
Own your brand vs. rent a network: the real economics
Key takeaways
- Networks charge 20–30% of billing revenue per session — not a one-time fee
- Independent credentialing takes 3–6 months but keeps 100% of the contracted rate
- Most clients follow their therapist, not the referral source, when you exit a network
- Networks simplify intake but not claim disputes, denials, or ERA reconciliation
- Most mature practices run a hybrid and shift toward direct billing as volume grows
A therapy network trades referral volume for 20 to 30 percent of your billing revenue, charged per session, indefinitely. Building your own brand keeps that revenue but requires you to own credentialing, billing, and patient acquisition yourself. The right choice depends on your session volume, your payer mix, and how long you plan to practice.
Why this decision is live right now
The network-versus-brand question is not abstract. It shows up in the math every time a practice owner looks at a remittance and subtracts the take rate.
This post draws on Oasys's proprietary knowledge: direct, ongoing conversations with practicing therapists and practice owners, plus Oasys's seat at the infrastructure layer of real practices, where we see how documentation, billing, and consent actually work day to day. Across recent conversations with practice owners, the network revenue-share question surfaced repeatedly among operators managing five or more clinicians. The 20 to 30 percent take rate was named explicitly and consistently, and for several practices, it was the primary reason they were evaluating a move to direct billing.
Here is the distinction the decision turns on: a network is not a permanent partner. It is a service you rent, priced as a percentage of every session you bill. That framing changes the calculation, because a percentage cost compounds with your success.
Below we walk through five common assumptions about networks, give the direct answer to each, and then the reality, so you can run the numbers for your own stage.
Is joining a network purely additive, more patients at the same revenue?
No. Networks take 20 to 30 percent of billing revenue as a permanent, per-session cost. On a $200 session rate, that is $40 to $60 per session, every session, indefinitely.
The referral volume benefit is real. A network can fill a new clinician's calendar faster than cold outreach. But the cost is not a one-time acquisition fee that ends once the relationship is established. It recurs on every session for as long as you bill through the network.
Run it forward. A clinician seeing 25 sessions a week at $200, with a 25 percent take, gives up roughly $1,250 a week, or about $60,000 a year per full-time caseload. That is the number to weigh against what independent acquisition would actually cost you.
Do I need a network to get credentialed with insurance?
No. Independent insurance credentialing is entirely possible.
It is slower, typically three to six months for the major payers, and it requires someone to manage the application, follow-up, and re-credentialing cycle. But once you are credentialed independently, you keep 100 percent of the contracted rate.
Networks handle credentialing as a service in exchange for their cut. The work is real and the speed is genuine. The cut, though, does not go away once you are credentialed. You keep paying the percentage long after the one-time credentialing work is done.
If I leave a network, do I lose my client relationships?
Mostly no. Most clients follow their therapist, not their referral source.
With adequate notice and a clear transition plan, the majority of active clients will move to direct billing or self-pay. The therapeutic relationship is the product. The network is the introduction, not the bond.
The practices where retention suffers most are those that leave abruptly or without communicating the change. Retention is a function of how you exit, not whether you can. Give clients runway, explain the billing change plainly, and most stay.
Do networks simplify billing entirely?
No. Networks simplify the front end of billing: matching, credentialing, and initial intake. They do not simplify claim disputes, ERA reconciliation, or the more complex billing edge cases.
The front end is the visible part, so it is easy to assume the whole pipeline is handled. It is not. When a claim is denied or a remittance does not reconcile, that work still has to happen somewhere.
A practice that relies entirely on a network for billing has no internal billing competency to fall back on if the relationship ends. That is a strategic exposure, not just an operational one. The infrastructure layer matters here: other platforms may be built differently, but Oasys is designed so the documentation and billing record stays legible and exportable to the practice, so you retain the competency even if a network relationship changes (other tools vary).
Is the decision binary, in a network or not?
No. Many practices run a hybrid: some payers through a network, direct billing for others.
The economics depend on the specifics. The right split is a function of your payer mix, your session volume, and whether the network's contracted rate is above or below what you could negotiate independently. For some payers, the network rate plus the take still nets more than you would secure alone. For others, it does not.
The binary framing is the expensive one. It pushes you into an all-or-nothing choice when the profitable answer is usually a deliberate split.
So, which makes sense at your stage?
The decision resolves to a few checkable properties. Rent the network when:
- You are early. A new or under-booked caseload values referral volume more than the percentage it costs to fill it.
- You cannot yet staff credentialing or billing. If no one can manage a three-to-six-month credentialing cycle or handle denials, the network's service is worth the cut for now.
- A specific payer's network rate, after the take, still beats your independent rate. Keep that payer in the network and move the others.
Own your brand when:
- Your caseload is full and stable. Once referral volume is no longer the constraint, the 20 to 30 percent take is pure margin leaving the practice.
- You manage five or more clinicians. At that scale the take is a five- or six-figure annual line item, and the math favors building internal billing.
- You plan to practice for years. A percentage cost compounds with time and volume. The longer the horizon, the larger the lifetime cost of renting.
Most mature practices land on a hybrid, then shift weight toward direct billing as their internal competency grows.