Greetings readers, it’s been 7 years since I first wrote on this issue, and to date it remains still one of the most asked about topics. This month I present to you a re-visitation, and update!
According to Salary.com, a Licensed Professional Counselor (or ‘Family Counselor’) working in Cambridge, MA makes a median average of $43,144 per year. A Substance Abuse Counselor (or ‘Chemical Dependency Counselor’) makes an average of $57,411.
In a city where the average cost of a 1500 square foot home exceeds a million dollars ($747 per foot, and expected to grow 3.6% this year, according to Zillow), working as a fulltime therapist is financially untenable. And while Cambridge (where I lived when I went into private practice) is expensive, the math isn’t too dissimilar in other cities across the country. For example:
- A 1500 square foot home in Bethesda, MD will run $685,500. Average Counselor Salary: $41,817
- A 1500 square foot home in Denver, CO will run $511,500. Average Counselor Salary: $38,329
- A 1500 square foot home in Austin, TX is a bargain at $310,500. Average Counselor Salary: $37,343
Nobody chooses the profession of counseling for the high pay. But is financial struggle our collective fate? Is the practice of counseling relegated to people who don’t need to make a living, or as a side passion one must pursue separately from a full-time job? I hope not, and I don’t believe so. I’ve found that with hard work and good planning, earning an income of $100,000 per year in private practice is an obtainable goal.
Money in Private Practice
As counselors, we loathe to discuss money–we want to focus on patient care. However, money is a necessary part of keeping the practice doors open. The fact is, you can’t help anyone if you’re out of business, and a counseling practice is precisely that—a business. Hence, in this column we’re going to look at the financial aspects of running a viable counseling business/practice.
Note: the following numbers are estimates for a solo-practitioner in private practice. You’ll need to adjust expenses, client fees, and volumes based on your practice goals and the costs of your area. I’ve tried to be conservative when referencing revenues, and liberal when listing expenses.
Client Fees
Client fees vary depending on the location of your practice, and the payer(s) you work with. For example, in Oregon a masters-level clinician accepting 3rd party insurance payments (for example, a combination of Anthem, United Healthcare, and Cigna) might earn $99 for a diagnostic evaluation (90791). Ongoing appointments for individual or family psychotherapy (90834/90837/90847) might pay around $70.
For now, let’s estimate that all your clients pay for services with insurance, and your average fee for a 45-minute session is $75.
Fulltime Caseload
The number of sessions that constitutes a fulltime caseload is hotly debated. Some professionals feel that 30 sessions per week is too heavy of a caseload, while others find that they can comfortably serve 40+ clients per week (I say ‘hotly’ debated because providers who opt for fewer clients have been known to accuse those with heavier caseloads of being unethical.
Contrarily, providers who manage heavier caseloads have criticized others as being unorganized, or ‘not cutout’ for fulltime private practice). I wish not to contribute to this contentious debate, but instead split the difference!
I find 35 sessions per week to be a sustainable number for a full-time clinician. With this number, if you’re providing 45-minute sessions, that’s 26.25 hours of face-to-face work with clients each week. With schedule gaps and practice management duties, you’re looking at a 45-hour workweek. It’s a full-time job to be sure, but not unendurable. In addition, let’s say that you give yourself a modest 4-week vacation each year.
Calculations:
35 (sessions per week) x 48 (weeks per year) = 1,680 (sessions per year)
1,680 (sessions per year) x $75 (fee per session) = $126,000 (yearly revenue)
Practice Expenses
Now that revenues are calculated, we need to subtract any/all practice expenses. There are large, small, and hidden costs to running a practice: from patient parking, to coffee, to organic tissues, to printer ink. Below is a sample (broad category) expense list.
- Rent (one office): $550 per month = $6,600 per year
- Office supplies (computer, software, phone, furniture, printer, coffee, etc.) = $3,000 per year
Furniture, if not financed, will be an initial outlay of several thousand dollars.
- Professional dues, CEUs, & liability insurance = $800 per year
This number is often contested as it applies to the costs of professional CEUs. Note that $800 won’t get you to a national conference, but it will cover the basics. There are quality low cost CEU options, one just needs to look.
- Accounting & Legal fees = $500 per year
- Advertising and Marketing = $6300 per year
There’s no ‘correct’ amount to spend on marketing or advertising. In fact, many counselors spend almost nothing. However, for the sake of this exercise, let’s earmark 5 percent of your gross yearly revenue for the marketing and advertising your practice (5% of $126,000 (yearly revenue) = $6,300).
- Medical Billing = $6930 per year
While some counselors prefer to do their own medical billing, you may wish to hire a company to handle it for you. A customary cost is 8 percent of what the billing company collects, which comes out to around 5.5 percent of your gross revenue. Note that it’s 5.5 percent because medical billing companies don’t customarily take a share of client deductibles, or co-pays (5.5% of $126,000 (yearly revenue) = $6,930).
- Other Miscellaneous = $1000 per year
Calculations:
$126,000 (revenue) – $25,310 (expenses) = $100,870 (net)
And there you have it! A 6-figure private practice.
Variables
While the above provides a theoretical outline of private practice financials, no counseling practice will perfectly mirror the example. To help you determine with greater accurately your finances, here’s a list of variables that could potentially detract from, or enhance, your practice’s earnings.
Possible Detractors:
- The estimates above assume that one will be able to maintain a caseload of 35 client sessions per week. Low new client volume, or high client attrition, can reduce one’s weekly session count.
- To expedite the building of a caseload, more money could be invested into advertising (or time spent in professional networking, which could detract from your available client hours).
- Client cancellations and/or client no-shows could lower income, depending on how one manages their practice schedule.
- The estimates above do not account for unpaid session fees (subtract up to 4 percent).
- If you accept credit cards, subtract 2-3 percent revenue from whatever percentage of session fees you expect to process with plastic.
- The “net” above doesn’t include the cost of health insurance, retirement planning, or taxes, which are often partially covered by an employer. While not truly a cost of business, these items will detract from your expendable income.
Possible Enhancements:
- After building a strong reputation, and establishing active referral sources, you may be able to eliminate advertising and marketing (reclaim up to 5 percent).
- Owning a business might have legitimate tax advantages. For example, your mobile phone might qualify as a business expense (meaning it’s paid for with pre-tax money).
- If you see some (or all) cash-pay clients, you can reduce or eliminate medical billing expenses (reclaim up to 5.5 percent).
- If demand for your services outweighs supply (that’s you), you could raise your cash-pay rates to $99 (add $40,320 revenue).
- If you provide 40 sessions per week on average (that’s 30 face-to-face hours with clients), add $18,000 revenue.
- If you reduce your time off from 4 weeks to 3 weeks per year, add $2,625 revenue (not worth it!).
As a rule, counselors aren’t motivated by money, or excited by numbers (who enjoyed psych-stats?), but understanding the financial aspects of your practice can help you to have a successful career doing what you love, and helping others. As always, I welcome your questions, and comments @anthonycentore.
Thanks so much for the info.. after years in sales I decided to follow my heart and go back to school for a career in counseling. Earning over $70k now and reading about the salaries for counselors was a little disheartening until I realized that if you google sales salaries you’ll see numbers all over the map. People who are good at what they do in almost any field find their way to the top somehow.
I had thought the numbers seemed very low based on my own quick math but thought maybe I was missing something.. your article confirmed my thoughts. Thanks so much, can’t wait to get started getting paid for something I feel rewarded for!
Mari, Thanks for reading, and for your comment! Congratulations on the career change! 🙂
I’m a private practitioner in Charlotte, North Carolina and our reimbursement rates (for masters level clinicians) is significantly lower than your estimation. I wish I was averaging $80/client!
Regardless, this is an informative article and I look forward to continued browsing!
I completely agree that 35 clients per week is not realistic. (In my area, by the way, 50-minute sessions are standard.) I see 6 clients per day (plenty!) and work four days per week in the office. One day I work from home on marketing/administration. I’m sure I could make a lot more money seeing 35 clients, but most therapists I know don’t even attempt to do this.
Dear Marilee/Mary,
Thank you for your comment! What you are describing is a caseload of 24 clients per week. With 50-minute sessions, that’s 20 hours a week of client work.
There is nothing wrong with this, but it is a part-time caseload (even by the standards of one’s professional liability insurance, I believe part time goes up to 20 hours a week).
Mary, if you are working a 40 hour workweek, you are allotting 3 hours a day for administrative work, as well as another 8 hours on Fridays (if that’s the day you dont see clients).
Hence, for your 20 hours of counseling per week, you are spending 20 hours on administrative work. With respect, these numbers seem out of balance. If you were able to streamline your administrative processes some, you would be able to effectively help more clients.
Warmly,
Anthony
P.S. With 50 minute sessions, 35 clients a week is 29.1 client contact hours per week. That offers 10.9 hours a week for administrative work (in a 40 hour work week).
This is a busy schedule, but still a 40 hour work week, and a far cry from “not realistic.”
Very helpful article and comments. I couldn’t help but notice almost ALL people commenting feel that 35 clients is too much – it can’t be a coincodence. I think one issue you might not be addressing is that 40 hour work week is not actually fully 40 hours of nonstop work, there are bathroom breaks, conversations, checking personal stuff, etc. So a 45 minute session really equals an hour of time. You can’t just see a new client at the end of 45 mins, you have to take a breath, jot a few notes and then clear your head to see the next person at the top of the next hour (I assume?). So I think the 45 minutes with a client be more conservatively calculated as 1 hour of a counselor’s time, not including the admin that is calculated separately.
I have read through many, but not all the comments. I haven’t see you address the emotional toll of seeing a certain amount of clients. I don’t think it’s about the amount of hours working based on a 40 hour work week, but talking to 35 people back to back in one week sounds exhausting. It seems like that’s more of people’s concern – it’s not about 25 hours of face time, which isn’t bad in itself, but it’s about the amount of people you are talking to, processing emotions with, and recalling and analyzing for the next session. Just a thought!
All this said, I love the article and I am starting an MA for counseling in the fall and am in my mid-30s. I am setting my expectations lower at $60k, but higher than the really sad $45k that is mostly discussed (I’ve been making that amount WITHOUT an MA, no kids, in a rented apt, and it’s really hard in San Francisco!)
Thank you for giving us hope, an outline to achieve financial stability in this field, and for publishing comments that do not always agree with you because it helps us better understand the dynamic picture behind your article – and open up dialogue. It also helps people see that financial security is not a selfless goal… it’s critical to our mental health!