How Much Does a Neurofeedback Therapy Practice Owner Make? $284k Model
You’re not just asking about session fees you’re asking what cash may be left for the owner This US neurofeedback practice model covers $683k monthly revenue, 910% gross margin before overhead, visible payroll, fixed costs, reserves, and owner take-home assumptions for planning only, not guaranteed salary, tax advice, or required distributions
What could your practice pay you?
Owner income calculator
Estimate owner take-home and the target-pay gap from revenue, margin, costs, reserves, and target pay.
Planning note: This is a researched planning estimate only. It is not guaranteed salary, tax advice, or owner distribution advice.
Want to test the full Neurofeedback Therapy model?
Yes — open the Neurofeedback Therapy Financial Model Template to review dashboard, revenue build-up, session assumptions, staffing, equipment, overhead, marketing, reserves, and owner-income outputs.
What the model should show
- Owner take-home outputs
- Revenue and profit trends
- Utilization and break-even
- Scenario tests by volume
How much can a neurofeedback practice owner take home?
A Neurofeedback Therapy owner’s realistic take-home depends on the role they fill: treating clients, managing the clinic, or hiring a director. In the first-year model, pre-tax operating profit is $28k–$43k after visible payroll, fixed overhead, and 90% direct variable costs; for context, track profit beside What Is The Main Indicator Of Success For Neurofeedback Therapy?.
Owner take-home
- $28k–$43k pre-tax operating profit
- $120k director salary is labor pay
- Owner-operator income can mix salary and profit
- Hired director reduces owner distribution capacity
Cash limits
- Pay taxes before personal take-home
- Hold reserves before distributions
- Subtract debt payments and reinvestment
- Watch unlisted staff costs closely
How many neurofeedback sessions are needed to make a living?
For Neurofeedback Therapy, the break-even point is about 215 completed sessions per month against the model’s $385k in monthly payroll and fixed overhead; to cover owner pay, taxes, and reserves, the target is closer to 270 sessions per month. Here’s the quick math: price, payer mix, utilization, no-shows, and staffing all move the session count. At the model’s stated 3,465 completed sessions per month, volume is well above break-even.
Break-even drivers
- 215 sessions covers fixed cost.
- 270 sessions supports owner pay.
- $385k monthly overhead sets the floor.
- No-shows cut completed sessions fast.
What moves the number
- Price changes needed sessions.
- Payer mix changes cash collected.
- Utilization drives weekly output.
- Staffing limits session capacity.
What affects neurofeedback practice profit margin?
If you’re running Neurofeedback Therapy, margin gets squeezed fast because the cost stack is heavy: 20% consumables, 15% specialized software use, 25% payment processing, and 30% referral commissions. For setup and early operating costs, see How Much Does It Cost To Open And Launch Your Neurofeedback Therapy Business?. The big profit lever is utilization, because every empty appointment still carries rent and salary cost.
Variable cost drivers
- 20% consumables cut margin
- 15% software use adds overhead
- 25% payment fees are steep
- 30% referral commissions bite hard
Fixed cost pressure
- $85k monthly overhead is high
- $55k clinic lease anchors costs
- $10k marketing is visible fixed spend
- $3.6M annual payroll raises break-even
Want the six income levers?
Session Volume
More completed sessions add revenue first, and the model starts at about 560 billable sessions a month.
Weighted Fee
Your weighted fee drives cash per visit, so payer mix can lift or cut take-home fast.
Utilization
Fill rates from 50% to 88% decide how much staff time turns into billable work.
Staffing Mix
Payroll swings from about $400K to $1.39M a year, so clinician mix sets the cost base.
Fixed Overhead
Lease, utilities, insurance, software, and admin run about $8.5K a month, which sets the break-even floor.
Acquisition Cost
Marketing at $1K a month plus 3.0% referral fees changes how much growth you keep before taxes and reserves.
Neurofeedback Therapy Core Six Income Drivers
Paid Completed Session Volume
Paid Completed Session Volume
Completed sessions are the revenue engine here. At 3,465 completed sessions per month, the model shows about $683,000 in monthly revenue, so each lost session cuts revenue by about $197 before variable costs ($683,000 ÷ 3,465). Cancellations and no-shows hurt twice: they reduce cash coming in, and rent and payroll still stay fixed. If volume slips, owner pay drops fast.
Track Completion Rate, Not Just Bookings
Measure booked sessions, completed sessions, cancellation rate, no-shows, and room-practitioner hours used. Capacity is capped by providers, rooms, and scheduling hours, so the real driver is how many paid visits actually get finished. One clean rule: if completion rate falls, break-even moves out. Protect the schedule with confirmations, waitlists, and same-week fill-ins so fixed costs get spread over more billable sessions.
Average Fee And Payer Mix
Average Fee and Payer Mix
Revenue per visit changes the day you change the price or the payer mix. In the first-year model, the weighted average fee is about $197.23 across specialist sessions, QEEG brain mapping, biofeedback, clinical psychologist sessions, and lead practitioner sessions, with listed prices from $130 to $350. At 3,465 completed sessions a month, that mix supports about $683k in monthly revenue before variable costs.
What this hides is simple: the same appointment slot can pay very differently. Cash-pay, insurance reimbursement, discounts, and package pricing change realized revenue, cash timing, and margin. If your average realized fee slips by just $10 per visit, monthly revenue falls by about $34.7k at 3,465 sessions, which can cut owner draw fast when payroll and rent stay fixed.
Track Realized Fee, Not List Price
Measure realized fee per completed session by service type, payer type, and package. Here’s the quick math: realized revenue = completed sessions × average collected fee. If pricing changes but session volume stays flat, profit can still swing hard because the fee mix drives cash in immediately. Do not treat pricing as billing advice; track what actually lands in the bank.
- Split cash-pay and insurance
- Track discounts by service
- Watch package redemption rates
- Compare price by practitioner
Test whether higher-priced visits hold volume, then keep the mix that raises collected revenue without slowing bookings. If packages lower upfront cash too much, owner pay gets tighter even when booked revenue looks strong.
Provider Capacity And Owner Labor
Owner Time Allocation
Owner income in a neurofeedback practice depends on whether time is spent in chair or in the office. The first-year model shows 500% utilization for the lead practitioner and 700% for the QEEG brain mapper, so the owner’s hours are either billable capacity or management capacity, not both at once.
If the owner treats clients, part of take-home is earned provider pay. If the owner manages staff, income depends more on margin after payroll, because wages, rent, and scheduling costs keep running even when the owner is not seeing clients. This driver is high impact because one hour moved from treatment to management changes both revenue and profit.
Track Billable Versus Admin Hours
Here’s the quick math: owner pay should be separated into clinical labor and profit draw. Track booked client hours, admin hours, and payroll load each week, then test whether the owner makes more by seeing clients or by supervising staff. If the owner is the bottleneck, every unpaid hour hurts take-home.
- Track owner billable hours weekly.
- Track staff payroll against booked sessions.
- Compare provider pay to profit draw.
- Watch utilization by role, not just total.
- Model coverage for cancellations and no-shows.
Staffing Model And Payroll
Booked Hours vs Payroll
For a staffed neurofeedback practice, payroll only improves income when added provider hours stay booked. First-year payroll is $3.6 million, or about $300,000 a month: $1.2 million for the clinic director, $1.7 million for two neurofeedback specialists, and $700,000 for one QEEG (quantitative EEG) brain mapper.
At $683,000 monthly revenue, payroll alone uses about 44% of sales before rent and other overhead. The inputs that matter are headcount, salary, booked sessions, and role-level utilization. If hiring adds capacity before the calendar fills, margin falls fast, and one underused full-time role can erase owner draw.
Hire Only After the Calendar Holds
Track booked hours per provider, no-show rate, and payroll as a share of revenue every week. A new hire should come after current staff stay consistently booked, not after demand looks good on paper. If the schedule is thin, the new salary becomes fixed cost, not profit.
- Track hours booked by role.
- Watch payroll versus monthly revenue.
- Test part-time before full-time.
- Fill schedules before adding staff.
Use staffing to protect cash flow. Director time should raise throughput, and specialist or mapper time should turn into completed sessions. If utilization slips, pause hiring and fix scheduling first, because payroll starts before every appointment slot is full.
Fixed Overhead And Equipment Burden
Fixed Overhead Sets the Floor
Fixed overhead is the monthly bill you owe before one more session helps you. Here, the floor is $85k per month, led by a $55k lease, $10k marketing, $800 utilities, $450 liability insurance, $350 software, $150 website costs, and $250 supplies and maintenance. The named items total $67k, so the rest has to be recurring cash needs or equipment burden.
Track the Cash Floor Weekly
- Lease, utilities, insurance
- Software, website, supplies
- Marketing and equipment reserves
Track fixed cash burn against completed sessions and average fee. The quick math is simple: if revenue slips, the $85k floor does not. That hits owner pay fast, because profit only shows up after fixed costs are covered. Use a monthly break-even check and compare it with booked sessions, cancellations, and no-shows.
Also model equipment, maintenance, software, and reserves as recurring cash needs where they apply. If you skip those costs to protect cash, the practice may look stronger on paper than it is in bank balance terms. That gap can delay owner draws even when revenue is growing.
Client Acquisition And Retention
Client Acquisition and Retention
Acquisition controls how fast the schedule fills, and retention controls how many booked visits turn into paid completed sessions. With $10k/month of marketing spend and 30% first-year referral commissions on referred revenue, weak conversion or drop-off cuts cash fast while rent and payroll stay fixed.
Here’s the quick math: revenue starts with leads, then booked consultations, then conversion rate, then completed sessions. If package adherence slips, revenue falls even when inquiry volume looks healthy. The owner’s take-home income depends on completed sessions, not inquiries, so no-shows and early churn hit profit twice: less revenue and slower break-even.
Tighten the funnel, not just the ad spend
Track lead source, consult booked rate, consult-to-start rate, completed sessions per client, and package adherence by source. That shows which channels actually fund owner pay. A channel that books cheaply but does not convert is still expensive if the session schedule stays open.
- Review cancellations weekly.
- Compare referral sources monthly.
- Cap spend at $10k.
- Keep claims about process only.
Use the list above to keep acquisition tied to cash, not vanity volume. If referral flow is stable, this driver matters less than in ramp-up, but retention still protects margin because the business earns on completed sessions, not inquiries.
Compare lean, base, and high-utilization owner-income cases
Owner income scenarios
Owner income moves with utilization, staffing density, and fixed clinic overhead. Low, base, and high cases show how faster session growth can lift profit once the clinic fills.
| Scenario | Low CaseLow Case | Base CaseBase Case | High CaseHigh Case |
|---|---|---|---|
| Launch model | This is the lower earnings path with Year 1 assumptions. | This is the modeled middle path with Year 2 assumptions. | This is the stronger earnings path with Year 3 assumptions. |
| Typical setup | Year 1 runs on 2 neurofeedback specialists, 1 QEEG mapper, 1 biofeedback therapist, 1 clinical psychologist, and 1 lead practitioner, with 560 monthly treatments and the heaviest setup drag. | Year 2 lifts staffing to 3 neurofeedback specialists, 1 QEEG mapper, 2 biofeedback therapists, 1 clinical psychologist, and 1 lead practitioner, with 830 monthly treatments and better spread of fixed costs. | Year 3 scales to 5 neurofeedback specialists, 2 QEEG mappers, 3 biofeedback therapists, 2 clinical psychologists, and 1 lead practitioner, with 1,420 monthly treatments and the strongest profit base. |
| Cost drivers |
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|
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| Owner income rangeBefore owner reserves | $160k - $200kLow Case | $325k - $400kBase Case | $1.0M - $1.2MHigh Case |
| Best fit | Best for a launch plan that stress-tests Year 1 owner income around the $182k EBITDA baseline. | Best for a steady clinic that wants to pressure-test owner income around the $358k EBITDA baseline. | Best for testing upside when high utilization holds and reserves trim owner distributions instead of operating profit. |
Planning note: Scenario ranges are researched planning assumptions, not guaranteed earnings, salary promises, tax advice, or distributions, and they exclude taxes, debt service, and payroll not visible in the provided data.
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Frequently Asked Questions
In the first-year model, revenue is $683k per month, but owner income starts after costs Direct variable costs take 90%, fixed overhead is $85k per month, and visible payroll is $3600k per year That leaves about $2843k in pre-tax operating profit before debt, reserves, taxes, and any costs not shown