Documentation Time Audit: How Long Should Writing Clinical Notes Actually Take?

Benchmark data on how much time documentation should require, plus strategies to reduce your documentation burden and reclaim time for client care.

Last updated March 15, 2026

The Documentation Time Problem

Therapists consistently report documentation as a major source of work stress and time burden. The numbers tell the story:

Documentation Time Reality

  • Average daily documentation time: 1-2 hours per therapist
  • Percentage of work time spent on notes: 20-30% for most therapists
  • Therapists spending more than 2 hours/day on notes: 41% of surveyed clinicians
  • Notes written after session time: Average 45-60 minutes after client departs
  • Time spent on insurance documentation: 30-45 minutes per authorization request

For a therapist with a typical 20-client weekly caseload:

  • 20 clients × 12 minutes per note = 240 minutes (4 hours) weekly on session notes
  • Insurance requests: 2-3 per week × 40 minutes = 80-120 additional minutes
  • Total: 5-6 hours per week (one full workday)

This is a significant portion of the work week spent on administration rather than client care. Some documentation is necessary, but many therapists feel it's become excessive and poorly designed.

Benchmark Data: How Long Notes Actually Take

Based on industry research and practitioner surveys, here are realistic time benchmarks for different documentation formats:

Note Format Typical Time (Routine Case) Complex Case With Template With AI Tool
SOAP Notes 12-15 min 20-30 min 8-10 min 3-5 min
DAP Notes 8-10 min 15-20 min 5-7 min 2-4 min
BIRP Notes 10-12 min 18-25 min 7-9 min 3-4 min
Progress Notes 10-15 min 20-25 min 8-12 min 3-5 min
Insurance Requests 30-45 min 45-60 min 20-30 min 10-15 min

Key insights from this data:

  • Templates reduce documentation time by 25-40%
  • AI tools reduce documentation time by 60-75%
  • Complex cases take 1.5-2x longer than routine cases
  • Insurance documentation is disproportionately time-consuming

Factors That Affect Documentation Time

1. Case Complexity

Routine cases with stable presentations take less time to document. Complex cases involving multiple diagnoses, safety concerns, medication management, or coordination with other providers require more detailed documentation.

2. Clinician Experience

Experienced clinicians often document faster because they can organize information more efficiently. New clinicians may spend 20-30% more time on documentation because they're still developing clinical efficiency.

3. Note Format

Different formats have different time requirements. DAP notes tend to be faster than SOAP notes because they're more concise. Your format choice affects your documentation burden.

4. Documentation System

Manual documentation (typing from scratch) takes longer than using templates. Templates save 20-40% of time. AI-assisted documentation saves 60-75% of time.

5. Workflow Efficiency

Therapists who batch notes, have organized systems, and write immediately after sessions tend to document faster. Those who write notes days later, switch between systems, or lack organization spend significantly more time.

6. Insurance Requirements

Different insurance companies have different documentation standards. Managing multiple insurance requirements increases documentation burden. Some insurance companies require very detailed authorization documentation.

Key Takeaway: Documentation time varies significantly based on case complexity, format, experience level, and tools used. The best practices involve using templates and workflow optimization to reduce administrative burden.

The 5-Minute Documentation Time Audit

To understand your current documentation burden, conduct a simple audit over one week:

Step 1: Track One Week of Documentation

  • Time each note as you write it (use a timer or time tracking app)
  • Record the case complexity (routine, moderate, complex)
  • Record the note type (SOAP, DAP, progress, etc.)
  • Record any insurance-related documentation time

Step 2: Calculate Your Averages

  • Average time per routine session note
  • Average time per complex session note
  • Total documentation time for the week
  • Percentage of work time spent on documentation

Step 3: Compare to Benchmarks

  • Is your time above, at, or below benchmark for your note format?
  • Are you spending significantly more time on insurance documentation?
  • Is there variance suggesting some inefficiency?

Step 4: Identify Opportunities

  • Are certain note types taking unexpectedly long?
  • Are you writing notes at inefficient times (when tired, distracted)?
  • Are there workflow inefficiencies (switching systems, looking things up, etc.)?

Strategies for Reducing Documentation Time

1. Use Templates

Standardized templates reduce decision fatigue and save 20-40% of time. Pre-structured fields guide your documentation and ensure completeness. Many practices develop diagnosis-specific templates for common presentations.

2. Batch Your Documentation

Writing all morning notes together at midday or all notes at the end of the day creates flow and efficiency. This works better for some clinicians than writing immediately after each session.

3. Write Immediately After Sessions

Other clinicians find that writing immediately after each session preserves details and prevents having to reconstruct the session later. Experiment to find what works for you.

4. Use Voice-to-Text

Speaking notes instead of typing can reduce time by 30-40%. This works well for some clinicians but requires careful editing and organization.

5. Optimize Your Workflow

Examine your actual documentation process. Are you switching between multiple systems? Looking up information repeatedly? Reorganizing information? Small workflow improvements can save 10-20% of time.

6. Use Clinical Shortcuts Appropriately

Develop standard language for common observations ("client presented with congruent affect and cooperative engagement") that you can use consistently. This speeds writing without compromising quality.

7. Standardize Your Insurance Documentation

Create templates for common authorization requests and insurance justifications. Don't rewrite the same information for each request.

How AI Reduces Documentation Time

Artificial intelligence can dramatically reduce documentation time by automating organization and suggesting appropriate language:

AI Documentation Tools Can:

  • Organize your session information into appropriate sections automatically
  • Suggest clinically appropriate language and terminology
  • Check for missing required documentation elements
  • Ensure consistency across your notes
  • Generate templates based on your actual practice patterns
  • Create insurance justification language from your clinical thinking

Real-World Time Reduction:

Benchmark comparison (from 2025 research):

  • Manual SOAP note: 14.1 minutes average
  • AI-assisted SOAP note: 4.2 minutes average
  • Time savings: 70% reduction

For a full-time therapist:

  • 20 clients × 52 weeks = 1,040 sessions per year
  • Manual notes: 1,040 × 14.1 minutes = 246 hours annually
  • AI-assisted notes: 1,040 × 4.2 minutes = 73 hours annually
  • Annual time savings: 173 hours (4+ weeks of work time)

Reclaim Hours. Protect Your Wellbeing.

Reduce documentation from 1-2 hours daily to 30-45 minutes. Mental Note AI generates compliant notes in minutes, reclaiming 3-5 hours weekly. Free: 2,000 words/month. Unlimited: $99/month or $990/year.

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Calculate Your Time Savings

Simple Time Savings Calculator

Step 1: Your Current Documentation Time

Number of clients per week: __________

Average minutes per note: __________

Current weekly documentation time = [# clients] × [minutes per note] = ___________ minutes

Step 2: With AI Documentation Tools (assume 70% reduction)

New time per note: [Current minutes] × 0.30 = ___________ minutes

New weekly documentation time = ___________ minutes

Step 3: Calculate Your Savings

Weekly time saved: [Current time] - [New time] = ___________ minutes/week

Annual time saved: [Weekly savings] × 52 weeks = ___________ hours/year

Example Calculation

20 clients per week × 12 minutes per note = 240 minutes (4 hours/week)
With AI tools: 20 × 3.6 minutes = 72 minutes (1.2 hours/week)
Weekly savings: 168 minutes (2.8 hours)
Annual savings: 146 hours (3.6 weeks)

Key Takeaway: The average therapist can reclaim 3-5 hours weekly by using AI documentation tools. That's 150-250 hours annually — equivalent to a month of work time returned to client care and personal wellbeing.

Related Resources

Ready to reduce your documentation time? Read our SOAP notes guide for best practices that improve efficiency. Also explore the documentation burden crisis to understand the broader impact.

Reduce Documentation. Increase Client Care.

Benchmark research shows documentation should take 10-15 minutes per session, not 20-30. Mental Note AI helps you achieve efficient documentation while maintaining clinical quality and compliance.

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