ICD-10-CM Code R09.02 – Hypoxemia

Code: R09.02 Type: ICD-10-CM (Diagnosis) Status: Active Effective: FY2016-2026

What does ICD-10-CM code R09.02 mean?

R09.02 represents Hypoxemia. As a symptom code from Chapter 18 (Symptoms, Signs and Abnormal Clinical Findings), this code should be used when no definitive diagnosis has been established for the underlying condition. Coders frequently reference this code as hypoxia icd 10, icd 10 code for hypoxia, or hypoxia.

Code category and hierarchy

  • Chapter: 18 – Symptoms, Signs and Abnormal Clinical Findings (R00-R99)
  • Category: R09
  • Code: R09.02 – Hypoxemia

Guideline notes and coding considerations

Important Guideline Note

Assign R09.02 only when documentation clearly supports this diagnosis. Review the excludes notes and ensure no conflicts with other assigned codes.

  • Specificity: Assign R09.02 only when documentation supports this specific diagnosis.

Learn the underlying rules in the ICD-10 Coding Guidelines, Symptom Code Guidelines.

Documentation tips (what coders should confirm)

  • Verify the clinical documentation supports the use of R09.02

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Related ICD-10 codes

R00.0

Tachycardia, unspecified

R05.9

Cough, unspecified

R06.02

Shortness of breath

R06.81

Apnea, not elsewhere classified

Frequently Asked Questions

The ICD-10-CM code for hypoxia is R09.02, which represents hypoxemia. This code is also commonly referenced as icd 10 code for hypoxia, hypoxia. Verify this code using the ICD Code Auditor to ensure guideline compliance.

Yes. R09.02 is an active ICD-10-CM diagnosis code used to classify hypoxemia for clinical documentation, reporting, and medical billing purposes.

Use the ICD Code Auditor to check R09.02 against official ICD-10-CM coding guidelines. The tool validates by fiscal year and patient gender to identify potential conflicts.

Yes, R09.02 can be the primary diagnosis in outpatient settings when no definitive diagnosis has been established. However, in inpatient settings, symptom codes should not be the principal diagnosis if the underlying condition has been identified. Per ICD-10-CM guidelines Section IV.D, codes for symptoms are acceptable as principal diagnosis when a definitive condition has not been established.

Documentation should clearly describe the clinical condition represented by R09.02 (Hypoxemia). Include relevant clinical findings, diagnostic test results, provider assessment, and the treatment plan. The diagnosis must be supported by the medical record and not based solely on lab results without clinical interpretation.

Sources

Reviewed by: Certified ICD-10 Coding & Risk Adjustment Specialist
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Validate R09.02 Against ICD 10 CM Coding Guidelines (FY2026)

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