When a new inquiry lands in your inbox, what should happen next?
For many therapists, this is where things get fuzzy.
Do you:
Offer a free 15–30 minute consultation?
Go straight to a paid intake session?
Let the client choose?
Or decide case by case?
There’s no single “right” workflow — but there are clearer, more sustainable ones depending on your goals, capacity, and practice model.
This post breaks down the most common therapist workflows, when free consultations help (and when they hurt), and how to choose a structure that actually supports your practice.
First: What We Mean by “Workflow”
In private practice, a workflow is simply:
The repeatable path someone follows from first contact → first session.
A clear workflow answers:
Without a defined workflow, therapists can feel like they're constantly reactive, unsure how to respond to inquiries, overbooked but underpaid, or drained by unpaid time. When clients reach out and the workflow is unclear they can be overwhelmed by choice and end up scheduling with another practice who makes the next steps much clearer.
The 3 Most Common Inquiry Workflows for Therapists
Option 1: Inquiry → Free Consultation → Paid Session
This is one of the most common models, especially for newer practices.
How it works:
When this works well:
Potential downsides:
Best used when:
You’re intentional about boundaries, length, and purpose of the consult.
Option 2: Inquiry → Paid Intake Session (No Free Consult)
In this workflow, you skip the free meeting entirely.
How it works:
When this works well:
Potential downsides:
Best used when:
Your messaging already pre-qualifies clients well.
3. Inquiry → Choice-Based Path (Consult or Intake)
This is a flexible hybrid model.
How it works:
When this works well:
Potential downsides:
Best used when:
You have systems that keep everything organized and tracked.
The Real Question Isn’t “Free or Paid”
The more important question is:
Do you have a clear, repeatable process — or are you deciding every time?
Problems arise when:
This is where therapists lose clients before the first session — not because of the model, but because of the execution.
How to Choose the Right Workflow for You
Ask yourself:
A Simple Rule of Thumb
Fixing the workflow usually fixes the stress.
One Important Factor: Insurance vs. Private Pay
One major factor that shapes your workflow is whether you accept insurance.
If you’re primarily insurance-based, free consultations often:
Many insurance-based practices move directly into a paid intake session, where eligibility, consent, and fit are addressed in one structured step.
If you’re private pay, free consultations can:
Neither approach is better on its own. The key is aligning your workflow with your payment model — and making sure the process is clear, consistent, and easy to follow.
Final Thought
You don’t need the “perfect” inquiry process.
You need one that:
Whether you offer free consultations, paid intakes, or both — the key is building a workflow that supports you, not just your clients.