Running a practice
Your guide to revenue protection when accepting insurance as a group practice
Here’s what to know about addressing revenue disruptions.
September 26, 2025
5 min read
As a group practice leader, you’re not only working to secure your own financial health — you also have an entire business and team to think about. With so many people relying on the practice’s profitability, operational and financial stability are key.
If your practice accepts insurance, however, stability can feel elusive. Even if you think you’ve done everything perfectly, you may be surprised by a rejected claim, clawback, or delayed payment at any time. And since most of the systems on which therapeutic practices rely don’t protect against these scenarios, you may be left to deal with these stressful hiccups on your own.
Choosing the right partner, however, can protect your group practice from these unfortunate incidents, addressing revenue disruptions before they turn into business disasters.
What group practices need from a billing and insurance partner
Group practices need each of their therapists to get credentialed efficiently, see plenty of clients, and bring in reliable payments. That’s not just to pad the bottom line, but to reach financial security for the benefit of everyone involved.
“I need to have predictable income so I can pay my therapists,” says Kira Torre, LMFT, chief clinical officer at Ever After Therapy, a group practice in California. “Predictable income means I need to know when I’m getting paid. I need to get paid on a regular basis so I can pay them, and also I need protection from clawbacks and denials.”
As any therapist who takes insurance knows, even the best-laid plans can go awry. Credentialing can take longer than expected. Claims can be rejected. Billing systems can fail. And when these issues pop up, ripple effects may extend throughout an entire practice, with a group practice leader struggling to manage financial problems while still maintaining payroll and other vital expenses. Ever After leans on Headway to avoid the scramble, Torre says.
When new providers join a practice, they can get onboarded and credentialed through Headway in as few as 30 days. Once they start seeing clients, they enjoy enhanced reimbursement rates thanks to Headway’s deep relationships with top payers. And when it comes time to bill, Headway streamlines the logistics so everyone can count on consistent, competitive bi-weekly pay.
Headway’s cohesive, all-in-one platform is even built to reduce the chances of disruptions like claim denials. When practitioners take advantage of resources like Headway’s compliant documentation templates, keeping progress notes flows seamlessly into submitting airtight claims. But if issues like denials, clawbacks, or outages do come up, Headway’s team is there to provide support throughout the process to help ensure you continue to get paid for your practice's work. Headway’s platform is built to help group practices easily accept insurance at scale, with minimal overhead costs and less administrative stress.
Practice in-network with confidence
Simplify insurance and save time on your entire workflow — from compliance and billing to credentialing and admin.
What revenue protection actually means
All the budgets and financial projections in the world won’t do any good if you can’t count on actually receiving the money you’re supposed to make. And unfortunately, that’s not an unlikely scenario in the behavioral health field.
Therapists who accept insurance make the field more accessible for everyone, but working with insurance plans has its headaches. Claims can be rejected or delayed for all sorts of reasons, from documentation and coding issues to insurers arguing that services rendered were unnecessary. Claims that have already been paid out can even be “clawed back” — meaning the insurer recaptures the payment because they retroactively find errors or decide the service should not have been covered in the first place.
When claims are not reimbursed as expected, practices can experience “revenue gaps,” or shortcomings in actual versus expected revenue. That’s where revenue protection comes into the picture.
Revenue gaps can be catastrophic for any provider, but they are often especially disruptive to a group practice managing lots of overhead and a full staff. “If it was just me, I might have time to organize my life” in the face of a financial disruption and scramble to make up the gap, Torre says. But an ethical group practice leader can’t expect their staff to do the same, nor would they want revenue issues to impact client care. Ongoing problems with insurance or claims may impact how you’re able to see your client, creating unwanted disruptions that go beyond your bottom line.
In a group practice setting, revenue protection isn’t just about profit margins; it’s about making sure that your entire team is paid fairly and promptly, ensuring their well-being and continued ability to show up for patients. Group practice leaders need to work with systems that have their backs, Torre says.
A real-world example: the 2024 Change Healthcare outage
In February 2024, Change Healthcare — which works with insurance companies to process one out of every three pharmacy, medical, and mental health benefits and claims in the U.S. — was down for all customers. This meant that healthcare providers and companies that relied on Change Healthcare were unable to verify benefits, submit claims, or receive payments. This exposed a critical weakness in the industry.
Headway stepped in to make sure care could continue. We relied on technology we built in the event of a temporary outage and fronted provider payments throughout the months-long outage. Headway continued to pay providers on a predictable schedule and protected payments from clawbacks while systems were restored.
Why this matters when hiring, scaling, and planning ahead
Payroll is a major expense for businesses across industries. In a mental health group practice, bringing on new providers can of course boost revenue — but it can also be a financial risk, since there may be a delay between when clinicians come on board and when they are fully credentialed and at client capacity. Plus, another person on the payroll is another person potentially affected by issues like revenue gaps and clawbacks.
That’s just one more reason why revenue protection is so important for group practices. When your practice can depend on predictable income, it becomes much easier to hire with confidence. When you know you’ll be able to pay your staff and keep the lights on, no matter what curveballs insurance throws your way, you can plan ahead for exciting growth opportunities like an expanding team or new service offerings — not to mention your ability to sustainably provide great care to your clients. Scaling shouldn’t mean putting your bottom line in jeopardy.
Protect your practice’s revenue with Headway
Working with insurance is vital, but sometimes unpredictable. Headway is here to remove the guesswork and allow your group practice to function to its fullest. With a fast credentialing process for new providers, enhanced reimbursement rates for therapists throughout your practice, and a guaranteed biweekly pay structure, we give your group practice the tools it needs to scale with confidence — and without unexpected revenue gaps.
This content is for general informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute clinical, legal, financial, or professional advice. All decisions should be made at the discretion of the individual or organization, in consultation with qualified clinical, legal, or other appropriate professionals.
© 2025 Therapymatch, Inc. dba Headway. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced without permission.
Running a practice
When can a therapist break confidentiality, as mandated reporters?
While therapists have an essential responsibility as mandated reporters, it’s challenging to navigate. Learn when a therapist can and must break confidentiality.
9 therapist referral networks for finding new clients
Here’s how to find and schedule more clients using therapist referral networks and online directories.
How to have a great 15-minute therapy consultation
There’s no official guidebook for this important milestone in the therapy journey, but here’s a start for structuring it.