The first answer that comes to mind is usually adding more. More clients. A second revenue stream. A course, a group program, a membership. Something on top of what you're already doing.
That instinct makes sense. But it's usually not what's actually driving consistent income at that level. And chasing it before you understand what is can keep you stuck for a long time.
When income feels inconsistent, the default move is to look for ways to add volume. See more clients. Keep the calendar full. The logic is straightforward: more sessions means more income.
Raising your session rate might cross your mind, but it usually doesn't stay there long. The fear that higher rates will price clients out, dry up your caseload, or make you seem out of reach tends to push that thought awa...
In the space of about three seconds, something happens inside you. You feel selfish. You wonder if your rate is too high. You start doing math in your head. And before you've had time to think it through, you hear yourself say, "I can actually work with you on that."
When a client says they can't afford your rate, the guilt hits fast. You feel greedy for charging what you charge. You feel like you're turning someone away who needs help. A scarcity voice shows up and tells you that some money is better than no money.
So you offer a lower rate. You tell yourself this is the last time. You feel relieved for about thirty seconds.
But here's what that moment is not: it's not a signal that your rate is wrong. It's not proof that you don't care. And it's not a test of your values as a dietitian.
What it is, though, i...
By Bethany Wheeler, RD | Dietitian Wealth Accelerator
If you are a private practice dietitian who has ever wondered whether your session rate is high enough, you are probably asking a more honest question underneath it.
Am I actually okay financially, or am I just surviving?
For a lot of dietitians in private practice, the answer is somewhere uncomfortable in between. The bills are getting paid. The caseload is full. But something about the money still feels tight, unpredictable, or not quite where it should be for the amount of work being put in.
The problem is that most advice on private practice dietitian rates focuses on what other dietitians are charging in your area or a basic overhead calculation. What it almost never addresses is the fuller picture of what your session rate actually needs to support: not just your business, but your life, your future, and your ability to stay in this work for the long term.
Here is the checklist I use with the dietitians I work with. If ...
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