Most articles ranking for "best EMR for speech therapists" were written by the companies selling them. You probably knew that. The SLP subreddit knows it too. So does every Facebook group where someone asks for a real recommendation and gets five vendor links before they get a single honest answer.
This one is different. Below is a straightforward look at what speech-language pathologists actually need from speech therapy EMR software, what the major platforms deliver (including what they don't), and the specific questions to ask during any demo to tell whether a system was built for SLP workflows or built for someone else and retrofitted.
The origin problem is worth naming plainly: WebPT was founded by a physical therapist, for physical therapy practices. Most of the multi-discipline platforms that followed built their core around PT workflows and added SLP support later. "Later" shows up everywhere once you start using the system: in missing templates, shallow ICD-10 code libraries, and billing modules that have never heard of a KX modifier.
SLP documentation has specific requirements that generic platforms routinely miss. Dysphagia protocols (MBSS and FEES documentation), AAC assessment frameworks, ASHA-compliant goal structures, Clinical Fellow supervision documentation, cognitive-communication evaluation templates. These aren't edge cases. These are everyday SLP workflows.
When a platform doesn't have them pre-built, you build them yourself. That's hours of configuration work before you can complete your first note. It's a workaround tax paid every time a new hire joins or a student rotates in. One pattern surfaces consistently across G2 reviews of multi-discipline platforms: "I had to build everything from scratch." That's not a feature of the software. It's the cost of using the wrong one.
The diagnostic code gap compounds this. SLPs use ICD-10 codes that simply don't appear in PT or general medicine billing modules. R49.0 for dysphonia, R47.01 for aphasia, F80.81 for childhood onset fluency disorder. If your billing module doesn't support these natively, you're doing manual workarounds on every claim, and every manual step is another place for an error to enter.
Before signing with any platform, ask this one question: "Do you have SLP-specific SOAP note templates, or will I need to build them?" The answer tells you more than an hour-long demo.
Not every EMR feature matters equally for speech therapy practices. Here's what to actually evaluate.
SLP-specific documentation templates. SOAP notes, treatment plans, progress notes, evaluation reports: these should be pre-built for speech pathology, not adapted from a PT template with the discipline name changed. If you've spent years developing a documentation workflow that works, rebuilding it from a generic shell costs you hours you don't have. Look for a platform that either ships SLP templates out of the box or offers complimentary custom templates so you can keep the formats that already work for you.
Integrated billing with SLP code support. The real test isn't whether a platform has a billing module. It's whether that module knows the difference between a 92507 and a 97110, and whether it can surface the KX modifier threshold before you accidentally exceed it and trigger a Medicare audit.1 Manual insurance verification without automation runs 8+ hours weekly for the average practice. The right billing integration cuts that materially by handling eligibility checks, clearinghouse submission, and outstanding receivables tracking in one place instead of three.
Scheduling with automated reminders. Cancellations are the single biggest revenue leak in private practice SLP. A missed appointment is a missed session and a gap in the schedule that's hard to fill same-day. Automated reminders (email, text, or both) reduce no-shows. Recurring appointment setup saves the weekly admin overhead of manually blocking the same slots. Room filtering and color-coded scheduling views make a difference in any clinic running multiple providers.
Patient portal for intake and communication. Electronic intake forms replace paper packets. HIPAA-secure messaging reduces phone tag. Patients who can see their appointment reminders, billing information, and relevant documentation in one place engage more consistently. For practices handling insurance, a portal that collects insurance information at intake rather than at the appointment saves real time.
A learning curve measured in hours, not months. New clinicians join practices. Students rotate every semester in university settings. Clinical fellows start with a learning curve on everything, not just the EMR. A system that requires two weeks to onboard every new user creates ongoing training overhead that compounds over time. The baseline question: how long does it take a brand-new user to complete their first SOAP note without assistance?
Review aggregators like Capterra and G2 surface real patterns from actual users. Here's an honest read on the platforms that come up most often in speech therapy EMR reviews, not a scorecard, just a summary of what practitioners actually say.
ClinicNote was built for therapy clinics from the start, not retrofitted from PT or general medicine. Speech therapy is the largest discipline on ClinicNote, with 117 speech clinics currently using it. The basics can be mastered in 1-2 hours of virtual training, which makes a real difference when you're onboarding a new cohort every semester. It's also the only platform we're aware of that bridges university clinic and private practice in a single account structure, including an adjunct faculty discount for faculty members running their own private practices alongside their university roles.
SimplePractice is well-designed, has 225,000+ users, and is an ASHA corporate partner. The peer community is large and active, which means help is easy to find when you're stuck. The honest trade-off: it's not speech-specific. Templates require customization from scratch. Reviewers in smaller practices and university clinic settings consistently cite cost as the eliminating factor. If your clinic runs on a sliding scale or operates on a state-funded budget, SimplePractice often gets eliminated on price before you even evaluate the features.
TheraPlatform is the most affordable full-featured option in the category ($39-$59/month as of this writing). It's telehealth-native with HIPAA-compliant video built in and includes an SLP-specific ICD-10 template library. Most commonly recommended by SLPs who need a real system on a tight budget. The limitation: no AI documentation features, and billing depth is limited for more complex practice needs.
WebPT is built for enterprise, multi-location rehab practices. Medicare compliance tracking is strong. Pricing ($99-$275+/month) excludes most solo or small practices. SLP users consistently report that the discipline module feels secondary. If your organization is already on WebPT because of the PT side of the practice, it may be your reality. But it's rarely the platform SLPs would choose independently if starting fresh.
Ensora Health (formerly Fusion Web Clinic) has experienced significant turbulence since its acquisition. G2 reviews from former Fusion users are consistent: technical issues following the transition, support quality decline, rigid contract terms, and unexpected billing changes. If you're currently on Ensora and feeling unsettled about it, the switcher wave is real and documented.
Every top-ranking speech therapy EMR comparison article was written for private practice SLPs. University training clinics have fundamentally different requirements, and zero existing comparison content addresses them. If you're a clinic director, this gap isn't surprising. You've probably run into it every time you've tried to evaluate a platform.
University clinic workflows that private practice EMRs don't cover: student caseload restrictions (students should only access their assigned patients, not the full caseload), supervisor co-signature workflows, real-time co-documentation review, Clinical Fellow documentation compliance, FERPA considerations layered on top of HIPAA, per-cohort training cycles, and IP-based access restrictions required by university IT departments.2
Clinics that try to run private practice platforms in a university setting end up with workarounds: separate student accounts, manual oversight checklists, shadow documentation systems to track what's been co-signed and what hasn't. Each workaround adds compliance risk and admin overhead on top of an already stretched team.
A purpose-built university clinic setup handles these as expected features, not exceptions: permission sets designed for the training environment, real-time supervisor feedback on student documentation, document completion verification for oversight, and access controls that satisfy both HIPAA and university IT requirements. Training a new cohort of students each semester isn't a burden the system has to accommodate. It's something the system is built to do.
This is also a meaningful consideration for long-term practice adoption. Students who train on a specific SLP EMR at a university program naturally consider that platform first when they open their own practices. It's a pipeline, not just a feature.
The best way to filter platforms isn't to read more comparison articles. It's to make them demonstrate specifics in a demo. Here are six questions that quickly surface whether a platform was built for SLP workflows or built for someone else and retrofitted.
"Can I see your SLP SOAP note templates before we start the demo?" If the rep pivots to "we can customize those for you," they don't have pre-built SLP templates. That customization work is your onboarding homework, not theirs. A platform that ships SLP templates should be able to show them before a demo even starts.
"What CPT codes does your billing module support? Walk me through a 92507 claim." If the rep pauses, looks it up, or switches to a generic therapeutic exercise example, the billing module wasn't built with speech therapy in mind.3 The 92-series speech codes (92507, 92508, 92521 through 92524) should be native to the system.
"What are my actual costs at 50 clients? At 100?" Per-user or per-note pricing looks very different at scale than it does on the pricing page. Ask for the math. A platform that's affordable at 10 clients can look very different at 40.
"What's the contract term and early termination penalty?" A platform that's confident in its product doesn't need 12-month contracts with $5,000 exit fees. Long contract terms and high penalties are signals about how confident the company is in your staying voluntarily.
"What does migration look like if I switch from my current platform?" How a company answers this tells you a lot about how they handle the parts of the relationship that aren't the sale. Vague answers mean the process is painful. Specific answers mean they've done it enough to have a real workflow.
"How long does onboarding take, and is training included?" A platform that takes months to learn has already told you something about how much it was designed with the actual user in mind.
Red flags: vague answers on billing specifics, inability to demo SLP templates on the spot, per-note pricing buried in the contract, implementation fees not included in sticker pricing.
The best EMR for speech therapists isn't the one with the biggest marketing budget or the most users. It's the one built around SLP workflows, with templates that fit your documentation style, billing that knows your codes, and a learning curve that doesn't cost you a month of productivity.
Here's the fastest test you can run in any demo: ask the rep to show you SLP SOAP note templates without navigating away from the main screen. If they have to pull up a "sample" from a separate folder, switch to a shared screen, or redirect to a different section of the platform, the discipline support is shallow. The templates should be ready before you ask.
ClinicNote was built for therapy clinics. Speech therapy is our largest discipline, with 117 speech clinics on the platform. If you want to see how it handles SLP documentation, billing, and scheduling, we offer a 60-minute demo that walks through your actual workflows, not a polished sales presentation. If you're running a private practice EMR, we're happy to start there.