Q3 tax estimates are due September 15th. Book a consult
Set up your business and launch your private practice.
Hire other therapists and grow your group practice.
Start tracking your income and expenses as a 1099 contractor.
Done-for-you monthly bookkeeping and financial reports.
Personalized quarterly tax estimates and annual tax filing.
Pay yourself and maintain compliance with Heard Payroll.
We handle the S corp election process for you.
Expert financial support when you need it.
Form a business entity, open a business bank account, and set up a retirement plan.
See a breakdown of our software and services.
Review our transparent pricing and plans.
Read high quality, fact-checked articles on private practice finances.
Find answers to your questions about the Heard product
Estimate S Corp tax savings, home office deduction, and more.
Explore state guides for starting a private practice.
Discover free articles, downloads, and other resources.
Get answers to your most common tax questions.
Navigate Insurance credentialing and billing
Listen and subscribe to Heard Business School.
Get the Ledger in your inbox every week.
Sign up for a webinar or watch a recording.
Learn more about our mission and vision to help therapists.
Find answers to your questions about the Heard platform.
View open positions and apply to join our team.
Read reviews about Heard from real therapists.
A business podcast for therapists and wellness practitioners. Season 2 coming in June 2025.
A phone hovering above a mattress, a foster care caseload on hold, and a pandemic looming set the unlikely scene for this week’s social work conversation.
Building a thriving private practice as a therapist comes with unique challenges, from finding clients to managing finances and maintaining work-life balance.
Getting out of debt can feel impossible, especially when you're building a therapy practice, managing student loans, and trying to make your work sustainable for the long haul.
Building a private practice is great. But building one rooted in lived experience is on a whole other level.
Running a therapy practice while staying true to your values isn’t always easy, especially in a system that often prioritizes profit over people.
Starting a private practice sounds exciting…until the clients don’t show up.
Navigating the complexities of running a therapy practice today means balancing clinical care with growing administrative demands and emerging technology.
Designing a career on your own terms isn’t easy, especially if it doesn’t exist out there yet. But Dr. Emily Anhalt found a way to do just that.
Building a successful career in mental health often requires navigating personal challenges, shifting professional goals, and staying adaptable in the face of growing demand.
Navigating a career in social work can be incredibly challenging, especially when balancing personal struggles, family life, and the demands of private practice.
Building a therapy business comes with its challenges, especially when you’re navigating AuDHD and entrepreneurship.
Therapists have long been told they won’t make it on their own in private practice.
Did you know S corporations (S corps) can provide significant financial benefits for therapists and their private practices?
How do you go from nonprofit work to a private practice making six figures?
Fostering a successful private practice while navigating academia, sports psychology, and representation in the therapy field can be daunting.
To truly connect with clients, therapists must embrace authenticity, cultural awareness, and personal identity.
Creating an excellent therapist profile is more than just credentials.
Starting a private therapy practice in New York City is no small feat.
Building a successful and inclusive therapy practice comes with its own set of challenges.
Building a therapy business isn’t an easy task. But creating one as a neurodivergent therapist? Even harder.
As therapists, understanding and managing the financial side of your practice is crucial.
Referrals are the lifeblood of any successful therapy practice.
There needs to be accountability for low pay, burnout, and blaming of therapists.
Starting a therapy practice comes with its own set of challenges.
A lot of therapists are told to “niche down” but aren’t told exactly what that means or how to do it.
Therapy hasn’t historically been accessible to everyone.
Representation matters, especially in men’s mental health.
Starting a private practice can be tough, both emotionally and financially.
Many therapists struggle with the complexities of managing their private practice, especially when it comes to financial planning.
Sometimes taking the next step is all you need to expand your therapy practice in ways you never imagined.
Having a bad experience with an employer may feel terrible at the time, but it can fuel a fire to create something amazing.
With the rise of social media, many therapists are elevating their online presence.
Quarterly taxes do not have to be overwhelming.
Inconsistencies in service, financial instability, management difficulties, and burnout are all issues that can affect a group therapy practice.
Oftentimes, therapists have their sights set on private practice after grad school. But what about going beyond the 1:1 therapy sessions as a business opportunity?
Therapists are uniquely equipped for business because they value authenticity and relationships.
This is a show for therapists building their own businesses.
Use this cheatsheet to maximize your deductions and save money on taxes for your therapy practice.