You left your school SLP job in January. You opened the LLC, signed the lease, ordered the assessment kits, and submitted your first CAQH application six weeks ago. It's now mid-March, and your in-network insurance income is exactly zero dollars. You're refreshing your CAQH dashboard like it's a stock ticker.
This is normal. Nobody warns you.
SLP insurance credentialing is its own job, separate from the clinical work you actually trained for, and it takes far longer than most new private practice owners expect. This guide walks through what credentialing actually is, what you need before you start, the step-by-step process, realistic timelines, and the common mistakes that quietly restart the clock. We're going to be straight with you about how slow this is. Plan accordingly.
Credentialing is the verification process insurance payers use to confirm you're licensed, qualified, and approved to bill them.1 They check your education, your license, your malpractice coverage, your work history, your references, and anything else that proves you are who you say you are. Insurance credentialing for speech therapists works the same way it does for every other healthcare provider, with a few quirks specific to our field.
A few things to understand up front.
Credentialing is not the same as contracting. You can be fully credentialed and still not be in-network. Credentialing approves you as a provider. The contract sets the terms (rates, claim rules, prior auth requirements) and makes you in-network. You need both.
Credentialing is per-payer. Aetna doesn't talk to BCBS. BCBS Texas doesn't talk to BCBS Illinois. Each one has its own process, its own portal, and its own queue.
There's also a split between individual credentialing (you as a rendering provider) and group credentialing (your practice as a billing entity). If you have an LLC or PLLC and bill under the practice's EIN, you usually need both.
So when an SLP says "I'm getting credentialed," what's actually happening is several parallel applications, with several payers, in several layers (individual plus group), each on its own timeline. That's the part nobody warns you about.
Get every document together before you open a single application. Credentialing apps reject for trivial mismatches, and starting clean saves you months.
Here's the working checklist:
One critical step before you submit anything: pull your NPI registry record and confirm every field matches your other documents exactly. Same legal name. Same address. Same Tax ID. A typo on your Tax ID, or a hyphen in your practice name on CAQH that's missing on your W-9, will send your application back to the bottom of the queue. You won't find out for 30 to 60 days.
Then comes CAQH ProView. Most commercial payers pull credentialing data from CAQH, so getting your CAQH application clean and current is the foundation everything else sits on. Slp caqh credentialing isn't optional if you're going after commercial insurance. Plan to spend a full day on the initial setup.
Here's how the slp credentialing process actually unfolds, in the order you'll move through it.
Step 1: Get your NPI(s). Apply at the NPPES site. Type 1 for you as an individual provider. Type 2 for your practice entity, if you have one. It's free and usually issued within a week.
Step 2: Set up CAQH ProView. This is the universal credentialing application most commercial payers pull from.3 You fill it out once, attest that it's accurate, and then re-attest every 120 days to keep your data active. Miss an attestation and you fall off payers' active-provider lists.
Step 3: Pick your target payers. For most SLPs in private practice, the top commercial panels to pursue are:
Plus government payers: Medicare via PECOS (forms 855I for individual and 855B for group), and your state Medicaid (which often includes separate managed care plans you'll need to credential with individually).4
Step 4: Submit individual applications to each payer. Most pull from CAQH, but most also require their own intake form, supplemental documents, or a phone call to start.
Step 5: Follow up every two to three weeks. This part is unsexy and essential. Applications stall without nudging. Call. Email. Get the name of the credentialing rep handling your file. Write it down.
Step 6: Sign the contract. When credentialing approval comes back, you'll receive a contract with fee schedules and policy terms. Read it. Sign it. You are not in-network until this contract is countersigned and an effective date is set.
Step 7: Complete EDI enrollment for electronic claims. This is the step that catches people. Credentialing and contracting approve you to bill. EDI enrollment connects your billing system to the payer so claims actually flow electronically. It's a separate form, usually a separate timeline, and missing it means your claims will reject (or worse, sit unsubmitted) until it's set up.
If you're wondering how to get credentialed slp without losing a year of revenue, the answer is: run all seven steps in parallel, not sequentially.
Here's what to actually expect for slp private practice credentialing, payer by payer:
Add it up. From the day you submit your first application, plan for four to six months of zero in-network insurance income. If that's news to you right now, it's better news now than in month three.
So what do you do during the gap?
The SLPs who survive credentialing are the ones who plan for the gap on day one, not the ones who hope it'll be shorter than what everyone said. It won't be.
A handful of small mistakes account for most of the lost months in speech therapy insurance paneling. Here are the ones to watch for.
Forgetting to re-attest CAQH every 120 days. This drops you from the active pool. Some payers will pause your application. Some will close it. Put a calendar reminder on day 100, every cycle, forever.
Submitting with an expired malpractice certificate. Renewals happen mid-application. Upload the new certificate to CAQH the day you receive it.
Mismatched Tax IDs and practice names. Pick one legal name for your practice and use it identically on your IRS letter, your NPI Type 2, your W-9, your CAQH, and every payer application. The hyphen, the comma after the LLC, the capital letter on "PLLC", all of it matters.
Applying to closed panels. Some BCBS regions and UnitedHealthcare panels are closed to new SLPs in certain zip codes. The application will sit in a queue for months before you get a "we are not accepting new providers in your area" letter. Call before you apply. Ask explicitly whether the panel is open for SLPs in your zip code, and get a name and date.
Skipping EDI enrollment. Credentialing approval is not billing readiness. Without EDI enrollment, your clearinghouse can't send claims to the payer. You'll watch claims reject for a month before someone figures out why.
Not tracking re-credentialing. Most payers require re-credentialing every three years.6 They will terminate you without warning if you miss it. Three years feels far away until it isn't.
Credentialing is the start, not the finish. Once you're in-network, the workflow shifts to claims, eligibility, denials, and re-credentialing reminders. This is where private practices most often lose money quietly.
A few things your post-credentialing workflow needs to handle:
Eligibility verification at intake. Credentialed doesn't mean covered. Each patient's plan has its own speech therapy benefits, prior authorization rules, visit limits, and copay structure. Verify before you treat, not after the claim denies.
Clean claims submission. Every claim needs the right rendering provider NPI, the right billing provider NPI, and the right Tax ID, matching what's on file with the payer. One mismatch and the whole batch rejects.
Denial tracking. The first 90 days of a new payer relationship usually produce the most denials. Track patterns. Fix the root cause once, not the same claim three times. (For a deeper look at common SLP billing mistakes that drive denials, this guide is worth a read.)
Re-credentialing reminders 90 days before each cycle. Three years sneaks up fast when you're heads-down treating patients. Build the reminder into your system the day you sign the original contract.
We'll be honest about ClinicNote here: we don't credential anyone. We can't get you on a panel. What we can do is everything that happens after credentialing. ClinicNote handles electronic claims submission through clearinghouse integration, captures insurance eligibility at intake, tracks outstanding receivables, and lets you tag CAQH attestation dates and re-credentialing cycles per payer so they don't sneak up on you. That's the workflow that depends on credentialing being done right.
The SLPs who get through credentialing in one piece are the ones who treat it like its own project, with its own folder, its own calendar, its own reminders, and its own honest timeline. Plan for four to six months. Track every application, every confirmation number, every credentialing rep's name. Re-attest CAQH on schedule.
When credentialing finally finishes, the work shifts to claims, eligibility, denials, and re-credentialing tracking. If you'd like to see how ClinicNote handles the billing workflow that picks up where credentialing ends, book a demo and we'll walk through how it works for private practice SLPs.