Clinician Pay & Cost to Practice Calculator
Enter your numbers once. See what each pay model really costs — and whether your structure is financially sustainable.
Understanding Pay Model Risk
Not all pay structures carry the same financial exposure. Know what you're signing up for before you set a rate.
You pay only when you collect. If a client no-shows and you collect a fee, the clinician gets their cut. If insurance claws back payment, you owe nothing. Cash flow is fully aligned with revenue. That said, this model is becoming less viable as states tighten wage and timely pay laws — I don't recommend it, and I'm including it here as a comparison only. If you're currently using commission, please consult an employment attorney in your state before continuing.
You owe for every hour worked regardless of collection. Insurance lag means paying clinicians before revenue arrives. Timely pay laws require full payment even if insurance claws back or a client doesn't pay.
The base hourly is always owed regardless of collections — same timely pay exposure as straight hourly. The commission portion can be held until collected, which partially hedges your risk.
Full payroll obligation regardless of caseload, cancellations, insurance delays, or clawbacks. Requires maintaining cash reserves to cover payroll gaps. Greatest exposure if census drops suddenly.
Clinician Pay & Cost to Practice Calculator
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Fill in the rate you're considering for each model. Leave a model's fields blank to exclude it from results. Higher-risk models should generally offer lower total compensation to offset your increased financial exposure as the practice owner.
Admin hours are used to calculate your implied clinical hourly rate — what you're actually paying per clinical hour once admin time is factored in.
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These are the operating costs tied directly to employing this clinician — separate from your practice-wide overhead.
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| Metric | Commission | Hourly | Hourly + Comm. | Salary |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Monthly revenue generated | — | — | — | — |
| Clinician gross pay / month | — | — | — | — |
| Admin pay / month | — | — | — | — |
| Employer taxes + workers comp / month | — | — | — | — |
| Benefits / month | — | — | — | — |
|
Cost to practice employing this clinician / month
Gross pay + admin pay +
employer taxes + workers comp + benefits
|
— | — | — | — |
|
Practice revenue remaining after clinician compensation / month
Still needs to cover opex,
rent, admin, leadership, and owner pay
|
— | — | — | — |
| Clinician take-home / month (est. after 20% employee taxes) | — | — | — | — |
|
Implied cost per clinical hour
Total gross ÷ clinical
sessions — true cost per billable hour once admin time is factored in
|
— | — | — | — |
| Equivalent annual gross pay | — | — | — | — |
|
Annual total compensation cost to practice
Gross pay + admin pay +
employer taxes + workers comp + benefits × 12
|
— | — | — | — |
Want to see how your numbers compare to Profit First benchmarks?
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Profit First Health Check
How your pay structure benchmarks against recommended allocations for a group practice
The 58% clinical benchmark includes total compensation: gross pay + employer taxes + workers comp + benefits. The remaining 42% of revenue needs to cover rent, admin, leadership, overhead, and owner pay before you reach true profit.
Built for group practice owners by The Group Practice Exchange. Estimates only — consult your accountant and an employment attorney for tax and wage law guidance. Check your employer tax rate →