The transition from solo private practice to a small group is the single least-discussed stage of behavioral health practice ownership. The clinical training prepares you for the work. The business literature is built for either lifestyle solo practice or 100-clinician multi-state platforms. The five-to-fifteen-clinician range — where most thriving Oregon outpatient practices actually live &
An ordinary 4-clinician outpatient behavioral health practice in Oregon, billing primarily commercial insurance, books between $480,000 and $620,000 in annual gross production. The same practice, badly run on the revenue side, collects 60 to 70 percent of that. The gap — somewhere between $120,000 and $250,000 a year — is rarely visible as a number on a single statement. It evaporates
Running a single-member LLC like CUTI LLC is about more than just being your own boss; it is about designing a life that actively prevents clinical burnout while aggressively building long-term wealth. In the mental health and private practice space, practitioners are navigating rising caseloads, heavier trauma presentations, and record levels of burnout. Many therapists at agencies or large group
Most solo and small-group behavioral health practices in Oregon make the same five licensing mistakes — not because they don't care, but because the licensing landscape was built for clinical individuals first and businesses second. The moment a clinician adds a second therapist, an associate-level supervisee, an outpatient program, or a service line, the licensing math changes in ways that
Oregon Advantage
Oregon leads the nation in access to psychedelic-assisted and integrative mental health therapies.