How Much a Midwifery Practice Owner Can Make at $118M Revenue

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Description

Key Takeaways

Key Takeaways

  • Maternity volume drives most revenue, so staffing must scale.
  • Collected prices rise modestly from Year 1 to 5.
  • Payer mix changes cash timing, denials, and admin burden.
  • Payroll and compliance costs pressure margins, not optional.


Owner income iconOwner income$373k to $3.0M
Net margin iconNet margin14% to 130%
Revenue for target pay iconRevenue for target pay$1.8M
Business difficulty iconBusiness difficultyHard

Want to test your owner pay?

Owner income calculator

Estimate owner take-home and the gap to target pay from revenue, margin, payroll, overhead, reserves, and target pay.

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86%
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Planning note: Research-based planning estimate only. It is not guaranteed salary, tax advice, or owner distribution advice.



How do you check owner income in the financial model?

The Midwifery Practice Financial Model Template shows revenue, margin, costs, reserves, and owner take-home as a planning aid—open the model.

Owner-income model highlights

  • Owner pay scenarios
  • Revenue: $118M to $489M
  • Payroll: $520k to $975k
  • Fixed overhead: $1.608M flat
Midwifery Practice Financial Model dashboard summarizes key KPIs, runway, cash and performance with a dynamic dashboard, helping spot cash-flow blind spots and present investor-ready metrics.

How do you grow midwifery practice income?


A Midwifery Practice grows income by collecting more volume per clinician, not just by chasing more demand. Here’s the quick math: revenue rises from $118M to $489M as staff midwives increase from 1 to 4, maternity package pricing moves from $6,000 to $6,500, and capacity improves from 650% to 800%. Payroll also rises from $520k to $975k, so added clinicians only help if utilization and collections stay strong.

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Volume drives growth

  • More staff midwives lift collected output
  • Pricing moves from $6,000 to $6,500
  • Capacity rises from 650% to 800%
  • Payroll grows from $520k to $975k
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Watch the bottlenecks

  • Utilization must keep pace
  • Collections must stay clean
  • Billing delays can eat gains
  • Admin and call coverage matter

Service expansion into lactation, childbirth education, and postpartum care adds $2,142k in Year 1 and $6,138k in Year 5. But if billing, call coverage, or admin systems lag, the added complexity can absorb the gain.

How many births does a midwifery practice need?


A Midwifery Practice needs about 132 package equivalents a year, or roughly 11 a month, to cover year-one payroll and fixed overhead of $680.8k. At $6,000 per maternity package and the stated 86% contribution margin, break-even revenue is about $791.6k; lactation, education, and postpartum add-ons can lower the pure birth count needed.

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Break-even math

  • $680.8k year-one fixed load
  • $120k lead-midwife director salary
  • 86% contribution margin stated
  • 132 packages needed yearly
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Volume levers

  • Add lactation services
  • Add education visits
  • Add postpartum follow-ups
  • Sell more per family

Can a solo midwife make a living?


Yes, a solo midwife can make a living in a Midwifery Practice if paid capacity holds and overhead stays disciplined; see What Is The Current Growth Rate For Midwifery Practice? for growth context. In the model, 56 packages/month at $6,000 equals $4.032M/year before shared overhead, but that is a capacity output, not a safe staffing target.

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Solo math

  • 8 monthly maternity slots base capacity
  • 700% Year 1 capacity assumption
  • 56 packages per month modeled
  • 672 packages per year modeled
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Take-home risks

  • Subtract rent and utilities
  • Budget backup coverage
  • Price malpractice insurance
  • Protect unpaid on-call time



Want to see the six main income drivers?

1

Client Volume

161-658

More maternity packages lift revenue fastest; the model grows from 161 in Year 1 to 658 in Year 5, so intake sets take-home.

2

Package Price

$6.0K-$6.5K

Each package starts at $6,000 and reaches $6,500, so small price gains scale across every birth case.

3

Payroll Load

$520K-$975K

Payroll rises hard as staff grows, so scheduling and call coverage decide how much revenue survives after labor.

4

Add-On Volume

150-172/mo

Lactation, education, and postpartum visits add billable volume, and they help spread fixed costs across more revenue.

5

Liability Cost

$30K

Malpractice insurance alone is $30K a year, and sloppy payer mix or billing can add write-offs on top.

6

Rent Load

$96K

Facility rent runs $96K a year, so empty space hurts margin while full schedules improve it.


Midwifery Practice Core Six Income Drivers



Client Volume And Birth Capacity


Client Volume And Birth Capacity

Client volume is the main revenue lever because maternity packages drive most income. Here’s the quick math: 1,608 × $6,000 = $9,648,000 of collected maternity revenue in Year 1. More bookings only pay off when the calendar can hold them.

Track Capacity Before You Add Due Dates

Track due-date clustering, on-call time, safe caseload, backup coverage, and admin close rate. By Year 5, volume reaches 6,576 packages, so staffing has to scale with births or extra demand turns into overtime, missed follow-up, and weaker owner pay.

  • Watch booked due dates weekly
  • Cap caseload by safe coverage
  • Close charts and follow-up fast
1


Average Collections Per Client


Average Collections Per Client

Average collections per client is the cash the practice actually keeps per client across maternity and add-on services. In Year 1, the model uses $6,000 for maternity care, $200 for lactation, $400 for childbirth education, and $150 for postpartum nursing. Higher collected price lifts contribution margin right away, so this driver can move owner pay faster than volume changes.

By Year 5, collected prices rise to $6,500, $220, $420, and $160. That is a 8.3%, 10.0%, 5.0%, and 6.7% increase from Year 1. These are blended collected amounts, not guaranteed reimbursement, so the real result depends on payer mix, allowed amount, timing, and write-offs.

Track collected revenue per client

Here’s the quick math: total cash collections divided by completed clients. Watch package price, allowed amount, collection timing, write-offs, and postpartum add-on attachment. If attachment slips, owner income drops even when visit volume stays flat.

  • Total cash per client
  • Write-off rate
  • Days to collect
  • Add-on attachment rate
  • Denied claims share

Test each payer group separately. Self-pay often gives cleaner cash, while commercial and public payers can raise admin work and delay money. If collections are late, profit may look fine on paper but the owner still feels the squeeze on payroll and draw timing.

2


Payer Mix And Collection Reliability


Payer Mix and Cash Collection

Payer mix changes how much cash actually lands, not just the sticker price. In this model, the key inputs are the share of self-pay, commercial insurance, and Medicaid, plus collected rate, denial rate, write-offs, and days to collect. A cleaner self-pay mix can speed cash, but it may cap demand. Commercial coverage can lift collections, but it usually brings more billing work and slower payment.

Use the average collected amount, not a state contract rate, because Medicaid economics vary by state and contract terms. One-liner: better payer mix can raise owner pay only if collection speed stays high and bad debt stays low. If a payer mix adds denials or 45-90 day delays, the practice may show profit on paper while cash for payroll and owner draws gets tight.

Track Collection Reliability

Track collected revenue by payer, not just scheduled charges. Measure collection rate, denial rate, adjustment rate, and days sales outstanding (DSO), the average days to collect. Split the view by maternity, lactation, education, and postpartum lines so you can see where payer friction hits the most.

  • Watch payer-level cash timing.
  • Separate denials from write-offs.
  • Reforecast owner draw monthly.

If self-pay demand softens, test a mixed payer strategy carefully. Commercial plans may lift gross collections, but they can also add claim follow-up and delay owner pay. This is not billing, credentialing, or legal advice. What gets collected is what pays salaries.

3


Staffing, Coverage, And Owner Clinical Role


Clinical Coverage Cost

Payroll is the biggest cost here, so staffing choices move owner income fast. Year 1 payroll is $520k with 1 lead midwife director, 1 staff midwife, 1 lactation consultant, 1 childbirth educator, 1 postpartum nurse, 1 practice manager, and 1 administrative assistant. Year 5 payroll reaches $975k with 4 staff midwives, 2 lactation consultants, 2 postpartum nurses, and 2 admin assistants.

Owner-led care keeps margin per client higher, but only if the schedule stays full. Here’s the quick math: payroll rises by $455k, or about 87.5%, so added staff must unlock more booked care, not just more overhead. If utilization lags, cash flow tightens and the owner’s take-home drops. If coverage absorbs more visits and births, profit can grow without the owner carrying every on-call shift.

Track Utilization, Not Just Headcount

Measure labor against booked care. Track midwife hours, on-call coverage, client volume, and add-on service volume so each role earns its wage. The key inputs are staffing mix, utilization, owner clinical hours, and backup coverage. One clean rule: hire for demand, not for comfort.

  • Watch booked visits weekly.
  • Compare owner time to staff time.
  • Stress test payroll at low utilization.

What this hides: if coverage is thin, the owner fills gaps with unpaid clinical work, and take-home falls even when revenue looks fine. If utilization stays high, added staff can support more clients and protect margin while reducing on-call strain.

4


Malpractice, Compliance, And Clinical Operating Costs


Malpractice And Clinical Overhead

This driver is pure margin pressure: it does not raise revenue, but it sets the floor for safe care. The model carries malpractice and liability insurance at $25k per month, and fixed overhead totals $1.608M per year. Clinical COGS is 60% of revenue in Year 1 and 50% in Year 5, so owner pay depends on volume outrunning these required costs.

Clinical COGS includes medical supplies, pharmaceuticals, and equipment upkeep. It also includes documentation, licensing, insurance, emergency readiness, and charting software. Here’s the quick math: at 60% COGS, only 40% of revenue covers fixed overhead and profit; with $1.608M fixed overhead, break-even is about $4.02M in annual revenue.

Track COGS And Coverage

Measure this monthly as clinical COGS %, insurance cost, and fixed overhead per client. If COGS stays near 60%, every pricing or volume miss hits the owner’s draw fast. Track supply use, medication spend, charting time, and compliance hours so you can see where margin leaks are coming from before they turn into cash strain.

Keep the focus on control, not cuts. Test whether better ordering, cleaner charting, and tighter emergency prep reduce waste without risking care quality. By Year 5, 50% COGS leaves 50% gross margin, so the owner gets paid more only if revenue grows faster than the $1.608M overhead base and the monthly insurance load.

5


Facility Model And Service Mix


Facility Mix Drives Margin

The facility mix sets how much revenue each room and staff hour can carry. With $8k monthly rent ($96k a year) plus utilities, maintenance, insurance, software, supplies, and licenses, low volume can squeeze owner pay fast. The add-on lines—lactation, childbirth education, and postpartum nursing—are modeled at $2,142k in Year 1 and $6,138k in Year 5, so service mix matters as much as the birth schedule.

A birth-center-style facility needs enough visits, classes, and postpartum care to cover fixed space and staffing. One clean rule: if the room is empty, the rent still shows up. Expansion only helps when scope of practice, staffing, utilization, and collected price all move together; otherwise revenue rises, but complexity and cash strain rise too.

Fill the Room Before You Add More

Track booked visits, class fill rate, postpartum nursing hours, and collections by service. Compare those numbers to rent and payroll so you can see whether add-ons are paying for the space. The core test is simple: does each new service line cover its share of fixed cost and still leave cash for owner draw?

  • Track room utilization by week.
  • Track collected price, not list price.
  • Track no-shows and billing lag.
  • Keep services inside licensed scope.

If service growth outpaces staffing, on-call coverage, or billing follow-through, profit can stall even when sales look strong. Keep the mix tight, because more services only help when they are filled, billed, and collected on time.

6



Compare low, base, and high owner-income scenarios

Owner income scenarios

Owner income changes fast in this clinic because revenue depends on visit volume, staffing coverage, and service mix. More providers can grow cash flow, but payroll and admin load rise too.

Low, base, and high cases show how the same practice can produce very different owner pay.
Scenario Low CaseDownside Base CaseBase High CaseUpside
Launch model This is the lower earnings path, using first-year volume and a tight staffing plan. This is the middle path, using Year 3 volume and a more balanced clinic load. This is the stronger earnings path, using Year 5 volume and fuller utilization.
Typical setup Year 1 assumes about $1.18M revenue, about $520k payroll, and about 28.3% EBITDA margin, with fixed overhead and admin still pressuring owner pay. Year 3 assumes about $3.25M revenue, about $775k payroll, and about 58.6% EBITDA margin, with stronger owner pay if coverage stays stable. Year 5 assumes about $4.89M revenue, about $975k payroll, and about 65.3% EBITDA margin, with higher owner pay only if coverage and referrals stay strong.
Cost drivers
  • Single midwife core
  • lean support staff
  • slower visits
  • high fixed overhead
  • thin admin buffer
  • More visit volume
  • wider care mix
  • higher staffing
  • payer mix shift
  • rising admin load
  • Fuller coverage
  • more postpartum support
  • higher utilization
  • heavier admin load
  • more referral coordination
Owner income rangeBefore owner reserves $253k - $453kLower take-home $1.73M - $2.02MMidrange take-home $2.90M - $3.31MUpper take-home
Best fit Use this to stress-test a slow launch or a weaker payer mix. Use this for a steady clinic that can hold staffing and visit flow. Use this to test upside when the practice can keep coverage full.

Planning note: These scenario ranges are researched planning assumptions, not guaranteed earnings, salary promises, tax advice, or distributions.

Frequently Asked Questions

This model shows about $453k of first-year owner-pay capacity before tax That includes the $120k lead-midwife director salary plus about $333k of EBITDA The result depends on $118M in revenue, $520k payroll, $1608k fixed overhead, and actual collections