Milestone Certified Public Accountants logo — boutique CPA firm Pleasanton CA

PHYSICAL · OCCUPATIONAL · SPEECH THERAPY


Tax and accounting for PT, OT, and speech therapy practices.

For physical therapy, occupational therapy, and speech-language pathology practices in California — solo clinicians, group practices, and pediatric or school-contract specialists. The therapy economics are different. Your CPA should know it.

WHAT THERAPY PRACTICES LIVE WITH

Six places generic CPAs miss.


Therapy practices share a regulatory shape — Medicare CPT codes, the 8-minute rule, group treatment units — that most CPAs have never had to model. These are the six places that breaks.

The Medicare 8-minute rule

Billable units depend on minutes per CPT code. Revenue projection and per-clinician productivity reporting both fall apart if minutes-to-units conversion isn't in the books.

School district contracts

Many speech and OT practices carry sizable district contracts paid on quarterly or end-of-year cycles. Cash flow looks great in March and terrible in August — without proper deferred-revenue treatment.

Pediatric vs adult vs Medicare mix

Pediatric pays differently than Medicare, which pays differently than commercial insurance. Per-payer net collection rates need their own line — most QuickBooks files lump them.

Teletherapy and multi-state nexus

A therapist licensed in CA who treats a patient temporarily in NY creates licensure, malpractice, and state-tax exposure. Telehealth scaled this without the books catching up.

1099 vs W-2 clinician structure

Most therapy practices misclassify at least one role. After AB 5 in California, the ABC test is unforgiving — and audits typically find years of back payroll tax + penalties.

Equipment, AAC devices, and modalities

AAC communication devices, exercise equipment, ultrasound, electrical stim — all qualify for §179 expensing or bonus depreciation, but the line between consumables and capitalized assets is where money is missed.

WHAT WE DO

Three engagement tracks built for therapy practices.


Accounting, tax, and advisory — integrated for PT, OT, and SLP owners.

01

Accounting & Bookkeeping

Monthly close that reflects how a therapy practice actually earns and spends — per payer, per clinician, per service line.

  • Per-payer net collection tracking
  • Per-clinician productivity reporting
  • School-contract deferred revenue
  • AR aging + denials workflow
  • Audit-ready closes by the 15th
02

Tax Strategy & Prep

Federal + CA returns with the entity structure and elections that fit therapy practice economics.

  • Professional corporation vs LLC analysis
  • S-corp election + reasonable comp
  • §179 + bonus depreciation on equipment
  • Multi-state teletherapy compliance
  • Quarterly estimated tax planning
03

Practice Advisory

Owner-level strategy for compensation, expansion, contractor decisions, and the transitions therapy owners face.

  • 1099 vs W-2 ABC-test compliance
  • Adding therapists (employed vs partner)
  • Adding locations, telehealth, or specialties
  • Selling or merging the practice
  • Retirement plans for owner + staff
A

CPA-led

You work with a CPA, not an associate.

B

Flat-fee

Scoped upfront and committed in writing.

C

24-hour

Response within one business day.

D

Year-Round

Quarterly planning — not just at deadlines.

Common Questions

Before we talk.


Do you work with all three — PT, OT, and SLP?

Yes. The economics rhyme: minutes-to-units billing, Medicare CPT codes, the 8-minute rule, deferred school-contract revenue, and 1099 vs W-2 contractor questions show up in all three. We adapt the engagement to your specific service mix and payer set.

Should our therapy practice be a PC, LLC, or S-corp?

In California, licensed therapists generally need a Professional Corporation (PT Corporation, OT Corporation, or Speech-Language Pathology Corporation) when the entity practices the profession — including hiring other licensed therapists. The S-corp election is then layered on top once compensation hits the threshold where it pays for itself.

How do you handle AB 5 and contractor classification?

We apply the ABC test to every contractor relationship and document the analysis. Most pre-AB 5 contractor PTs/OTs/SLPs should now be W-2. We help reclassify cleanly — and if there's historical exposure, we coordinate with employment counsel on voluntary disclosure or quiet correction.

What about school-district contracts paid on weird cycles?

School contracts get deferred-revenue treatment so income is recognized in the period the service is delivered, not when the check clears. That smooths month-to-month margin and prevents the August "where did the cash go" surprise.

We use a billing service. Does that simplify things or complicate them?

It simplifies billing but complicates reconciliation. We build a workflow that maps the billing-service reports to QuickBooks at the payer + clinician level so denials and adjustments don't hide in a single deposit line.

Can we deduct evaluation kits, test materials, and AAC devices?

Yes. Single-use materials are direct costs; capitalized assets (AAC devices, gait trainers, hand-therapy equipment, modalities) are §179 or bonus depreciation candidates. We model the elections against your tax bracket each year.


An Invitation

Therapy economics deserve specialty depth.

A complimentary 30-minute review. We look at your practice specifically — payer mix, clinician structure, services, locations — and tell you honestly what we'd do.

Call directly: 925-320-0309 · ronak@milestonecpas.com