Cost to Open an NP Practice: What It Really Takes

Nurse practitioner calculating the cost to open an NP practice at her desk Nurse practitioner calculating the cost to open an NP practice at her desk

How Much Does It Really Cost to Open an NP Practice?

If you have ever tried to budget for the cost to open an NP practice, you have probably noticed something strange. Every answer online is different. Some sources say a few thousand dollars. Others say six figures. Both can be right, depending on the kind of practice you build.

The real cost depends less on a single number and more on the choices you make early. Once you understand which decisions move the budget, you can plan with confidence instead of guessing.

Here is a clearer way to think about what it actually costs to open an NP practice.

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Start by Separating Startup Costs From Ongoing Costs

The two get blended together more often than you would think, and that is where most budgeting confusion begins.

Startup costs are one-time expenses to open the doors. Once paid, they are done.

Ongoing costs are the monthly expenses your practice needs to keep running. They continue regardless of how many patients you see.

Keeping the two separate gives you a much more honest picture of what you need to launch and what you need to sustain.

Typical Startup Cost Categories

Most new NP practices spend in the same general buckets, even when the dollar amounts vary widely.

  • Business formation (entity filing, registered agent, attorney review if you choose one)
  • Licensing and credentialing fees (DEA, state licensure, CAQH setup)
  • Malpractice insurance, often paid upfront for the year
  • EHR setup and onboarding
  • Telehealth platform setup if applicable
  • Website, domain, and branding
  • Business bank account and bookkeeping software
  • Initial equipment and supplies
  • Office space deposit and any buildout, if applicable

A telehealth-only practice may spend $5,000 to $15,000 to open. A small brick-and-mortar primary care clinic can climb past $100,000 once leases, buildout, and equipment are included. An aesthetic or specialty practice often lands somewhere in between, depending on equipment.

There is no wrong number here. There is only the number that fits the practice you are building.

Typical Ongoing Monthly Costs

Once the doors are open, the monthly stack tends to include:

  • Rent and utilities, if you have a physical space
  • EHR and telehealth subscriptions
  • Malpractice insurance, if paid monthly
  • Business insurance and other compliance costs
  • Phone service or virtual receptionist
  • Software stack (scheduling, payments, communication)
  • Marketing
  • Bookkeeping and accounting support

Most new practices land somewhere between $500 and $5,000 per month in fixed costs before any growth investment. The wider that range feels, the more important it is to map your own numbers rather than rely on averages.

What Moves Your Budget Up or Down

A few decisions shape the total more than any others.

  • Practice model. Telehealth, cash-pay concierge, insurance-based, or aesthetic each carry very different startup needs.
  • Urban leases, equipment costs, and licensing fees vary significantly by region and state.
  • Scope of services. Procedures, labs, and on-site equipment increase upfront spending quickly.
  • Hiring help from day one (attorneys, billing, virtual assistants) costs more early, but it often reduces mistakes that cost more later.

When you understand which of these you are choosing, the budget becomes much easier to plan.

How Much to Have Saved Before You Open

A useful rule of thumb is to plan for your full startup costs plus three to six months of operating expenses in reserve. That gives you a runway while you build a patient base, get credentialed, and wait on insurance reimbursements if you are paneling.

This number is rarely small, but it is rarely as large as the worst-case figures online suggest either. Building a realistic plan around your model usually surprises NPs in a good way.

The real answer to “how much does it cost?” is “it depends on the practice you want to build.” That is not a dodge. It is the most useful thing anyone can tell you. When you know your model, your location, and your timeline, the numbers become specific. And specific numbers are what let you move forward.

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