Revenue Cycle Management for Behavioral Health
Behavioral health revenue cycle management operates differently from medical and surgical specialties because of the session-based service model, lower per-claim values, and the ongoing nature of patient relationships. A therapist generating $95 per session at 25 sessions per week produces approximately $10,000 in weekly revenue per provider. At that per-session value, collection rate and denial rate have a direct and visible impact on practice viability.
Revenue Per Session
Average revenue per session is the most important behavioral health-specific KPI. The benchmark range is $85 to $140 per session for individual psychotherapy, depending on payer mix and code distribution. Practices averaging below $80 per session are likely defaulting to 90832 (shorter session) when documentation supports 90834 or 90837, or they have a payer mix heavily weighted toward low-reimbursement plans.
Track revenue per session by provider and by payer. Variations between providers may indicate coding inconsistency. A therapist billing primarily 90834 will average lower revenue per session than one billing a mix of 90834 and 90837, even with identical clinical skill. The question is whether the documentation supports the longer session codes.
Days in Accounts Receivable
AR days for behavioral health should be 25 to 32 days. Behavioral health claims are relatively simple (single service, single diagnosis), so adjudication should be faster than multi-line surgical claims. Practices running above 38 days typically have authorization-related denials creating rework delays or have payer-specific payment bottlenecks.
Break AR aging by payer and by authorization status. If claims with valid authorization are paid in 20 days but claims requiring re-authorization average 45 days, the re-authorization workflow is the bottleneck, not the billing process itself.
No-Show and Cancellation Impact
No-show and late cancellation rates directly affect behavioral health revenue in a way that does not apply to most medical specialties. A therapist with 25 scheduled sessions per week and a 12% no-show rate loses 3 sessions per week, or approximately $285 to $420 in weekly revenue. No-show rates above 10% require intervention: reminder systems, no-show policies, and waitlist management to fill cancelled slots.
Track no-show rates by day of week, time of day, and modality (in-person vs. telehealth). Many practices find that telehealth sessions have lower no-show rates than in-person visits. Shifting high-risk appointment slots to telehealth can reduce the no-show rate without changing the patient panel.
Authorization Utilization Rate
This KPI measures what percentage of authorized sessions are actually used. If a payer authorizes 12 sessions and the patient completes only 8, the utilization rate is 67%. Low utilization rates indicate patient dropout, scheduling gaps, or authorization obtained for sessions that were not clinically needed. The target utilization rate is 85% or higher.
Collection Rate
Net collection rate for behavioral health should be 94% or higher. Patient responsibility collection is a significant component because behavioral health copays ($30-50 per session) and deductible application create substantial patient balances over a course of treatment. A patient receiving weekly therapy at $40 copay accumulates $160 per month in copays. Collecting at point of service is essential.