How Does Allia Make Money?
Allia is free for individual clinicians because the system—not providers—should cover the cost.
Most platforms charge therapists because they can.
We don’t. Instead, Allia is funded by payers, healthcare networks, and large group practices that need better behavioral health insights.
Here’s how we fund Allia today and where we’re headed
Right Now:
Organizations Pay for Their Version of Allia.
That’s Enough to Keep Yours Free.
Large healthcare organizations need data and analytics to improve outcomes and manage behavioral health at scale. They pay for their version of Allia, which has enterprise features, system-wide insights, and population-level reporting.
That revenue is enough to support a high-quality, clinician-first version of Allia that remains free for individual providers. No hidden costs, no premium upgrades, and no selling your data.
Long-Term:
Helping Therapists Get Paid More
Healthcare is shifting toward value-based care (VBC), where payers reimburse providers based on outcomes, not just sessions. Large organizations are already adapting, and we don’t want therapists to get left behind.
Allia helps therapists track real-world outcomes so they can negotiate higher reimbursement rates in this new system. If this model succeeds, we may take a small percentage of the additional revenue therapists secure—but only from the increase, never from what you already earn.
That means our success is tied to yours.
(Curious about how we plan to leverage data into higher reimbursements? Check out this note from our founders.)
What This Means
for Your Practice
No fees, ever
Allia makes enough from larger contracts—therapists don’t need to pay.
Your data stays private
We don’t sell or share individual session data.
You stay ahead of the shift to outcomes-based care
Allia helps therapists adapt so they don’t lose ground.