Why Therapists Need Administrative Help
Running a private therapy practice means wearing two hats: clinician and office manager. Most therapists spend 10 to 15 hours per week on administrative work — intake coordination, scheduling, insurance verification, and billing — time that could be spent with clients or simply resting.
A virtual assistant (VA) trained in mental health administration can step in to handle these tasks with minimal oversight, freeing you to focus on what matters most: your clients.
What a VA Can Handle for Your Therapy Practice
Intake Coordination
New client intake is often the most time-intensive administrative process in a therapy practice. A VA can:
- Send intake forms via your preferred EHR or intake software (SimplePractice, TherapyNotes, etc.)
- Follow up with incomplete submissions
- Verify insurance eligibility before the first session
- Collect consent forms, ROI documents, and payment information
- Add client records to your system accurately
The VA doesn't conduct therapy or assess clients — that remains your role. But they can ensure every new client walks into their first session fully onboarded.
Scheduling and Calendar Management
Scheduling conflicts and no-shows cost practices thousands of dollars annually. A VA can:
- Manage your appointment calendar and fill open slots
- Send appointment reminders via text or email
- Handle reschedule requests and cancellations
- Maintain a waitlist and reach out to fill last-minute openings
- Schedule consultations for prospective clients
- Block time for documentation, supervision, and breaks
With a dedicated VA managing your calendar, you won't be surprised by double bookings or gaps in your schedule.
Billing Support
Billing is where most solo and small-group practices hemorrhage time. A VA trained in mental health billing can handle:
- Submitting insurance claims through your clearinghouse
- Following up on denied or pending claims
- Posting payments and reconciling accounts
- Sending client invoices and payment reminders
- Running end-of-month billing reports
- Verifying benefits and deductibles at the start of each year
Note: Your VA should understand HIPAA requirements and sign a Business Associate Agreement (BAA) before accessing any protected health information (PHI). For guidance on finding HIPAA-compliant support, see our article on how to find a HIPAA-certified virtual assistant for your counseling practice.
Comparison: Tasks You Should Keep vs. Delegate
| Task | Keep | Delegate to VA |
|---|---|---|
| Clinical assessment | Yes | No |
| Session notes (SOAP) | Yes | No |
| Treatment planning | Yes | No |
| Intake form distribution | No | Yes |
| Insurance verification | No | Yes |
| Appointment reminders | No | Yes |
| Billing submissions | No | Yes |
| Payment posting | No | Yes |
| Responding to general inquiries | No | Yes |
Getting Started: What Your VA Needs
Before your VA can begin, prepare the following:
- Access credentials — Add them as a limited user in your EHR system (never share your primary login)
- A signed BAA — Required under HIPAA before they touch any PHI
- Process documentation — A simple SOP (standard operating procedure) for intake, scheduling, and billing steps
- Communication preferences — How and when you want updates (e.g., daily summary email)
- Escalation criteria — What situations require your direct attention (e.g., crisis disclosures, billing disputes over $X)
Most VAs can be fully operational within one to two weeks if provided clear documentation.
Time Savings: A Real-World Example
A solo practitioner running a 25-session-per-week practice typically spends:
- 3 hours/week on intake
- 4 hours/week on scheduling and reminders
- 5 hours/week on billing and insurance
- 2 hours/week on general admin emails
That's 14 hours per week — over half a clinical day. A VA handling 80% of these tasks can return 10+ hours per week, which at a $200/session rate equals $2,000 or more in recovered billable time.
Choosing the Right VA for Your Practice
Not all virtual assistants have healthcare experience. When hiring, look for:
- Prior experience with mental health EHR platforms (SimplePractice, TherapyNotes, Jane App)
- Knowledge of CPT codes commonly used in mental health billing (90837, 90834, 90791, etc.)
- Familiarity with insurance verification processes
- Willingness to sign a HIPAA BAA
- References from healthcare or mental health practices
Ask candidates to walk through how they would handle a new client intake from referral to first session. Their answer will reveal their experience level quickly.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Sharing your EHR login directly — Always use role-based access
- Skipping the BAA — This is a legal requirement under HIPAA
- Hiring a generalist for a specialized role — Mental health billing is distinct from general billing
- Delegating without SOPs — VAs work best with clear, documented procedures
- No oversight in the first 30 days — Review their work weekly until trust is established
Ready to Hire?
Administrative overload is one of the top reasons therapists experience burnout and cut back their caseloads. A trained VA can take intake, scheduling, and billing off your plate entirely. Ready to hire a virtual assistant? Virtual Assistant VA connects you with trained VAs who specialize in mental health practice administration — so you can see more clients, reduce stress, and build the practice you envisioned.