Should Therapists Take Insurance?
Should Christian Therapists Bill Insurance? A Closer Look at the Cost of Being Paid
As a Christian therapist, I’ve long heard the debate: Do you bill insurance or go cash-pay? The conversations swirl around two major ideas — accessibility for clients, and fair compensation for therapists. And while I used to think the answer was complicated, the more I experience the system firsthand, the more I wonder if the conversation isn’t so muddied after all.
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The Case for Billing Insurance
Let’s be honest — taking insurance can make it easier to get clients in the door. Many people search specifically for in-network providers, and in certain areas, especially where income levels are lower, that’s the only financially realistic option for clients.
But here’s the other side: billing insurance doesn’t mean financial stability. Payments are often delayed — sometimes by months. When the reimbursement does arrive, it’s often much less than expected. And once you factor in the cut taken by group practices (typically 20–40% to cover overhead, admin, and billing), it’s not uncommon to walk away with $50 per client hour. Now add in taxes, documentation, unpaid admin time, and cancellations, and it can feel like you’re earning $25/hour with a Master’s or Doctorate degree. Many therapists in these situations end up making around $50,000/year.
That’s not just disheartening. It’s devaluing.
This reality isn’t just true for therapists — it extends to psychologists, psychiatrists, social workers, and other mental health professionals to a large degree. It’s especially hard to swallow for those of us with terminal degrees, who have spent years in rigorous training only to be reimbursed at rates that fail to reflect that investment. While some specialists may receive higher rates, many still face the same reimbursement delays, administrative burdens, and undervaluation by insurance companies.
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Real Stories: $400 for 20 Sessions and a 65% Squeeze
Let me share a story that captures this tension in a real, personal way. I once supervised a clinician who worked in an office that took 65% of her production. That meant she wasn’t just being squeezed by the insurance companies — she was also being squeezed by her own practice. The system was stacked against her from both sides, leaving little room for financial stability or long-term sustainability.
A friend of mine — a master’s-level therapist — sees around 7 to 10 clients a week, almost every week. On paper, that’s 20 hours of face-to-face client time across two weeks. But here’s the reality: after the group practice took its cut, and after waiting on delayed and partial insurance reimbursements, their paycheck for that period came out to just $400.
That’s $20 an hour — before taxes, before paying an accountant, before contributing to a health savings account or retirement, and before covering any business expenses.
This isn’t just about one week. It’s about the fact that this can happen at all — and does happen, unpredictably. It’s nearly impossible to create a consistent budget when you’re dependent on payments that are delayed by insurance processing times, inconsistent billing cycles, and client no-shows.
Now, I realize medical doctors also face bureaucratic frustrations with insurance. But there’s a key difference: even their “low end” of reimbursement is far higher than our “high end.” When a physician gets paid late, they’re still being reimbursed at rates that honor their training and the value our society places on their work.
Therapists, by contrast, are expected to deliver deep, transformative care — and are often paid less than a high school tutor or barista for doing so.
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The Case for Cash Pay
With private pay, you set your rate. You don’t have to wait three months for a claim to be processed. You don’t have to argue over whether your note justifies the session. You don’t have to worry about clawbacks. If you charge $150 an hour, you earn $150 an hour. You’re in control.
Critics of the cash-pay model often say, “You won’t be able to fill a practice that way.” And yes, it can be harder depending on your location or population served. But increasingly, therapists — especially those in niches like trauma recovery, testing, or faith-based care — are doing exactly that. They’re building thriving practices by setting fair rates and helping clients access reimbursement through superbills, where clients pay upfront and submit claims themselves.
Recently, I looked into billing insurance for ADHD testing — a highly specialized service. Even with doctoral-level credentials, after my office’s cut, I’d be making around $75/hour. That doesn’t include the cost of tests, taxes, or the expensive training required just to offer assessments. At some point, it starts to feel absurd. And wrong.
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A Word of Balance: Not All Insurance Experiences Are Equal
That said, not all insurance experiences are created equal.
Some therapists do very well with insurance. Reimbursement rates vary significantly by state, insurer, and negotiation. I’ve spoken with colleagues who consistently receive $100–$140 per session through insurance, and their systems are smooth and sustainable. Practices with effective billing departments and lower overhead can make insurance work in a way that feels fair and even profitable.
So this isn’t a blanket indictment of insurance-based work. It’s not “cash-pay good, insurance bad.” There are plenty of therapists who’ve found the insurance model to be the best fit for their calling and business. And that’s valid.
But the larger issue is this: Why are so many of us okay with allowing insurance companies — not clients, not therapists, not the free market — to decide what our work is worth?
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Therapy Is Not Just a Service — It’s a Healing Relationship
Yesterday, five out of five clients left my office lighter. Each one had a breakthrough. Each one left with a deeper understanding of themselves and their story. I don’t know how to assign a dollar amount to that — but I do know it’s not $50.
And this is where the value conversation becomes personal. When I go to the doctor, I often get 10 minutes and a prescription. That’s considered worth $300. But an hour of deeply attuned, transformative therapy? Often reimbursed at a fraction of that.
This isn’t about arrogance. It’s about integrity — asking the honest question: Is the current system valuing our work in a way that aligns with what it actually takes to do it well?
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What About Access?
Of course, we care about access. That’s part of why many of us became therapists. We’re helpers by nature. But I don’t believe the solution to the problems in the healthcare system is for therapists to simply accept being underpaid. That’s not the answer.
Yes, the system has major flaws — opaque billing, inconsistent reimbursement, and a clear imbalance in how mental health is valued compared to other forms of care. But undervaluing clinicians only worsens those issues. It leads to burnout, turnover, and a system where quality care becomes harder to maintain.
There are better ways to promote access while still honoring the value of our work. We can offer superbills to help clients get reimbursed. We can provide sliding scale options on a case-by-case basis. We can partner with churches or nonprofits to subsidize sessions for those in need.
And perhaps most meaningfully, as Christian therapists, we can tithe a portion of our time — offering free or reduced-cost sessions to a limited number of clients as a form of ministry and generosity. That doesn’t mean devaluing our work across the board. It means freely giving as God leads us, while still maintaining sustainable practices that allow us to thrive and continue serving long term.
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Final Thoughts: Let the Market Decide
This isn’t capitalism or socialism. It’s something stranger — a system where a few massive companies set the prices for millions of therapists, regardless of training, expertise, or outcomes. Or maybe it is a form of socialism — but who knows? Either way, it isn’t working.
Medical doctors have had decades of advocacy, established professional valuation, and strong reimbursement structures. Mental health, though essential, has lagged behind. But maybe the solution isn’t waiting for insurance companies to come around.
Maybe the answer is: We set the price. We offer the value. We let the market respond.
This is a moment for courage. For those of us who have labored under unrealistic reimbursement models, who’ve invested in advanced education and sacrificed time and income to serve faithfully — now is the time to reclaim the dignity of our work. Not with arrogance, but with clarity and integrity.
We can create practices that are sustainable, ethical, and deeply honoring to both the client and the clinician. We can build models that reflect the true cost and worth of healing relationships. And we can do it in a way that still serves the underserved — through thoughtful generosity, strategic partnerships, and Spirit-led discernment.
Whether you choose to take insurance or not, don’t let someone else’s reimbursement schedule define your worth. Charge fairly. Work ethically. Rest in the knowledge that your calling is sacred — and act like it.
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