Lab & pathology

82607 — Cyanocobalamin ; serum

A blood test that measures the level of vitamin B12 (cyanocobalamin) in the blood to check for deficiency.

  • Typical setting: Hospital lab, reference lab, doctor's office
  • National avg charge (illustrative): $10–$25 Medicare allowed (CMS CLFS); $15–$70 commercial; varies by region
  • Most-disputed reason: Confusing 82607 (lab test for B12 level) with J3420 (B12 injection supply code) or 96372 (injection administration) — these serve entirely different billing purposes

What it means

What 82607 actually means

A blood test that measures the level of vitamin B12 (cyanocobalamin) in the blood to check for deficiency. Low B12 levels can cause neurological problems, anemia, and fatigue, and are common in older adults, vegetarians, and those taking certain medications.

Common errors with this code

What goes wrong on real bills.

Most bills that look correct still contain at least one of these issues. Up to 49% of medical bills contain errors (CFPB).

If you see 82607 on your bill

Three steps before paying.

1. Get the itemized bill. If your statement only shows a summary, request the CPT-level itemized bill before paying. Generate the request language →

2. Cross-check against the EOB. Compare what your insurer's Explanation of Benefits says you owe versus what the hospital is asking. They disagree more often than people think. Read the bill-vs-EOB guide →

3. Run a free Bill Scan. Upload the bill (and EOB if you have it) and BillBusted will flag the most likely issues with this specific code in your specific state. Run free scan →

Related codes

Other codes in this category.

People who land on 82607 often also see these adjacent codes on the same bill.

Related BillBusted guides

Plain-English reads if you see 82607 on a bill.

82607 FAQ

Plain-English answers.

What does 82607 usually cost?

$10–$25 Medicare allowed (CMS CLFS); $15–$70 commercial; varies by region. Costs vary by region, payer contract, and whether the service was performed in a hospital outpatient department (which adds a facility fee) versus a free-standing clinic.

What's the most common billing error on 82607?

Confusing 82607 (lab test for B12 level) with J3420 (B12 injection supply code) or 96372 (injection administration) — these serve entirely different billing purposes

What should I do if I see 82607 on my bill?

Request the itemized bill and the matching EOB from your insurer. Compare the units/quantity billed against what you actually received. Run a free BillBusted scan to flag the most likely errors specific to 82607 before paying.

Don't pay 82607 blindly.

The free scan tells you in under 60 seconds whether this charge looks reasonable for your situation.