WebPT is the dominant EMR in physical therapy. It handles PT-specific outcomes measurement, rehab documentation, and insurance workflows extremely well, for physical therapists. Speech-language pathologists using WebPT are working in a platform where SLP is an afterthought, not a core design assumption.
If you're a CCC-SLP in private practice or a clinic director at a university program, you're paying for a system optimized for a completely different clinical model. ClinicNote was built with SLP as a foundational discipline, with documentation templates, supervision tools, and billing workflows that match how speech pathology clinics actually operate.
WebPT was built for physical therapy and rehabilitation clinics. It's the market leader for outpatient PT, with strong outcomes tracking, PT-specific documentation, and deep integration with rehab billing workflows.
WebPT does accommodate some allied health disciplines beyond PT, including SLP. But the platform's architecture, templates, reporting, and feature prioritization are built around physical therapy. For SLPs, this means adapting to a platform that wasn't designed with their clinical model, their disorder types, or their documentation requirements in mind.
ClinicNote was built for allied health clinics with speech-language pathology as a core discipline from day one. 117 speech clinics currently run on ClinicNote. The platform supports 13 disciplines, including SLP, audiology, OT, PT, and AAC, with documentation templates and workflows built for each. It's not a PT platform that SLPs can also use. It's a platform where SLP is native.
The most common reasons speech-language pathologists move away from WebPT:
Documentation built for PT, not SLP. WebPT's clinical documentation is structured around physical therapy: functional mobility, musculoskeletal goals, rehab-specific outcome measures like the FOTO or OPTIMAL. SLP documentation (SOAP notes tracking articulation targets, language goals, fluency data, dysphagia management, aphasia treatment, AAC usage) requires working around a PT-first system.
Enterprise pricing that doesn't fit SLP clinics. WebPT is priced for larger physical therapy organizations. For university SLP training clinics or small-to-mid-size speech therapy private practices, the cost structure doesn't fit the revenue model.
No university training clinic support. University SLP programs require real-time supervisor-student collaboration, caseload-level access controls, and cohort training infrastructure. WebPT's feature set wasn't designed for clinical education programs or ASHA supervision requirements.
Paying for features you never use. WebPT includes extensive PT-specific features (FOTO outcomes, rehab-specific scheduling, home exercise program tools) that SLPs pay for without ever touching.
| ClinicNote | WebPT | |
|---|---|---|
| Built for SLP | Yes, SLP is a core discipline | No, built for physical therapy |
| University clinic support | Yes, purpose-built for training programs | No |
| Supervisor/student workflows | Yes, real-time review, feedback, approval | No |
| SLP-specific templates | Yes, SOAP notes, treatment plans, evaluations, lesson plans | PT-focused; SLP templates are limited |
| Disciplines supported | 13, including SLP, audiology, OT, PT, AAC | Primarily PT; some allied health |
| HIPAA compliance | Yes | Yes |
| MFA + IP restrictions | Yes | MFA available |
| Insurance billing | Yes, clearinghouse integration | Yes |
| Patient portal | Yes | Yes |
| Scheduling | Yes | Yes |
| University IT compliance | Yes | Not designed for this |
| Time to learn | 1-2 hours | Days to weeks |
| Pricing model | Custom (affordable for SLP clinics) | Per clinician/month; enterprise-oriented |
| SLP outcomes tracking | Yes, patient outcome tracking over time | Primarily PT outcomes |
WebPT's documentation is built around the physical therapy clinical model: initial evaluations, daily notes, progress notes, and discharge summaries structured for musculoskeletal and rehabilitation care. Outcome measures, functional assessment tools, and goal-tracking are heavily PT-oriented.
SLPs using WebPT typically find themselves working around the system, adapting PT-specific note structures for speech pathology goals, or using generic free-text fields where SLP-specific templates should exist. Documenting an articulation session, a fluency evaluation, or a dysphagia treatment in a system built for range-of-motion and gait is slower, less accurate, and harder to audit.
For private practice SLPs billing insurance, that documentation friction compounds. When your EMR doesn't natively support the CPT codes and ICD-10 diagnoses you use most (think F80.x language disorder codes, R13.x dysphagia codes, or the 9250x speech therapy CPT family), you're managing billing risk manually.
ClinicNote's documentation suite was built for the SLP clinical workflow from the start. Pre-built templates include: initial intake and evaluation forms, SLP-specific SOAP notes, treatment plan documentation, lesson plans, and progress reports. Templates support narrative formats and fillable electronic forms.
Thousands of ICD-10 diagnosis codes relevant to communication and swallowing disorders are supported. Speech therapy CPT codes integrate directly into clinical documentation, so billing follows naturally from the clinical note. Whether you're treating articulation disorders, aphasia, voice disorders, or managing a dysphagia caseload, the documentation system already speaks your language.
Bottom line: WebPT forces SLPs to document like physical therapists. ClinicNote documents the way SLPs actually work.
WebPT has no clinical supervision or training clinic infrastructure. It's built for credentialed practitioners in outpatient rehab settings. There is no native support for: - Supervisor review of student documentation before finalization - In-platform feedback from clinical supervisors - Caseload-level access restrictions for student clinicians - Document completion tracking across a cohort - IP address controls for university network compliance
University SLP training programs and clinical fellowship placement sites require all of these. ASHA mandates specific supervision structures for clinical fellows and student clinicians. WebPT can't support those requirements.
ClinicNote was co-designed with university clinic directors to support the full clinical training workflow. Supervisors review documentation in real time, provide feedback within the platform, and verify completion before notes are finalized. Students see only their assigned caseload. IP address restrictions ensure access comes from approved locations only.
New student cohorts are onboarded each semester. ClinicNote provides comprehensive training for each cohort, with basics mastered in 1-2 hours.
WebPT's pricing is enterprise-oriented, designed for multi-location PT organizations with large clinician counts. For university SLP programs running on grant funding, or private SLP practices with two to five clinicians, the cost structure is misaligned with SLP clinic economics.
ClinicNote's pricing is customized to your clinic's actual size and structure. It was specifically built to be affordable for university training clinics and small-to-medium private practices, the organizations that actually make up the SLP market.
WebPT is a feature-rich platform that takes time to learn. New clinicians typically need several days to a week to become comfortable with the system. For organizations with regular staff turnover or rotating student cohorts, this training burden compounds over time.
ClinicNote's basics are mastered in 1-2 hours of virtual training. For university programs where a new cohort of student clinicians arrives every semester, this speed isn't a convenience. It's a requirement. For private practices, it means new staff are charting productively from the first week. Comprehensive cohort training is included, not a paid add-on.
WebPT is primarily a physical therapy platform. Occupational therapy and some speech therapy documentation are supported, but PT is the design center. If your clinic runs SLP and audiology alongside each other, or alongside OT or behavioral health, WebPT's multi-discipline capabilities are limited and PT-centric.
ClinicNote supports 13 disciplines in one platform: Speech-Language Pathology, Audiology, Occupational Therapy, Physical Therapy, Counseling, Behavioral Health, Art Therapy, Music Therapy, Social Work, Psychology, Athletic Training, Exercise Science, and AAC. For university clinics that house multiple allied health disciplines, this means one platform, one billing system, one administrative infrastructure.
WebPT offers a large support infrastructure befitting an enterprise platform: help center, onboarding resources, customer success management at higher tiers. For large PT organizations, this works well. For smaller SLP clinics, support can feel depersonalized and slow to address discipline-specific needs.
ClinicNote operates as a genuine partner to the clinics it serves. When urgent needs arise (compliance reporting, custom template development, new diagnosis codes) the team responds. The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee received custom reporting built within one week for a compliance deadline.
"My favorite thing about ClinicNote is the customer support. Everyone has been so incredibly patient and willing and generous with their time."
Stacey Nye, Clinic Director, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
WebPT is a strong fit if:
You run a physical therapy clinic or multi-location PT organization
Your primary discipline is PT with SLP as a minor secondary service
You need PT-specific outcomes measurement (FOTO, OPTIMAL) and reporting
You have the budget for enterprise-tier pricing and the volume to justify it
Ideal WebPT customer: Mid-to-large outpatient physical therapy organizations where PT is the primary and dominant clinical discipline.
ClinicNote is built for you if:
Speech-language pathology is your primary clinical discipline
You treat across SLP disorder types: articulation, language, fluency, voice, dysphagia, aphasia, or AAC - You run a university training clinic or host clinical fellowship placements
Your clinic serves multiple allied health disciplines including SLP and audiology
You need SLP-specific documentation templates without extensive customization
Enterprise pricing doesn't fit your clinic's budget or structure
You want a support team that knows your clinic by name
Ideal ClinicNote customer: SLP-first clinics, whether university training programs, private practices, or multi-discipline allied health clinics, that need a platform built for communication disorders, not rehabilitation medicine.
If you're evaluating ClinicNote as an alternative to WebPT:
Is WebPT designed for speech-language pathologists? WebPT accommodates SLP, but it was designed for physical therapy. SLPs working in WebPT adapt PT-oriented documentation workflows and lack access to SLP-specific features like supervision tools, communication disorder templates, and university training program infrastructure.
Can ClinicNote replace WebPT for an SLP clinic? Yes, and for most SLP clinics, ClinicNote is a better fit than WebPT. ClinicNote covers documentation, scheduling, billing, patient portal, and reporting purpose-built for speech-language pathology, without paying for PT-specific features you won't use.
Does ClinicNote handle insurance billing for SLP services? Yes. Speech therapy CPT codes are integrated into documentation with clearinghouse connection for electronic claims submission, EFT payment processing, and outstanding receivables tracking.
Can ClinicNote support a university SLP department alongside audiology? Yes. ClinicNote supports both SLP and audiology, along with 11 other disciplines, in one platform. It's designed for exactly this multi-discipline university clinic environment.
How long does it take to implement ClinicNote vs. WebPT? ClinicNote's typical implementation timeline is 60 days to full deployment, with basics mastered in 1-2 hours of training. WebPT implementations, particularly for organizations migrating from another system, typically take longer and require more training investment.