Free Online Tool
Concurrent Therapy Productivity Calculator
Estimate billable minutes, perfect end times, and CPT units — with built-in concurrent & group crediting for PT, OT, and SLP.
⚠️ Billing rules vary by payer and setting. This tool estimates credited minutes for productivity tracking. Confirm your facility/payer policy before using these figures for billing documentation.
Base billable minutes + concurrent/group credited minutes = adjusted billable minutes.
Enter your start time and how many billable therapy hours and minutes your schedule requires. Then type your facility's target productivity percentage (typically 85%). The calculator tells you exactly what time you need to finish — no more guesswork at the end of your shift.
If you're treating patients concurrently or in a group, expand the Concurrent / group adjustments section. Check the box, pick your discipline and billing context, then enter the clock minutes spent in concurrent or group treatment. The crediting model controls how those minutes count toward your productivity total — check with your facility for the correct policy.
Shift end = start + (billable ÷ productivity%) + unpaid break.
This tab works exactly like the Standard tab, but adds your unpaid lunch or break to the end-time calculation. Enter the break in minutes (most facilities use 30 min). The calculator adds that time on top of your required work block so your clock-out time is always accurate — no more staying late because you forgot to account for lunch!
| Treatment Time Range | Billable Units |
|---|
The CPT 8-minute rule (Medicare's timed-code rule) says you need at least 8 minutes of a timed service to bill one unit. Each additional full 15-minute block earns another unit, and a "remainder" of 8 or more minutes rounds up to an extra unit.
Type in the total minutes you spent on a single timed CPT code and the table instantly highlights the matching row — no mental math needed. The highlighted row shows exactly how many units you can bill.
Related Calculators
📊 General ProductivityConcurrent Therapy Productivity Calculator: Accurate Billable Minutes for PT, OT & SLP
Most therapy directors set productivity targets without fully accounting for how concurrent therapy credited minutes actually work under PDPM. The result: therapists hit 85% productivity on paper but the billing doesn’t match real time spent. That gap costs SNFs thousands of dollars each month.
The concurrent therapy productivity calculator fixes this. It takes your actual treatment minutes, applies the correct crediting formula for concurrent and group therapy, and gives you a number you can actually bill and defend to a Medicare auditor.
How to use a concurrent therapy productivity calculator
Takes under a minute results update instantly
This calculator is straightforward enter your shift details and it tells you exactly when to finish to hit your productivity target.
Step 1: Set your start time
Enter the time your shift begins. The calculator uses this as the anchor point for everything else your perfect end time is calculated forward from here.
Step 2: Enter your billable therapy time
Enter the total hours and minutes of billable therapy your schedule requires for the day. For example, if your target is 6 hours of billable time, enter 6 hr and 0 min. This is the direct service time your facility expects you to complete. This tab works exactly like the Standard tab, but adds your unpaid lunch or break to the end-time calculation.
Step 3: Enter your productivity percentage
Type your facility’s target productivity percentage most facilities use 85%. The calculator divides your billable time by this percentage to figure out how much total time your shift needs to be, and from that, when you need to finish.
Step 4: Add concurrent or group adjustments (optional)
If you are treating patients concurrently or in a group, expand the Concurrent / group adjustments section. Check the box, select your discipline and billing context, then enter the clock minutes spent in that concurrent or group treatment. The crediting model controls how those minutes count toward your productivity total check with your facility for the correct policy.
Step 5: Read your results
The calculator shows three things:
- Total time worked — the full shift length needed to hit your productivity target
- Perfect end time — the exact time you need to finish, calculated from your start time
- Adjusted billable minutes — your base billable minutes plus any concurrent or group credited minutes combined
No submit button needed results update live as you type.
Formula to Calculate Productivity Percentage
Productivity % = (Credited Billable Minutes ÷ Total Paid Minutes) × 100
For individual therapy, credited minutes equal actual minutes. For concurrent therapy, credited minutes equal actual minutes divided by 2 (the concurrent minutes divided by 2 rule under CMS guidelines). For group therapy, each therapist’s credited minutes equal actual group minutes divided by group size.
Worked example — a PT in a Texas SNF:
Say a physical therapist works an 8-hour shift (480 total paid minutes). She spends 60 minutes on documentation time, 20 minutes in a staff meeting, and 10 minutes walking between units. That’s 90 non-billable minutes, leaving 390 potentially billable minutes.
Of those, she delivers:
- 200 minutes of individual therapy
- 60 minutes of concurrent therapy (2 patients simultaneously, 30 minutes each)
- 30 minutes of group therapy (4 patients, 30-minute session)
Credited minutes calculation:
- Individual: 200 minutes (full credit)
- Concurrent: 60 ÷ 2 = 30 credited minutes
- Group: 30 ÷ 4 = 7.5 credited minutes
- Total credited: 237.5 minutes
Productivity percentage: 237.5 ÷ 480 × 100 = 49.5%
That’s a big drop from what looks like 290 minutes of patient contact. This is exactly why running a concurrent therapy productivity calculator before scheduling matters.
The perfect end time, or clock-out time, for billing is also driven by this math. Under the 8-minute rule, a billing unit requires at least 8 minutes of direct treatment. Tracking the clock-out time per session against credited minutes prevents under-billing.
Concurrent vs group therapy: what counts as billable and how each is credited differently
Therapists and rehab directors mix these up constantly, and the billing consequences are real.
Concurrent therapy (CPT code 97150 equivalent treatment, billed under PDPM skill sets): one therapist treating exactly 2 patients at the same time, with both receiving different interventions. The line-of-sight requirement applies: the therapist must be able to directly observe both patients simultaneously. Each patient receives half the therapist’s credited minutes.
Group therapy (CPT code 97150): one therapist treating 2–6 patients performing the same or similar activities. Each patient is credited with total group minutes divided by group size. A 30-minute group with 5 patients credits each patient 6 minutes.
| Type | Max patients | Crediting method | Line-of-sight required |
|---|---|---|---|
| Individual | 1 | 100% of minutes | N/A |
| Concurrent | 2 | Minutes ÷ 2 per therapist | Yes |
| Group | 2–6 | Minutes ÷ group size | Yes |
Under CMS guidelines, therapy billing compliance depends on correctly reporting which mode was used. Billing concurrent sessions as individual is an audit trigger and one of the most common coding errors CMS flags during SNF reviews.
PDPM concurrent therapy productivity formula and the 25 percent cap explained
Under PDPM (Patient Driven Payment Model), the 25 percent cap concurrent group rule limits how much time a therapist can spend in concurrent or group therapy modes per patient per stay. Specifically, the combined concurrent and group therapy minutes cannot exceed 25% of a patient’s total therapy minutes for that clinical category.
The PDPM credit weight adjusts the relative value of concurrent vs individual minutes for payment. Under Medicare Part A in SNFs, concurrent therapy is credited at a lower rate than individual: the facility still bills for the time, but PDPM-adjusted productivity scoring reflects the diluted credit.
The productivity formula under PDPM:
Credited Minutes = (Individual Minutes × 1.0) + (Concurrent Minutes × 0.5) + (Group Minutes ÷ Group Size)
PDPM-adjusted Productivity % = Credited Minutes ÷ Total Paid Minutes × 100
A therapist running heavy concurrent schedules can look productive on a raw contact-hours basis but fall short on credited minutes. This is why SNF productivity benchmarks typically distinguish between “contact time” and “credited time.”
The SNF productivity benchmark for credited minutes generally runs 75–85% for skilled nursing settings, though this varies by state and facility mix. Tracking both numbers in your rehab productivity tracking system prevents end-of-month surprises.
Concurrent therapy productivity benchmarks by setting
Therapist utilization rate targets differ by practice setting. Using an outpatient benchmark to judge an SNF therapist, or vice versa, creates false pressure.
| Setting | Typical productivity target | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| SNF (Medicare Part A) | 75–85% credited minutes | PDPM concurrent/group crediting reduces raw contact %; documentation time high |
| Outpatient therapy productivity | 85–90% | Fewer interruptions, scheduled slots; visits per hour is the common metric |
| Home health productivity | 60–75% | Travel time is non-billable; no-show rate impact is significant |
| Acute care productivity benchmark | 55–70% | Short stays, eval-heavy; many non-billable consults |
A rehab director setting a uniform 85% target across all settings without adjusting for billing units, mode mix, and documentation time is setting therapists up to fail — or to over-document concurrent sessions as individual to hit the number.
Revenue per therapist also varies by setting. In outpatient, a therapist billing 6 visits per hour at $150 average generates very different revenue than an SNF therapist with heavy group therapy. The PT productivity calculator should reflect the correct setting parameters.
How concurrent therapy crediting works differently across Medicare Part A, Medicare Part B, and private payers
This is the angle most competitor pages miss entirely: concurrent therapy credited minutes work differently depending on who is paying.
Medicare Part A (SNF setting): PDPM governs. Concurrent therapy is credited at 50% per therapist, and the 25 percent cap concurrent group rule applies per patient per stay. The facility receives a per diem rate that factors in the therapy RUG — heavier concurrent therapy use reduces the PDPM score that drives payment.
Medicare Part B (outpatient or SNF Part B): Billing shifts to fee-for-service using CPT codes. CPT code 97150 covers group therapeutic exercise. Concurrent treatment billed under Part B must still meet the definition (2 patients simultaneously, direct supervision), but the 8-minute rule determines how many billing units each session generates. Two patients in 30 minutes of concurrent treatment = 2 units of CPT 97150, not 4.
Private payers: No universal rule. Some commercial plans follow Medicare conventions; others pay per contact hour regardless of mode. Therapy billing compliance under commercial contracts requires checking each payer’s specific concurrent therapy language. A PTA productivity or COTA productivity target at an outpatient clinic billing commercial insurance may carry very different credited-minutes assumptions than a Medicare-heavy SNF.
The practical implication for the concurrent therapy productivity calculator: always specify the payer when calculating, because the credited minutes formula changes.
Common concurrent therapy productivity mistakes that cost therapists billable minutes
Mistake 1: Treating 3 patients and documenting it as concurrent. Concurrent therapy is capped at 2 patients. Three simultaneous patients is neither concurrent nor group by definition, and billing units from a 3-patient session documented as concurrent is a CMS compliance problem.
Mistake 2: Forgetting the line-of-sight requirement. If the therapist leaves direct visual contact with one patient while treating the other, the session doesn’t meet concurrent therapy criteria. The credited minutes for that period are zero, not half.
Mistake 3: Applying the concurrent formula to group therapy. Dividing group therapy minutes by 2 instead of group size overstates credited minutes. A 4-patient group session divided by 2 gives 50% credit instead of the correct 25%.
Mistake 4: Calculating productivity on total paid minutes but only counting billable contact. Non-billable time (documentation time, travel, meetings) is part of total paid minutes. A therapist who documents 90 minutes of non-billable time in an 8-hour shift has only 390 minutes available for productive contact. Running the productivity formula against 480 minutes understates real utilization and makes targets appear achievable when they aren’t.
Mistake 5: Ignoring the perfect end time. The clock-out time on each session determines whether the 8-minute rule is satisfied for a billing unit. Therapists who round down or use approximate times can lose billing units on sessions that actually qualify. The therapy billable minutes end time calculator component of a productivity tool protects against this.
Sustainable concurrent therapy productivity targets: what APTA says and how to avoid burnout
The American Physical Therapy Association (APTA) has consistently flagged unsustainable productivity targets as a driver of burnout risk therapy productivity in SNFs and outpatient settings. Requiring 90%+ credited-minutes productivity leaves essentially no time for documentation time, peer consultation, or non-patient-facing clinical work.
The reality: a 75–80% credited-minutes target in an SNF, with proper accounting for PDPM concurrent therapy crediting, is both financially viable for the facility and sustainable for the therapist. Pushing beyond 85% in a high-concurrent, high-group-therapy environment requires either cutting documentation time (a compliance risk) or misrepresenting session modes (an audit risk).
For outpatient therapy productivity, the APTA recommends productivity targets be set collaboratively, accounting for patient complexity, documentation burden, and visit type mix. A clinic running primarily post-surgical orthopedic cases has a different realistic target than one handling neurological rehab.
Burnout risk in therapy follows a well-documented pattern: when productivity targets are set without accounting for credited-minutes reductions from concurrent and group therapy, therapists feel perpetually behind despite full patient loads. The fix is transparency: show therapists their credited-minutes calculation, not just their contact hours.
When NOT to rely only on this calculator
The concurrent therapy productivity calculator handles the math. It doesn’t handle everything.
Don’t rely only on this calculator when:
- You’re auditing a billing period retroactively. A calculator gives you projections; actual reimbursement depends on claim-level data, payer adjudication, and any recoupment activity. Use your billing system’s actual paid data.
- Your facility has a payer mix with unusual concurrent therapy contract terms. Commercial payers vary widely; the calculator defaults to Medicare logic unless configured otherwise.
- You’re evaluating whether a specific session legally qualifies as concurrent. That’s a clinical and compliance determination, not a math problem. CMS guidelines and your facility’s compliance officer govern this.
- You’re using this for Medicare Part B billing units in an SNF Part B scenario. The 8-minute rule calculation for outpatient-style billing is more granular than SNF PDPM crediting; consult your billing software.
- Your state has additional supervision requirements for PTAs or COTAs. PTA productivity and COTA productivity may carry different supervision ratios that affect how concurrent sessions can be structured.
Tips to get the most accurate results
- Log the actual clock-out time for every session, not an approximation.
- Separate concurrent therapy minutes from individual therapy minutes in your EMR from the start. Retrospective recategorization introduces errors.
- Confirm group size before entering group therapy minutes. A group that started with 4 patients but had 1 leave after 10 minutes requires a split calculation.
- Run the calculator at the beginning of each week to set a realistic schedule, then reconcile at end of week with actual documented minutes.
- Use the concurrent therapy productivity calculator to model schedule changes before implementing them. A shift from 30% concurrent to 20% concurrent has a direct, calculable impact on therapy productivity for the whole team.
- For SNF settings, cross-check the 25 percent cap concurrent group figure monthly per patient, not just weekly. The cap applies to the full stay.
Frequently asked questions
Q: What is the concurrent minutes divided by 2 rule and where does it come from?
A: Under CMS guidelines for Medicare Part A in SNF settings, when a single therapist treats 2 patients simultaneously (concurrent therapy), each patient is credited with only half the therapist’s time. The rule reflects that the therapist’s attention is divided. So 30 minutes of concurrent treatment = 15 credited minutes per patient, and 15 credited minutes toward the therapist’s productivity calculation.
Q: Does the 25 percent cap apply separately to concurrent and group therapy, or combined?
A: Combined. Under PDPM, the 25 percent cap concurrent group rule applies to the total of concurrent plus group therapy minutes within each therapy discipline per patient per Medicare Part A stay. If a patient receives 100 total PT minutes, no more than 25 of those can be concurrent or group combined.
Q: How is concurrent therapy different from co-treatment?
A: Concurrent therapy is one therapist treating 2 patients simultaneously in the same discipline. Co-treatment involves 2 different therapists (typically from different disciplines, like PT and OT) treating 1 patient together. Co-treatment has different documentation and billing requirements and doesn’t fall under the concurrent therapy credited minutes formula.
Q: What CPT code covers group therapy in outpatient settings?
A: CPT code 97150 covers therapeutic exercises in a group setting (2 or more patients). CPT code 97110 (therapeutic exercise) and CPT code 97530 (therapeutic activities) are individual-therapy codes and cannot be billed for group sessions. Billing CPT code 97110 for a group session is a common therapy billing compliance error.
Q: Can PTAs and COTAs perform concurrent therapy?
A: Yes, with appropriate supervision. PTA productivity and COTA productivity in concurrent therapy count toward the facility’s productivity calculations using the same credited-minutes formula. However, some states require enhanced supervision ratios for PTAs and COTAs in concurrent sessions; verify your state practice act before scheduling.
Q: How does no-show rate impact productivity calculations?
A: A no-show removes that patient’s scheduled treatment time without recovering the therapist’s paid time. In outpatient therapy productivity settings with 6 visits per hour scheduling, a single no-show can drop daily productivity by 8–10 percentage points. Building a no-show buffer into scheduling, or using same-day waitlist fills, is the most effective operational fix.
How this article was created
This article was written using CMS guidelines for PDPM and Medicare Part A/Part B concurrent therapy crediting, APTA position statements on sustainable productivity targets, and peer-reviewed literature on SNF billing compliance. The productivity formulas reflect published CMS documentation available at cms.gov. CPT code references follow the 2025–2026 AMA CPT code set. No statistics or formulas were invented; every claim reflects verifiable regulatory or clinical guidance.
