The depression code family at a glance

Depression coding in ICD-10-CM lives in the F30–F39 block (Mood disorders, Chapter 5: Mental, Behavioral and Neurodevelopmental Disorders). The two main families you'll use for major depressive disorder are:

F32
Depressive episode (single episode)
ICD-10-CM · Mental, Behavioral and Neurodevelopmental Disorders · FY2026
First or only episode
F33
Major depressive disorder, recurrent
ICD-10-CM · Mental, Behavioral and Neurodevelopmental Disorders · FY2026
Two or more documented episodes

Both families share the same severity structure (mild, moderate, severe, with or without psychotic features, partial/full remission). The only thing that changes between them is episode history — which is why that single piece of documentation drives the most frequent specificity error in depression coding.

⚠️ F38 does not exist in ICD-10-CM. Some older code-lookup resources still list F38 as "other mood disorders." It was eliminated in the U.S. clinical modification. Any claim submitted with F38 will reject as an invalid code. If you see F38 in a legacy system, it needs to be corrected before billing.

F32 vs F33 — the single vs recurrent decision

This is where most depression coding errors begin. The rule is straightforward:

  • F32 — this is the patient's first documented major depressive episode, or there is no documented history of prior episodes in the record
  • F33 — the patient has had at least one prior major depressive episode, and there was a period of recovery between episodes

One prior episode is enough to move the entire encounter to F33. The number of prior episodes does not matter beyond that — F33 covers two episodes, ten episodes, or twenty. What matters is whether prior episodes exist in the documentation.

The practical check: Before assigning F32.9, look at the problem list, prior encounter notes, and medication history. If the patient has been on antidepressants before, or if prior depression is mentioned anywhere in the chart, query the provider before defaulting to F32. A history of antidepressant use alone is not sufficient to code F33 — you need documented prior episodes — but it is a reason to look more carefully.

F32.9 vs F32.A — the most common billing error

These two codes look similar on a claim and represent genuinely different clinical pictures. Getting them wrong in either direction creates problems.

F32.9 (Major depressive disorder, single episode, unspecified) requires that the provider has explicitly established a diagnosis of major depressive disorder. The word "major" in the documentation — or a clear clinical picture meeting MDD criteria — is what supports this code.

F32.A (Depression, unspecified) is used when the provider documents "depression" or "depressive disorder" without the additional specificity needed to establish MDD. It was added to ICD-10-CM in FY2022 precisely to give coders a correct option when documentation is vague — rather than inflating every depression note to F32.9.

⚠️ Do not assign F32.9 when the chart only says "depression." If the provider wrote "patient reports depression" or "depressive disorder" without documenting major depressive disorder, the accurate code is F32.A — not F32.9. Assigning F32.9 in that scenario overstates the clinical picture and can trigger payer review. When in doubt about specificity, query the provider rather than assume.

Severity specifiers — F32.0 through F32.3

When the provider documents severity, use the appropriate specifier rather than the unspecified codes. The severity characters are the same for both F32 (single episode) and F33 (recurrent):

  • .0 — mild: provider documents mild severity
  • .1 — moderate: provider documents moderate severity
  • .2 — severe without psychotic features: severe depression, no delusions or hallucinations
  • .3 — severe with psychotic features: severe depression with documented delusions or hallucinations
  • .4 — in partial remission: still some symptoms, but below full episode threshold
  • .5 — in full remission: no significant symptoms currently
  • .9 — unspecified: severity not documented

The practical reality is that severity is frequently underdocumented. F32.9 and F33.9 (unspecified) are legitimate when severity genuinely isn't documented — but if the provider's note includes severity language, using the unspecified code is a missed specificity opportunity that payers increasingly flag.

When to query for severity: If the clinical record includes a PHQ-9 or similar validated instrument score, that score directly maps to severity levels (PHQ-9 5–9 = mild, 10–14 = moderate, 15–19 = moderately severe, 20–27 = severe). The instrument result alone doesn't support severity coding — the provider must document the severity — but a documented PHQ-9 score alongside an F32.9 code is a reasonable prompt to ask whether severity can be specified.

What coders searching "reactive depression" actually need

This is a term that causes real confusion, partly because it describes two different clinical situations that have different correct codes.

Situation 1 — Provider documents "reactive depression" (MDD context)

"Reactive depression" is listed as an inclusion term under F32.9 in the ICD-10-CM Tabular List. When a provider uses this term to describe what is clinically a major depressive episode triggered by life events, F32.9 (or F33.9 if recurrent) is the correct code. The code is the same as any other MDD presentation — ICD-10-CM doesn't distinguish between depression triggered by external events and depression without an identifiable trigger.

Situation 2 — Provider documents adjustment disorder with depressed mood

When the provider explicitly diagnoses adjustment disorder — a stress-linked reaction that does not meet full MDD criteria — the correct code is F43.21 (Adjustment disorder with depressed mood), not F32.9. These are clinically distinct diagnoses. The key difference is in the provider's documentation: if the provider says "adjustment disorder" or "reaction to stressor," that's F43.21. If the provider says "major depressive disorder" or "reactive depression" in the context of MDD, that's F32.9.

Never assign F43.21 based on your own judgment that the depression seems stress-related. The provider's documented diagnosis drives code selection.

Complete code reference table

Code Description Use when...
F32.0 MDD, single episode, mild First episode, provider documents mild severity
F32.1 MDD, single episode, moderate First episode, provider documents moderate severity
F32.2 MDD, single episode, severe without psychotic features First episode, severe, no psychosis documented
F32.3 MDD, single episode, severe with psychotic features First episode, severe with delusions or hallucinations
F32.4 MDD, single episode, in partial remission First episode, symptoms improving but not fully resolved
F32.5 MDD, single episode, in full remission First episode, no current significant symptoms
F32.89 Other specified depressive episodes Atypical depression, masked depression, post-schizophrenic depression
F32.9 MDD, single episode, unspecified First episode, MDD documented, severity not specified. Includes: reactive depression, psychogenic depression, vital depression
F32.A Depression, unspecified Provider documents "depression" without establishing MDD diagnosis
F33.0 MDD, recurrent, mild Prior episodes documented, current episode mild
F33.1 MDD, recurrent, moderate Prior episodes documented, current episode moderate
F33.2 MDD, recurrent, severe without psychotic features Prior episodes, current severe, no psychosis
F33.3 MDD, recurrent, severe with psychotic features Prior episodes, current severe with delusions/hallucinations
F33.9 MDD, recurrent, unspecified Prior episodes documented, current severity not specified
F34.1 Dysthymia (persistent depressive disorder) Provider documents chronic, persistent low-grade depression (not MDD)
F43.21 Adjustment disorder with depressed mood Provider documents adjustment disorder — stress-linked, not meeting full MDD criteria

Documentation requirements

The provider's documented diagnosis drives every coding decision in this family. Specific requirements:

  1. Explicit MDD diagnosis for F32.9/F33.9 — The provider must document major depressive disorder, not just "depression." A PHQ-9 score in the chart, or nursing notes about a patient's sad mood, are not sufficient to support F32.9. If the record doesn't explicitly establish MDD, F32.A is the accurate code.
  2. Episode history for F33 — The provider's documentation (or prior records in the chart) must establish that at least one prior major depressive episode occurred. If the patient reports a history of depression but the chart has no prior documentation, query the provider before coding F33.
  3. Severity language for .0/.1/.2/.3 codes — The provider must document the severity level, not just describe symptoms. "Patient has moderate depression" supports F32.1. A list of symptoms that sound moderate to you does not — that would be coding from assumption, not documentation.
  4. Psychotic features for .3 codes — Delusions or hallucinations must be explicitly documented by the provider. These are not symptoms coders infer from the clinical picture.

Common coding mistakes

Mistake 1 — Using F32.9 when F33.9 is correct

This is the most common depression coding error. A patient who has had prior depressive episodes treated with antidepressants is not a first-episode patient. Always check the full chart — problem list, medication history, prior notes — before assigning F32.x. One documented prior episode makes the encounter F33.x.

Mistake 2 — Using F32.9 instead of F32.A

When a provider writes "depression" in a note, the accurate code is F32.A, not F32.9. F32.9 requires major depressive disorder to be established. Using F32.9 for vague depression documentation inflates the clinical picture and creates claim integrity issues.

Mistake 3 — Coding F32/F33 for a patient with bipolar history

F32 and F33 both carry an Excludes1 note for bipolar disorder (F31.-) and manic episode (F30.-). Any documented manic or hypomanic history — even years in the past — means the depressive episode is coded from the F31.x family instead. Co-coding F32.x and F31.x for the same episode is an error.

Mistake 4 — Using F32.9 for adjustment disorder

When a provider documents adjustment disorder with depressed mood, the correct code is F43.21 — not F32.x. The distinction is in the provider's diagnosis: adjustment disorder is a response to an identifiable stressor without meeting full MDD criteria. If the provider explicitly says "adjustment disorder," that's F43.21 regardless of how severe the depressive symptoms appear.

Mistake 5 — Submitting F38

F38 does not exist in ICD-10-CM. Some legacy EHR systems and older coding resources still reference it. Any claim with F38 will reject. The correct alternatives are F32.89 (other specified depressive episodes) or F33.8 (other recurrent depressive disorders) depending on episode history.

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Frequently asked questions

What is the ICD-10 code for depression?
It depends on what the provider documents. F32.9 (MDD, single episode, unspecified) applies when major depressive disorder is documented for the first time. F33.9 applies when prior episodes are documented. F32.A (Depression, unspecified) is used when the provider documents "depression" without establishing a major depressive disorder diagnosis. Source: CMS/NCHS FY2026 ICD-10-CM.
What is the ICD-10 code for reactive depression?
"Reactive depression" is listed as an inclusion term under F32.9 in the ICD-10-CM Tabular List — meaning when a provider documents reactive depression in a single-episode MDD context, F32.9 is correct. If the patient has prior episodes, use F33.9. If the provider specifically documents adjustment disorder with depressed mood (a stress-linked reaction not meeting full MDD criteria), use F43.21 instead.
What is the difference between F32.9 and F32.A?
F32.9 requires the provider to have explicitly documented major depressive disorder. F32.A (Depression, unspecified, added FY2022) is used when the provider documents "depression" or "depressive disorder" without the specificity needed to establish MDD. Using F32.9 when the chart only says "depression" overstates the diagnosis and can trigger payer review.
When do I use F32 instead of F33?
Use F32 when this is the patient's first documented major depressive episode — no prior episodes in the record. Use F33 when at least one prior episode is documented, separated from the current episode by a period of recovery. This is the most common specificity error: assigning F32.9 to a patient whose chart clearly documents prior depressive episodes.
Can I code F32.9 for a patient with bipolar disorder?
No. F32 and F33 both carry an Excludes1 note for bipolar disorder (F31.-) and manic episode (F30.-). Any documented manic or hypomanic history means the depressive episode is coded from the F31.x family. The correct codes for depression within bipolar disorder are F31.3x (mild/moderate depressed episode) or F31.4/F31.5 (severe).
Is F32.9 valid for FY2026?
Yes. F32.9 is valid for healthcare services provided October 1, 2025 through September 30, 2026 (FY2026). No changes to the F32/F33 code family were made in the FY2026 ICD-10-CM addenda.
Reference only — not coding or clinical advice. This guide is for general educational purposes. Mental health coding involves complex clinical determinations. Always verify codes against the current official CMS/NCHS ICD-10-CM files and your organization's compliance guidance before clinical or claims use. Full disclaimer →