Blog

Insights on launching and scaling insurance-contracted behavioral health programs.

H2036: Intensive Residential Therapy

March 2, 2026

H2036: Intensive Residential Therapy

Learn how H2036 intensive residential therapy billing works — including reimbursement rates, documentation requirements, common billing errors, and how to avoid leaving money on the table in your SUD residential program.

IOP/PHP vs. Residential Rehab: Startup Costs Compared (Full Breakdown)

February 26, 2026

IOP/PHP vs. Residential Rehab: Startup Costs Compared (Full Breakdown)

IOP/PHP startup costs often run roughly $150K–$500K vs. $1M–$5M+ for residential rehab, depending on market and scope. See the full side-by-side cost breakdown and learn why outpatient is often the smarter first move.

Billing Medicaid for Addiction Treatment Services in Texas: What IOP/PHP Providers Actually Need to Know

February 26, 2026

Billing Medicaid for Addiction Treatment Services in Texas: What IOP/PHP Providers Actually Need to Know

Learn how to bill Texas Medicaid for IOP and PHP addiction treatment — credentialing, covered codes, documentation requirements, and common denial reasons explained.

Stop Struggling with Addiction Treatment Utilization Reviews in 4 Easy Steps

February 25, 2026

Stop Struggling with Addiction Treatment Utilization Reviews in 4 Easy Steps

Learn how IOP and PHP programs can reduce insurance denials with better UR documentation, payer-specific templates, and a proven appeals strategy.

Why IOP/PHP Is the Most Accessible Behavioral Health Business You Can Open

February 17, 2025

Why IOP/PHP Is the Most Accessible Behavioral Health Business You Can Open

Want to open an IOP/PHP program? Learn why intensive outpatient is the lowest-overhead, most accessible behavioral health business model — no beds, no 24/7 staff, real margins.

7 Financial Pitfalls That Sink New IOP/PHP Programs Before Year Two

February 11, 2025

7 Financial Pitfalls That Sink New IOP/PHP Programs Before Year Two

The demand is real and the economics can be strong — but seven recurring financial pitfalls sink otherwise solid behavioral health programs before they reach steady-state census.