders work 2 to 4 years in hospital or coding services settings developing inpatient coding depth before independent work.

Step 03
Set up your business

Register an LLC. Get an EIN. Open a separate business bank account.

Step 04
Get professional liability insurance

Errors and omissions coverage. Inpatient coding errors can affect significant reimbursement.

Step 05
Sign HIPAA Business Associate Agreements

Every client signs a BAA. Inpatient coding involves extensive PHI access.

Step 06
Find your first client

Hospitals with inpatient coding backlogs or specific coding specialty needs are natural first clients. Coding services companies provide entry points.

Step 07
List in the Veterans Desk Independent Members Directory

Position yourself around inpatient coding specifically — depth in the highest-paying coding specialty creates premium positioning.

Step 08
Build your book of business

Independent inpatient coders often work full-time with 1 hospital or part-time with 2 hospital clients on coding service agreements.

Education & experience pathways

Members exploring this role typically come into the work through one of these learning paths:

AHIMA-accredited coding education
AHIMA-accredited associate or bachelor’s degree programs in HIM build the strongest foundation for inpatient coding.
Coding-specific credential pathways
AAPC and AHIMA coding programs combined with on-the-job experience develop inpatient coding expertise.
Military MOS adjacent paths
Military medical administration with coding exposure translates well — 68G (Patient Administration with coding experience), HM (Hospital Corpsman with administrative experience), 4A0X1 (Air Force Health Services Management).
THE SKILL THAT DISTINGUISHES STRONG PROFESSIONALS

Inpatient Coders who grow fastest are the ones who develop specialty depth in specific service lines — cardiology, orthopedics, oncology, behavioral health, obstetrics. Service-line specialty expertise in inpatient coding creates premium positioning and supports senior coder, coding auditor, and CDI career paths.

The realities of the work

The Inpatient Coder role is focused detailed work with sustained concentration requirements. Inpatient coding cases can take significant time per case due to documentation complexity.

It is one of the most established remote-work specialties in healthcare. Inpatient coding happens through hospital EHR systems and coding software accessible from secure workstations. Compensation is at the senior coding specialty level because inpatient expertise commands premium rates.

Income — research the range

Veterans Desk does not publish specific income figures because numbers vary based on credential, geographic market, employment type, specialty focus, and experience. Here are the authoritative sources to research current income data:

BLS — Medical Records Specialists

BLS occupational data covering coding work.

bls.gov/ooh/healthcare/medical-records-and-health-information-technicians.htm
AHIMA Salary Snapshot

AHIMA publishes detailed compensation data for CCS credential holders by setting and geography.

ahima.org
AAPC Salary Survey

AAPC publishes annual coding compensation data including inpatient coding breakouts.

aapc.com

How to know if this role fits you

The Inpatient Coder role is a good fit for members who like deep analytical work with complex code sets and clinical documentation. Members who can sit with inpatient records carefully and master ICD-10-CM and ICD-10-PCS coding systems. Members who enjoy specialty depth. For the right person, especially with CCS credential and 2-4 years of inpatient experience, it is one of the highest-compensated remote-work paths in healthcare administration.

About this content. Veterans Desk is a Florida 501(c)(3) nonprofit membership platform. This page is educational and does not constitute medical, legal, financial, or placement advice. Medical coding requirements, code set updates (ICD-10, CPT, HCPCS), and audit standards vary by payer, setting, and code year. Veterans Desk does not employ, place, refer, or supervise coding professionals. All members listed in the Independent Members Directory operate their own independent businesses, set their own rates, sign their own contracts, and carry their own insurance.