Life as a provider
How much do private practice therapists make?
Whether you’re considering becoming a therapist or are already in practice, you may be curious about the average salary of private practice therapists.
June 26, 2026
By the Headway Editorial Team • Clinically reviewed by Caitlin Pugh, LCSW
5 min read
By the Headway Editorial Team • Clinically reviewed by Caitlin Pugh, LCSW
If you’re just starting out as a therapist or you’re venturing out from a group practice to start your own, you may be wondering how much private practice therapists make. That’s a great question — and one that doesn’t have a straightforward answer.
How much therapists make ultimately depends on many different factors, from geographic location and work setting to license type and experience level. That said: With a bit of strategy, you can take some significant steps to increase your earnings and scale your practice over time.
Understanding potential salary ranges can help you set a realistic budget and clarify your goals. This guide explains potential income ranges for private practice therapists who accept insurance, and how Headway can help you maximize your earning potential as you grow your business.
Key insights
1
Based on BLS data, the median annual salary for therapists can range from $59,190 to $256,930, depending on license type.
2
Exactly how much a therapist makes depends on many different factors, such as work location, work setting, license type, and experience.
3
Therapists in private practice can earn more than those in salaried or agency roles by accepting insurance, but caseload and hours can also affect pay.
4
Headway helps private practice therapists earn more with more competitive reimbursement rates, reliable bi-weekly payments, and built-in tools that reduce the administrative tasks that cut into take-home pay.
How much private practice therapists make?
The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) doesn't track private practice therapist salaries as a specific category. But understanding the median salary across various license types can help you understand your own income potential as a therapist.
Keep in mind there can be a range of potential salaries for private practice therapists, and those who bill insurance are often at the higher end of the spectrum.
According to the BLS, as of May 2024, the median national annual salary for the following license types are:
- Mental health counselors: $59,190 per year
- Marriage and family therapists: $63,780 per year
- Social workers: $61,330 per yer
- Psychologists: $94,310 per year
- Psychiatrists: $256,930 per year
To break it down into median hourly pay:
- Mental health counselors: $28.46 per hour
- Marriage and family therapists: $30.66 per hour
- Social workers: $29.49 per hour
- Psychologists: $45.34 per hour
- Psychiatrists: $123.53 per hour
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What influences how much private practice therapists make?
Many factors can impact how much a private practice therapist makes, including license type, work setting and geographic location, whether they accept insurance, and overall caseload. Below, learn more about the most significant influences on a private practice therapist’s salary.
- Location: Where you practice can significantly impact potential pay. States like California, New York, Connecticut, and New Jersey tend to offer the highest salaries for mental health social workers, while providers in rural areas and lower cost-of-living states typically fall below the national median. But keep in mind cost of living is an important factor, so a higher salary in a more costly area may not result in more take-home pay.
- Work setting: Private practice therapists can work in many different settings, from community mental health centers, hospitals, and schools to private practice. Salaried roles in agency or institutional settings may offer more income stability, but the overall earning potential for private practice therapists is often higher (especially with strategic planning).
- Experience: As a general rule, less experienced private practice therapists tend to earn less than established providers who have more clinical experience or specialized practice areas.
- License status: Private practice therapists with full clinical licensure have access to options that lower-level credentials don't — for example, they can work in an independent practice and directly bill insurance rather than billing through a supervisor’s NPI. Providers still completing supervised hours typically earn less until they’re fully licensed.
- Caseload and hours: A therapist’s weekly caseload has a significant impact on overall earnings, since most private practice therapists bill per session. Clinicians with a consistently full caseload can earn more than those in part-time or salaried roles.
- Accepting insurance: Generally, private practice therapists who bill insurance can accept more clients, resulting in a fuller caseload. Some private-pay therapists may have more control when it comes to setting rates, but it’s often easier for therapists who accept insurance to find long-term clients.
There's no straightforward answer for how much a private practice therapist can make, and an individual’s income can ebb and flow over time. You can make more informed decisions about your practice by understanding what’s behind potential income differences.
How much can therapists make with Headway?
Potential earnings for private practice therapists can vary widely among clinicians, and the same is true for those who work with Headway. How many clients you see, which insurance plans you’re paneled with, and your geographic location can all play a role in your potential earnings. Still, Headway is designed to help you maximize your earning potential as a private practice provider while minimizing administrative stress in the process.
Instead of working on your own to get credentialed and negotiate rates, Headway works with insurance companies to set rates on your behalf. Headway providers often earn more than those who negotiate rates on their own, but earnings can vary based on factors like your location, the plans you accept, and the specific services you provide.
Once you’re set up with Headway, we’ll submit and track claims after each therapy session. You’ll get paid consistently every two weeks, and if you encounter a denied claim, you’ll still get paid for your work. Plus, you’ll have access to a built-in EHR with valuable practice management tools for billing, documentation, scheduling, and more. The result? Consistent, reliable income ,and more time to spend investing in your clients and growing your business.
Explore how much providers make by license or location
Salary data is most useful when you have something to compare it to. Here's a look at what providers earn across different license types, plus state-by-state breakdowns for even more context.
How much therapists make by license types
License type is one of the main drivers of earning potential. Take a look at what different types of providers earn on average.
- Licensed marriage and family therapists (LMFT)
- Licensed clinical social workers (LCSW)
- Psychiatric nurse practitioners (PMHNP)
- Couples therapists
- Online therapists
- Psychiatrists
- Therapist vs psychologist salary: What's the difference?
How much therapists make by state
Your location is another significant factor driving how much you can earn as a private practice therapist. To learn more about salaries in different states, you can explore these in-depth Headway resources.
How Headway helps you build a profitable practice
Building a profitable, sustainable practice is about more than attracting clients — you’ll also be tasked with managing overhead expenses, juggling admin work, and maintaining steady revenue. That’s where Headway can help.
As a partner to therapists, Headway helps simplify some of the most burdensome, time-consuming parts of running a private practice, including insurance credentialing, claims submission, billing, and compliance. Providers can get credentialed with major insurance plans in as little as 30 days, helping them start seeing clients (and generating revenue) sooner.
Headway also helps reduce operations costs with free, built-in practice management tools, including an EHR, scheduling, documentation, telehealth, messaging, and assessments. Unlike many standalone EHRs and billing platforms, Headway’s tools are available at no cost to providers.
On the revenue side, Headway negotiates competitive reimbursement rates with insurance payers around the country and provides consistent biweekly payments. Together, these features can help you spend less time on paperwork and more time growing a profitable practice.
This content is for general informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute clinical, legal, financial, or professional advice. All decisions should be made at the discretion of the individual or organization, in consultation with qualified clinical, legal, or other appropriate professionals.
© 2026 Therapymatch, Inc. dba Headway. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced without permission.
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