I recently had a call with one of my lovely clients who is a clinic owner who has grown her therapy practice by bringing in associates to help fulfil her waiting list.
She has a growing team, a steady stream of enquiries, and a business that felt like it was moving to the next level. But behind the scenes, her clinic wasn’t as profitable as expected. It was becoming harder to manage, more time-consuming, and financially frustrating.
This is one of the most common reasons a therapy practice with associates becomes unprofitable.
The assumption: more associates = more profit
Many clinic owners assume that growing a therapy practice with associates will automatically increase profit.
More clinicians should mean:
- More availability
- More clients
- More income
But in reality, it doesn’t always work like that. Because a private practice with associates is only profitable when the structure around it works properly.
Without that, you can end up:
- Busy but not making money
- Managing more people with little return
- Feeling like your business has grown, but your income hasn’t
The biggest pitfall: not enough sessions per associate
This is the issue I see most often in UK private practice. A clinic takes on an associate, but they only have availability for a couple of clients a month to fit in around their own practice or employed role. Or the reality is that the demand is not their to fill their diaries.
Why low session volume doesn’t add up
Even one associate comes with overheads.
For example:
- Practice management system licences
- Email accounts
- Payment processing fees
- Website updates and profiles
- Time spent onboarding and supporting them
- Admin support (whether that’s you or a VA)
- Ongoing diary management and client communication
So if your associate is only seeing a couple of clients a week, the income generated often doesn’t cover the true cost of having them.
The hidden cost most clinic owners miss
Clinic owners often don’t track the time they spend onboarding and supporting associates or underestimate how long this can take. Some associates require more support than others, which increases the time investment.
Whether you are paying for VA support, for admin support, or doing the admin yourself, there is a cost associated with the time spent managing a team.
That includes:
- Responding to enquiries
- Screening calls
- Booking appointments
- Chasing forms and payments
- Managing cancellations
- Supporting the associate
So the real question becomes:
👉 Is the income from those 1 to 2 sessions actually worth your time?
Often, the answer is no.
The “sweet spot” for a profitable associate model
To make a therapy practice with associates profitable, you need to find your “sweet spot”.
This is the number of sessions each associate must deliver to:
- Cover overheads
- Cover your time
- Generate profit
And this should be calculated before you take on your first associate, not after.
Can you actually fill their diary? It’s not just about what the associate can deliver. It’s about whether your business can support them.
Ask yourself:
- Do you have consistent enquiries?
- Do you have a system to convert those enquiries?
- Can you keep their diary full every week?
Without this, taking on associates becomes a risk rather than a growth strategy.
If you’re not measuring it, you won’t fix it
Another major issue is that many clinic owners don’t actually know if an associate is profitable. I have worked with clinics of various sizes, and I am often surprised that they do not measure profitability for their associate provision and per-associate. Good practice management software will have a suite of reports that can be run at the touch of a button, but I find that these are under-utilised. Coming from a data management background, I know firsthand that without data to inform your business decisions, there can be a financial business risk.
Use your practice management system properly
Most practice management systems used in UK private practice allow you to:
- Run monthly activity reports
- Track sessions per clinician
- Monitor income generated per associate
This should be part of your monthly routine.
Track associate profit in your accounting software
If you’re using accounting software such as Xero, Quickbooks or Freeagent, make sure you are:
- Separating associate income
- Separating associate costs (fees, licences, room hire, etc.)
This allows you to clearly see:
👉 Is this associate actually generating profit?
What you should review each month
At a minimum:
- Sessions per clinician
- Income generated per clinician
- Costs linked to that clinician
- Actual profit (not just revenue)
Without this, it’s very easy to grow a team that looks busy but isn’t financially working.
Common mistakes clinic owners make
Across many therapy clinics, I see the same issues:
- Taking on associates too early
- Not having enough demand to sustain them
- No clear financial model
- Diaries that are inconsistent or half empty
- Not reviewing monthly performance
- Underestimating admin time and costs
- Assuming things will “pick up”
So what does work?
A profitable private practice with associates is absolutely achievable.
But it needs to be intentional.
That means:
- Understanding your numbers
- Setting a minimum viable caseload per associate
- Running monthly reports
- Having strong enquiry and onboarding systems
- Making sure admin processes are efficient
- Scaling at the right time
Free download: Associate Profitability Tracker
If you’re not currently tracking this, I’ve created a simple tool to help.
👉 Download the Associate Profitability Tracker and see exactly:
- How many sessions each associate is delivering
- What income they are generating
- Whether they are actually profitable
[INSERT DOWNLOAD LINK]
FAQs about associates in private practice
Are associates profitable in private practice?
Yes, but only if they have enough consistent sessions to cover overheads, admin time, and their fee split.
How many sessions does an associate need to be profitable?
This varies depending on your costs, but there needs to be a minimum weekly caseload to cover expenses and generate profit.
Why is my clinic busy but not making money?
This is often due to low utilisation of associates, high admin time, or not tracking income and costs properly.
Should I hire associates or stay solo?
It depends on your demand, systems, and financial structure. Scaling too early can reduce profitability.
Need a second opinion?
If you’re unsure whether your associate model is working, or you’re thinking about growing your team, I can help you review your setup.
Sometimes a few small changes make a big difference.
👉 Get in touch for a free, no-pressure chat





