Running a practice
How many clients do most therapists have?
How many sessions you can fit into a “full time” practice depends on several important factors, including your own capacity and your clients’ needs.
August 2, 2024 • Updated on February 10, 2026
7 min read
Working in private practice, you get to make important decisions about your work, including how many clients you want to see.
There’s no set number of clients that makes a therapist full-time. Instead, working full-time as a therapist typically means practicing for standard “full-time” work hours. How many sessions you can fit in during that time frame depends on several important factors, including your own capacity and your clients’ needs.
Deciding on the right number of clients for your caseload is a personal decision that requires some reflection and strategic planning — and a willingness to adapt as needed.
What’s a typical full-time provider’s caseload?
It’s standard for a full-time therapist to schedule 20 or 25 therapy appointments each week, says Natalia Tague, clinical engagement lead at Headway.
If you see each of these clients weekly, you may have that many people on your caseload. But if most of your clients are bi-weekly or monthly, then you may have 40 or 50 total people on your caseload.
Ultimately, Tague says, your caseload is a personal decision. How many clients you see will depend on several factors, such as:
- How often you see each client
- The severity of your clients’ mental health needs
- Your own personal needs
- The amount of administrative work you do (for example, if you own a group practice, you may see fewer clients)
- Your personal and professional capacity to provide excellent care
How to determine your ideal caseload
To determine your ideal caseload, first consider your own values. How many hours a week do you want to dedicate to therapy, and when do you want to work? If you want to earn enough money to take more time off, for example, then you might need to see more clients (or be OK with a pay cut).
Then, think about your specialty and the type of clients you might be seeing.
“Let’s say you have clients with intense symptoms or who require more crisis management. In that case, your caseload will be on the lower side,” says Tyler Willis, a full-time private practice therapist in California. “If you’re experienced in a specific niche and specialize with clients in that niche, you can likely take on more.”
Your caseload should, of course, factor in burnout and your ability to provide clinical excellence.
“I’d warn people against squeezing in 40 sessions a week just to make money,” says Tague. “Then you’re sacrificing your wellness and your clients’ care.”
Willis also cautions against comparing your practice to others or shaping your caseload based on another provider instead of accounting for your own preferences, skills, and values. “Have confidence in your ability to determine your own needs. Ignore what others are doing if it's not relevant to your situation,” he says.
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How many clients do most providers see in a day?
Ultimately, how many clients you see in a day depends on how many hours you want to work in a day and how long your typical sessions are. If you typically provide traditional 50-minute therapy sessions and you have 25 clients on your weekly caseload, then you’d likely see 5 to 7 clients a day.
If you want to work longer days so you can take Friday off, then you may need to squeeze in more clients. But be honest with yourself about how your schedule may be impacting your quality of care: After a long day, your seventh or eighth client might not be getting you at your best.
Either way, Tague says it’s important to leave time for breaks and administrative work (like writing progress notes) between sessions.
That said, leveraging the right tools can make administrative work less of a burden, allowing you to see more patients. Headway’s EHR, for example, includes a suite of free features that make it simpler to run a busy therapy practice. When everything you need — from your telehealth platform to your appointment calendar — is in the same place, you’ll save time otherwise spent jumping from program to program. Plus, Headway automates time-consuming tasks like documentation and billing, freeing up space for additional client work.
How many hours does a therapist work in a week?
Full-time work is typically seen as 40 hours per week, but you may work 35 or so hours and still be full-time. For example, in a report from the American Psychological Association, full-time clinical psychologists reported working an average of 36 hours a week (with most time spent on direct clinical care).
If you work full-time, you can determine how you want to break up your week. For example, some therapists work 9-5, Monday through Friday. Others may decide to work longer days for four days of the week so they can have one day off.
(If you want to estimate your potential earnings in private practice, remember that your billing and coding will only reflect the actual amount of time spent in session.)
Properly slotting client sessions into your weekly working hours can feel like a (high-stakes!) game of Tetris. Headway’s scheduling software removes some of the stress by creating a master calendar — helpfully color-coded for at-a-glance legibility — that syncs with your documentation, telehealth, and billing tools. Automatic appointment reminders also take one more thing off your plate.
Typical caseloads for psychiatrists
Mental health practitioners who prescribe medication, such as psychiatrists and nurse practitioners, may see more clients in a given day or week. That’s because prescribers bill their sessions differently, often with shorter appointments. While a talk therapist may spend 45 to 50 minutes with each of their clients, a medication management appointment could be as short as 15 to 20 minutes. That means prescribers may be able to see 10 to 20 patients per day.
No matter what type of therapy you provide or in what context, willingness to pivot as needed is an essential skill. “Accept that this is a process of learning about yourself, and adapt as you go,” says Willis.
How many clients is too many for a therapist?
What works for one therapist may not work for another. Ultimately, you’ll have to figure out what your maximum case load looks like. But how to tell?
Red flags could include burnout or poor work-life balance, feeling excessively tired or unfocused by the end of the day, forgetting important details from your sessions, or running out of time for necessary administrative work. If you’re seeing these signs, take them seriously; they’re signals that your mental health and quality of care could be at risk.
If it feels like you’re at — or over — capacity, first try to lighten your administrative burden with tools, such as Headway, that can streamline or automate key tasks to make time for client care. But if your roster still feels like too much, even with the help of productivity-boosting platforms, be honest with yourself. You may need to stop accepting new clients or even refer some of your current ones to another trusted provider.
How Headway helps providers manage a full case load
When deciding on your ideal case load, there are lots of things to consider, like your preferred schedule, your clients’ needs, and how you do your best work as a therapist. Another important consideration: the amount of time you typically devote to administrative work like scheduling, billing, and documentation. These tasks are necessary but can be extremely time-consuming. Not with Headway.
Headway’s all-encompassing platform supports all the back-end work that goes into running a thriving therapy practice, streamlining time-consuming tasks like scheduling, documentation, and billing. Devoting less time to those duties means you can spend more of your time and energy caring for your clients.
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.
© 2025 Therapymatch, Inc. dba Headway. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced without permission.
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