IntakeQ vs TherapyAppointment
IntakeQ scores 8.3/10 vs 6.8/10. Best for: Health practitioners who are drowning in paper intake forms and want the best digital forms tool that also handles scheduling and billing.
IntakeQ scores higher overall at 8.3/10 vs 6.8/10. Buy IntakeQ if your biggest headache is paper intake forms and you want the best digital forms tool that also does scheduling and billing. Skip it if you need a full-featured EHR with outcome tracking and deep clinical documentation.
IntakeQ
TherapyAppointment Rank
#2 of 41
Rank
#33 of 41
Features
15/18
Features
17/18
Starting at
$29.9/mo
Starting at
$10/mo
User reviews
4.7/5 (321)
User reviews
3.8/5 (107)
What they cost
| IntakeQ | TherapyAppointment | |
|---|---|---|
| Starting at | $30 /mo | $10 /mo |
| Free trial | 14 days | 30 days |
| Number of plans | 4 | 4 |
What the pricing really means
At first glance, TherapyAppointment looks cheaper at $10/month vs $29.9/month. But sticker price is only part of the story. Look at what is included on the base plan, how many users you get, and whether you need add-ons to get the features you actually need. The $99/month plan that requires $200 in add-ons is actually more expensive than the $250/month plan that includes everything.
Where IntakeQ wins
- The intake forms are the best in the category. Fully customizable, branded, and clients actually complete them before the first session without calling you confused
- Low-volume plans at $29.90 and $59.90 per month let part-time practitioners avoid paying for capacity they do not use
- Month-to-month billing with no contracts. You can upgrade, downgrade, or cancel anytime without penalty
- 4.7 stars on both G2 and Capterra with over 300 reviews. That is not hype, that is consistent satisfaction across years of feedback
- The API is well documented, so if you want to push form data into your own systems or Zapier, you can
Where TherapyAppointment wins
- Pricing starts at $10/mo and scales with your caseload, so you only pay more when you actually book more sessions
- 30-day free trial with full access to every feature, no credit card required upfront
- Built-in telehealth option at $15/mo per provider, or bring your own Zoom for Healthcare at $5/mo
- Been around since 2006, which means fewer surprise shutdowns or feature pivots compared to newer startups
- E-prescribing available for $65/mo per prescriber, keeping psychiatrists on the same platform
Where IntakeQ falls short
- The practice management side is an add-on, not the core product. Scheduling and billing work but feel less polished than dedicated EHRs
- No native mobile app. Checking forms and appointments from your phone means using a mobile browser
- If you need full EHR features like outcome measures or treatment plan tracking, IntakeQ does not go deep enough
- Adding practitioners gets expensive. At $30/month per additional provider on the top plan, a five-person practice pays $204.90/month
Where TherapyAppointment falls short
- Telehealth, e-prescribing, and claims are all paid add-ons, so costs stack up fast once you leave the base plan
- Capterra rating of 4.1 with 12% negative reviews points to real frustration, especially around interface design
- No open API, so you cannot connect it to tools like Zapier or your own automations
- Interface looks dated compared to newer competitors like Sessions Health or Blueprint
Who is each product built for?
IntakeQ
Target: 1-20 practitioners
Buy IntakeQ if your biggest headache is paper intake forms and you want the best digital forms tool that also does scheduling and billing. Skip it if you need a full-featured EHR with outcome tracking and deep clinical documentation.
TherapyAppointment
Target: 1-15 clinicians
Buy TherapyAppointment if you are a low-volume solo therapist who wants to start at $10/mo and grow into higher tiers naturally. Skip if you want a modern interface or need telehealth and claims included in the base price.
Feature comparison
| Feature | IntakeQ | TherapyAppointment |
|---|---|---|
| Compliance & Security | ||
| HIPAA compliant | ||
| Telehealth / video sessions | ||
| Secure messaging | ||
| Scheduling & Clients | ||
| Online scheduling | ||
| Client portal | ||
| Intake forms / assessments | ||
| Automated reminders | ||
| Clinical | ||
| Progress notes / documentation | ||
| Treatment plans | ||
| E-prescribing | ||
| Outcome measures / assessments | ||
| Billing & Payments | ||
| Insurance billing / claims | ||
| Payment processing | ||
| Superbill generation | ||
| Automated billing | ||
| Platform | ||
| Group practice support | ||
| Mobile app | ||
| Integrations / API | ||
Common questions
IntakeQ scores 8.3/10 vs TherapyAppointment's 6.8/10 in our ranking. IntakeQ is the better pick for 1-20 practitioners. TherapyAppointment is better if you need solo therapists or small practices that want straightforward scheduling and billing without paying for features they will never use.
IntakeQ starts at $29.9/month. TherapyAppointment starts at $10/month. Watch for add-on costs — the base price often does not include all features. Pricing last verified 2026-04-01.
IntakeQ: Yes, 14-day free trial. TherapyAppointment: Yes, 30-day free trial. Always test with your actual workflow before committing to an annual plan.
IntakeQ covers 15 of 18 features we track. TherapyAppointment covers 17 of 18. TherapyAppointment has broader feature coverage, but more features does not always mean better — pick the tool that covers what your business actually needs.
No, IntakeQ does not have a mobile app. TherapyAppointment does have one.
Yes. The main effort is migrating your data (customer lists, job history, invoices). Plan for 1-2 weeks of overlap where you run both. Most healthcare practice management tools can import CSV data. Ask both vendors about migration support before you sign.
The bottom line
Pick IntakeQ if...
Health practitioners who are drowning in paper intake forms and want the best digital forms tool that also handles scheduling and billing
Pick TherapyAppointment if...
Solo therapists or small practices that want straightforward scheduling and billing without paying for features they will never use.