A patient finishes a $6,000 program, thanks your team on the way out, and three statements later the balance is still open. Your front desk sends another round of reminders. Bringing up money at the next visit feels awkward, so you let it ride. Half a year later the receivable ages into write-off territory, and the relationship you wanted to protect feels strained anyway.
Most of these problems never start when payment expectations are discussed before treatment begins. When the patient or client knows the terms going in, collections run on schedule and your staff stops refereeing payment disputes at the desk. Insurance or cash-pay, the policy is what protects the money in either model.
Put your patient payment policy in writing before treatment
Single-visit care can run on payment-at-service. A program that spans months earns a deposit before the first session.
A deposit does two jobs at once. The patient who puts money down has already committed to the program. It also protects your cash while you front the products and staff time a long program runs through before the patient pays in full.
Twenty to thirty percent of the total works for most wellness practices. Take it before you order supplies or block off the provider’s calendar. The patient who balks at a deposit is often the same one who leaves you with an aging receivable later.
Let technology do the collection work
Your team shouldn’t be chasing payments by phone. Automation collects more of what you’re owed, and it takes the awkward calls out of your revenue cycle.

Card-on-file with auto-pay turns the monthly invoice into a background charge. The patient enrolls once and the payment just runs. For an insurance-based practice, the same card on file covers the copay and the coinsurance left after the claim clears. Payment plans let someone spread a big program over six or twelve months while a set amount clears each cycle. When a patient needs a longer runway, third-party financing through CareCredit or a similar lender takes the receivable off your books. The lender pays you up front and carries the collection risk from there, minus a merchant fee.
Every one of these removes a reason to put off paying. When it takes ten seconds, more of it happens on time.
How to flex without losing the policy
A rigid policy strains the relationship. Run it with no spine, though, and unpaid balances pile up. The hard part is knowing which call you’re making in the moment.
Bend when a loyal, long-term patient runs into real hardship. After a layoff or a loss in the family, offer a revised plan or pause their payments for a month while they recover. Goodwill you extend to a patient like that usually finds its way back to you.

Hold the line on the structure that keeps your doors open. No treatment starts without a signed policy. Deposits have to clear before the work does, and auto-pay rides on every payment plan by default.
Watch the longer pattern across visits, too. One missed payment from a long-time patient is just a conversation. When the late payments and broken plans stack up over a year, you’re seeing how this person operates. You handle that differently from a one-time slip.
Why clear terms put patients at ease
Plenty of owners worry that firm terms will scare patients off, and the opposite usually happens. Clear terms upfront read as a sign you run a tight practice. Patients settle down around a provider who has the business side handled. Skip the written policy and your staff ends up sorting out money questions at checkout, in front of the next patient in line.
Write the financial policy, then get the deposit and auto-pay in place before your next program starts. Your hours go back to patient care, which is why you opened the practice in the first place.

Frequently-Asked Questions
How do I set up a payment policy without scaring patients away?
Treat it like any other intake step, the same as a health history form. Give your front desk one script so every patient hears the same calm version, and tell them to stop apologizing for the terms. Patients settle fast once it feels routine.


What should be included in a patient financial policy?
Past the fee schedule, the clauses people forget are the ones that save you when a balance goes unpaid. Put in a timeline for when a balance moves to collections, plus your no-show charge. End it with a dated signature line, since that signature is what you point to if the balance ever gets questioned.
Should I require a deposit for a multi-month treatment program?
For most programs that run several months, yes. Set it around a quarter to a third of the total, and take it before you commit to supplies. Put it toward the final invoice, so the patient reads it as part of care rather than an extra charge.


When should I be flexible with a patient’s payment versus stay firm?
Flex on the timing, and hold firm on whether the balance gets paid at all. A loyal patient in a rough month earns a written plan with a firm end date. Offer that accommodation once, and when they ask again the next month, the pattern has answered for you.
How can a wellness practice cut down on unpaid balances?
Get a card on file at the point of service, before a balance has a chance to age. Move recurring programs onto auto-pay and the longer ones onto financing. Then watch your days in accounts receivable as the scorecard, because that number tells you whether the system beats the old phone reminders.


Is CareCredit worth it for a med spa or aesthetic practice?
For higher-ticket programs, the answer is yes. The financing fee usually costs less than what you’d eat if that patient defaults. Offer it next to auto-pay and your in-house plans, and let the patient who needs more time reach for it themselves.
Not sure where your policy is leaking?
A payment policy only protects you if it runs the way it reads on paper. A Financial Operations Assessment from Healthy Bodies of Finance walks your revenue cycle the way a fraud examiner would, and shows you where the money slows down or slips out. You’ll leave knowing exactly what to tighten first.
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This article is designed to provide information only and should not be considered legal or tax advice. Because of the complexity of the law and the variables in your own personal tax and accounting situation, you can’t rely on our advice specifically related to your unique circumstances. In order to get the best tax savings and legal advice available to you, you should consult with your own accountant, attorney or advisor regarding your particular facts and circumstances. Healthy Bodies of Finance is an accounting firm that specializes in working with health and wellness providers. We provide monthly accounting & bookkeeping services and financial education. For more information on our specialized services for health and wellness providers please contact us at info@healthybodiesoffinance.com


