Health Contract Template

Free Therapist Contract Template

Set clear terms before sessions begin. Cover scope, payment, cancellation, and limitations in one document.

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What is a Therapist contract?

A therapist contract is a written agreement that defines the services to be provided, the payment structure, cancellation policy, and the limitations of the practitioner's services. Health and wellness contracts are important because they set expectations about what the service can and cannot achieve and protect both parties. This template is a starting point only and is not legal advice.

What to include in a Therapist contract

Common therapist contract line items

Service Typical Rate Unit
Individual therapy session (50 min) 80 session
Couples therapy session (60 min) 100 session
Online/telephone therapy session (50 min) 70 session
Clinical supervision (60 min) 75 session
Group therapy (per session) 45 session
Extended assessment session (90 min) 120 session

How to write a therapist contract

Send a therapist contract or service agreement before the first session begins. Include a clear scope-of-service statement that defines what your service does and does not cover and what does not constitute medical or clinical advice if that is applicable. Set a cancellation policy and apply it consistently: 24 to 48 hours' notice is standard, with a cancellation fee for short-notice cancellations. For programme packages, state how many sessions are included and what happens to unused sessions if the client withdraws. Include your professional registration number and indemnity insurance details. Sign before starting. This template is not legal advice: review with a solicitor and your professional regulator before use.

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This therapist contract template is provided for informational purposes only. It is not legal advice. Tidybill does not guarantee that this template is suitable for any particular situation or enforceable in any particular jurisdiction. Before signing or relying on any contract, consult a qualified solicitor or attorney in your jurisdiction. Laws differ between countries and regions.

Frequently asked questions

What should the deposit be for a therapist contract?
A common pattern is a deposit of 25 to 50 percent of the total project fee, paid before work begins. The deposit protects you against a client who disappears after you have invested time, and it signals that the client is serious. Some therapists use a tiered structure: a deposit at signing, a milestone payment at 50 percent completion, and a final payment on delivery. For very large projects, three or four milestone payments spread the financial risk for both sides. Whatever you agree, write it clearly in the contract.
What happens if the client wants to change the scope mid-project?
Scope creep is one of the most common sources of disputes in therapist work. Your contract should include a change-order clause that states any additions to the agreed scope must be documented in writing, priced separately, and approved by both parties before the additional work begins. Without this clause, clients may expect extra work at no cost. A short change-order form or email confirmation referencing the contract is sufficient. Good contracts make scope changes a process, not a battle.
Who owns the work once it is delivered?
Ownership of the final work depends on what your contract says. By default in most jurisdictions, the creator retains copyright until it is explicitly transferred. Most therapists either transfer full copyright on final payment, retain ownership and licence the work to the client, or grant a limited licence (for example, use in one market or medium). Choose the arrangement that matches your business model and write it clearly. If you retain source files or raw materials, state that in the contract. This template is a starting point only: IP law varies by jurisdiction, so review with a solicitor before use.
Can either party cancel the contract?
Yes, if the contract includes a termination clause. Your contract should state how much notice is required to cancel, what happens to work completed to date, whether the deposit is refundable, and what the client owes for work already delivered. A common approach is: either party may terminate with 14 days' written notice; the client pays for all work completed up to the termination date; and the deposit is non-refundable unless the therapist is in breach. Tailor the terms to your business and seek legal advice if the sums involved are significant.
Is an electronic signature legally binding?
In most jurisdictions, yes. The UK Electronic Communications Act 2000, the US ESIGN Act, the EU eIDAS Regulation, and equivalent legislation in many other countries recognise electronic signatures as legally binding for most commercial contracts. Tools such as DocuSign, Adobe Sign, or even a typed name in an email confirming agreement are generally sufficient. However, some document types (such as deeds, wills, or land transfers) require wet signatures. For a standard therapist services contract, an e-signature is almost always acceptable. Confirm with a solicitor if you are unsure for your jurisdiction.
What if the client disputes the work?
Your contract should include a dispute resolution clause. A typical approach is: first, the parties attempt to resolve the dispute informally within a specified period (say, 14 days); if that fails, the matter goes to mediation before any legal action. Some contracts specify which courts have jurisdiction and which country's law governs. These clauses do not prevent disputes, but they make resolution cheaper and faster. Keep records of all communications, approved revisions, and milestone sign-offs throughout the project: these are your evidence if a dispute escalates.