You sit down between sessions to bang out your notes, get to the S in SOAP, and freeze. Or you copy the same "Client was cooperative and engaged" sentence you've used a hundred times and move on. We've all done it.
If you're hunting for a solid subjective SOAP note example for speech therapy, you're not alone. The Subjective section is the shortest part of a SOAP note, and arguably the easiest one to write badly. It's also what supervisors, CF mentors, and payer reviewers flag first when something feels off.1
This is a practical post. You'll get a working definition of the S section, the five most common mistakes SLPs make when writing it, and a dozen real subjective SOAP note examples across pediatric and adult caseloads, each with a weak version and a stronger rewrite. It's a spoke under our SOAP notes for speech therapy hub, so when you want the full S/O/A/P framework, that's where to start.
The Subjective section is for what your patient (or their caregiver) reports about how they're doing. In their own words, when possible. It's their perspective. Not yours.2
Five things belong in S:
One thing does not belong: anything you observed during the session. If you saw it, it's Objective. If they said it, it's Subjective. That's the rule that keeps the subjective in SLP SOAP note distinct from the rest of the note.3
Formatting-wise, one to three sentences is normal. Longer is fine when it's clinically warranted. Direct quotes go in quotation marks, with the source named ("Mother reported…", "Patient stated…").
A quick contrast to anchor the rule. This sentence belongs in Objective, not Subjective: "Client was distracted today and required redirection." This one belongs in Subjective: "Mother reported, 'He didn't sleep well last night, he's been like this all morning.'" Same observation, different speaker, different section.
If you're writing the S in SOAP note SLP-style and your supervisor keeps sending notes back, it's almost always one of these five.4
Mistake 1: Including your own clinical observations. "Client was distracted today" is the single most common offender. If it's something you saw, it goes in O. Move it.
Mistake 2: Vague, non-defensible language. "Doing well." "Making progress." "Had a good session." None of that survives a chart review. Replace it with specific quotes and reportable facts.1
Mistake 3: Skipping the patient's voice. Paraphrasing everything loses the whole point of the section. Capture at least one direct quote when you can.
Mistake 4: Leaving S blank when the patient is nonverbal or pediatric. S is not optional just because the patient doesn't self-report. Caregiver report, environmental context, and carryover from the last session all fill the space.
Mistake 5: Writing the same template sentence every session. "Client arrived on time and was cooperative" three sessions in a row reads like you didn't show up. Use a phrase bank as a starting point, then make every entry specific to today.
If you're a first-year grad student in a university clinic and your first SOAP note came back with "S looks too much like O," it's almost certainly mistake 1. If you're a CF in a SNF writing twelve notes a day, it's usually mistake 5.
This is where most of the value lives. Four pediatric SLP subjective examples, each with a weak version, a stronger rewrite, and a one-line note on what changed.
Articulation
Language
Fluency
AAC
Notice the pattern. Every strong example does the same three things: it names the source, it includes a quote, and it gives at least one detail you couldn't have fabricated about any other patient.
Same format, adult caseload.
Dysphagia post-CVA
Aphasia
Voice
Cognitive-communication (TBI)
If you're a CF in acute rehab or a SNF, the dysphagia and aphasia examples are the ones to internalize. If you're in outpatient voice or private practice, the voice and cognitive-communication examples will land closer to your daily reality.
Memorize these openers. They cover most of what good speech therapy subjective documentation needs.
One important caveat. A phrase bank is a starter, not a template. Every entry has to be followed by something specific to this session, on this date, with this patient. If a sentence could describe any patient on any day, rewrite it. Read it out loud if you have to. That single trick catches more weak S sections than anything else.
If you're a university clinical supervisor coaching three or four students at once, share this list at the start of the semester. It cuts your editing load fast.
Some sessions make S harder than it should be. Here's what to lean on.
Nonverbal or AAC. Caregiver report and environmental context. Document what the patient initiated, what they oriented toward, and what the caregiver observed between sessions. The "snack page" example above is a good template.
Pediatric. Parent report is your friend, and so is teacher report. Capture at least one quote when you can. School-based SLPs can cite IEP team observations as part of S, with the source named.
Telehealth. Include the environment ("client at kitchen table, sibling in the background"), the tech context if it mattered ("audio dropped for about two minutes"), and whether a caregiver was present. None of that is filler. All of it can affect how you weight your Objective data later.5
Adult acute care. When the patient can't communicate verbally, family report or nursing staff report fills in. Cite the source. "Per night-shift RN report, patient coughed with morning juice trial" is a perfectly valid S line.
The S in SOAP is small but loaded. Get it right and the rest of your note has somewhere to stand. Get it wrong and you've blurred the line between what the patient said and what you saw, which is the single biggest documentation issue across SLP caseloads.4
A few things to take with you. The S section is what they reported, not what you observed. Direct quotes are the strongest quality marker you can drop into a note. Weak-vs-strong rewrites, done a handful of times across your caseload, will fix the habit faster than any checklist.
And the trick worth repeating: read your S section out loud. If it could describe any patient on any day, rewrite it.
Need a SOAP note system that doesn't make you rewrite the same boilerplate every session? ClinicNote's SLP-focused EMR has structured S/O/A/P fields, custom phrase libraries, and discipline-specific templates built in, used by 117 speech clinics across university programs and private practice. Get a demo and see how it fits your documentation flow.
For the rest of the framework, head back to the SOAP notes for speech therapy hub, or read through our deeper guide on SOAP notes for speech pathology and speech therapy progress notes software.