DoulaPaid

Minnesota billing rules 2026.06.13-current

Minnesota Medicaid doula billing rules

Check Minnesota rates, codes, setup steps, visit-note basics, and denial risks before claim entry.

Set up provider details first.
Check rates, visit notes, and claim gaps.
Use denied-claim help when a payer sends a reason code.

Minnesota Medicaid doula billing rules

Minnesota uses per-visit service lines such as Prenatal, postpartum, or non-labor doula session at $100, with modifiers, caps, and documentation checks to confirm before claim entry.

Recently updated

Updated Jun 13, 2026Official fee schedule

Rates are backed by official published fee-schedule or rate evidence in the source packet.

  • Checked Minnesota Department of Human Services: Minnesota Health Care Programs Provider Manual.
  • Checked Minnesota Office of the Revisor of Statutes: Minnesota Statutes 256B.758 Payment for Doula Services.

Paid by visit

Prenatal, postpartum, or non-labor doula session: $100

Labor and delivery doula session: $1,400 with modifier U4

Prior authorization is needed after 18 sessions.

What to check before billing

  • Document the member's name, visit date, length of time, what was done, discussed, and recommended, important concerns or follow-up advice, and the doula signature.
  • Use T1033 without a modifier for non-labor and non-delivery sessions.
  • Use T1033 with U4 for labor and delivery sessions, including emergency Cesarean delivery when the doula attended the labor.
  • Request prior authorization before providing more than 18 sessions.
  • For telehealth labor and delivery billing, keep the signed DHS telehealth assurance statement and document that the doula was available throughout labor.

This page is built from checked state billing sources.

Use nicknames on public pages.

Keep client names, IDs, claim numbers, and visit notes in your own records.

Provider setup

These state tools are available for planning. Confirm payer requirements before billing.

Launch status

active

Active: guide and tools are ready for general planning.

Billing portal

MN-ITS

  • Confirm MN-ITS access and provider enrollment before first-claim work.
  • Keep MHCP provider ID in your own secure records.
  • Keep Medical Assistance member ID, names, dates of birth, and visit notes out of public pages.

Payout estimator

Model common claim totals from verified published rates. Keep client-specific details in your own secure records.

Planning estimator

Estimate a claim total

Use published rates to model Minnesota services before claim entry. Do not enter client names, IDs, dates of birth, or visit notes here.

Estimated total

$1,500.00

Final payment still depends on eligibility, payer edits, documentation, and claim review.

Common questions

Plain answers about Minnesota Medicaid doula billing.

Does Minnesota Medicaid cover doula services?

Yes. Minnesota Medical Assistance doula services covers doula services. Coverage still depends on active eligibility, the service date, provider setup, and visit notes.

How much does Minnesota Medicaid pay doulas?

Minnesota pays per visit — Prenatal, postpartum, or non-labor doula session: $100; Labor and delivery doula session: $1,400. Use the Minnesota rate reference to check current amounts against official sources.

What should my Minnesota visit note include?

Minnesota lists 5 visit-note checks to review before claim entry, starting with: Document the member's name, visit date, length of time, what was done, discussed, and recommended, important concerns or follow-up advice, and the doula signature.. See the Minnesota visit-note checklist for the full list.

Why do Minnesota doula Medicaid claims get denied?

Common reasons include missing medical assistance member id; more than 18 sessions need prior authorization; wrong t1033 modifier. The Minnesota denied-claim guide lists the next step for each.

Rule change alerts

Get a no-PHI email when Minnesota doula billing rules change or new verified sources are added.

Do not include client details. This signup stores only the state and email address.

Official sources

Check these official sources before billing.

Need a PDF copy?

PDF export is in the paid tools, where saved state guides and checklist downloads stay with your account.