T31.84
BillableBurns involving 80-89% of body surface with 40-49% third degree burns
Last updated: FY2026 ICD-10-CM (Oct 1, 2025 – Sep 30, 2026) | CMS-HCC V28 (100% phase-in, PY2026)
Is T31.84 an HCC code?
Yes. T31.84 maps to Severe Skin Burn or Condition under the CMS-HCC V28 risk adjustment model (and Severe Skin Burn or Condition under V24).
HCC Category Mapping
RAF weights shown are the community, non-dual, aged base weights from the CMS risk adjustment model file. Actual per-patient RAF contribution depends on member segment, interactions, and the model year used by the payer. V28 is the CMS-HCC model phased in over payment years 2024–2026; V24 remains in use during the transition and for historical data.
MEAT Criteria for T31.84
For T31.84to count as a valid HCC diagnosis in a given encounter, the provider's documentation must show MEAT: Monitor, Evaluate, Assess, or Treat. A diagnosis from a prior year does not carry forward automatically — it has to be re-documented and supported each calendar year.
- MMonitor: signs, symptoms, disease progression, or lab trending documented in the note
- EEvaluate: test results, medication response, or physical findings reviewed by the provider
- AAssess: explicit mention in the assessment or plan with acknowledgment of status
- TTreat: medication, referral, procedure, therapy, or counseling tied to the diagnosis
Only one of M/E/A/T is required to support the code, but the documentation must be specific enough to show that the provider actually addressed T31.84 during that encounter — not just copy-forwarded from a problem list.
What This Code Means
T31.84 is the ICD-10-CM diagnosis code for burns involving 80-89% of body surface with 40-49% third degree burns. Severe burns covering 80-89% of the body with 40-49% deep tissue damage (third degree burns). This critical injury involves nearly half of the affected area as full-thickness burns. T31.84 sits in the ICD-10-CM chapter for injury, poisoning and certain other consequences of external causes (s00-t88), within the section covering burns and corrosions of multiple and unspecified body regions (t30-t32).
Under the CMS-HCC V28 risk adjustment model, T31.84 maps to Severe Skin Burn or Condition (HCC 385) with a community, non-dual, aged base RAF weight of 0.350. Under the older V24 model, T31.84 mapped to the same category but with a base RAF weight of 0.517 — V28 recalibrated weights across the entire model. V28 is the CMS-HCC risk adjustment model that reached 100% phase-in for payment year 2026, replacing V24 which was used during the PY2024–PY2025 transition.
Ensure the third degree burn percentage documented falls within 40-49% range for accurate code assignment. Because T31.84 maps to a payment HCC, the provider's documentation must satisfy MEAT criteria (Monitor, Evaluate, Assess, or Treat) for the encounter to count toward the patient's Medicare Advantage risk adjustment score. When documentation is ambiguous, coders should issue a provider query rather than assume the highest-specificity variant.
HCC Buddy maintains structured V28 and V24 mapping, RAF weights, and MEAT documentation criteria for T31.84 sourced directly from the CMS-HCC risk adjustment model files and the CMS ICD-10-CM code set.
Coding Tips
- •Ensure the third degree burn percentage documented falls within 40-49% range for accurate code assignment.
- •This severity level indicates substantial tissue loss and high risk of complications including infection and organ dysfunction.
Clinical Significance
This represents a life-threatening burn injury with near-total body surface involvement and nearly half being full-thickness burns. These patients require immediate burn center management with intensive multidisciplinary care and have maximum morbidity risk.
Documentation Requirements
- ✓Total body surface area (TBSA) calculated as 80-89%
- ✓Third-degree burns comprising 40-49% of body surface
- ✓Validated burn assessment chart documentation
- ✓Complete anatomical burn distribution
- ✓Burn etiology and mechanism specification
- ✓Comprehensive burn depth classification
- ✓Associated injuries and complications
- ✓Maximum treatment protocols and responses