Therapy Progress Note Template (Free): SOAP, DAP & BIRP Formats
Good progress notes don’t require an expensive template pack or a premium EHR subscription. They require a clear structure, clinical thinking, and consistency. Below are free therapy progress note templates in the three formats most commonly used in outpatient mental health — ready to copy, paste, and adapt to your practice.
Use these as starting points. Modify them to match your clinical style, your setting’s requirements, and your population. The format is less important than whether it actually reflects your clinical reasoning.
What Every Therapy Progress Note Needs
Before the templates: regardless of which format you use, every progress note should contain these elements.
Everything else is structure. These are the bones.
Free SOAP Note Template for Therapy
SOAP is the most universally recognized format — standard across healthcare settings and well understood by supervisors, auditors, and insurance reviewers.
SESSION DATE: ____________ CLIENT ID: ____________ SESSION #: ____________ SESSION TYPE: Individual / Couples / Family / Group DURATION: ____________ S — SUBJECTIVE [Client's self-report. What did the client say about their week, their mood, their presenting concerns today? Use the client's own words where useful. Note any significant events disclosed.] "[Direct quote if relevant]" Safety check: Client [ ] denied / [ ] reported SI/HI. [If reported: describe nature, plan, protective factors, action taken.] O — OBJECTIVE Appearance: [Grooming, dress, physical presentation] Mood: [Client's reported emotional state] Affect: [Observed emotional expression] — [ ] congruent / [ ] incongruent with mood Speech: [Rate, tone, clarity, coherence] Eye contact: [Maintained / intermittent / limited / avoided] Behavior: [Notable behavioral observations in session] Engagement: [Participated / guarded / resistant / excellent rapport] Assessment administered: [ ] None [ ] PHQ-9: ___ [ ] GAD-7: ___ [ ] PCL-5: ___ [ ] Other: _______________________ A — ASSESSMENT Diagnostic impression: [Current diagnosis with ICD-10 code — speak to how it is presenting NOW, not just restating the label] Progress toward treatment goals: Goal 1 — [Goal description]: [ ] Improving [ ] Stable [ ] Declining [ ] Achieved Goal 2 — [Goal description]: [ ] Improving [ ] Stable [ ] Declining [ ] Achieved Clinical summary: [2-4 sentences synthesizing today's session, progress, concerns, and clinical reasoning. This is where your professional judgment lives.] Risk: [ ] Low — client denied SI/HI, no active safety concerns. [ ] Moderate — [describe] [ ] High — [describe and document action taken] P — PLAN Next session: [ ] Weekly [ ] Biweekly [ ] As needed — Date: ____________ Session focus for next appointment: Between-session assignment: Referrals / coordination: Treatment plan update needed: [ ] No [ ] Yes — [describe] Clinician signature: _________________________ Date: _____________
Free DAP Note Template for Therapy
DAP (Data, Assessment, Plan) is a streamlined alternative to SOAP that combines the subjective and objective sections into one. It’s faster to write and works well for experienced clinicians who’ve internalized the distinction.
SESSION DATE: ____________ CLIENT ID: ____________ SESSION #: ____________ D — DATA [Combine client self-report and clinician observations here. What did the client present with today? What did you observe? This section blends what the client said with what you saw.] Client presentation: Client reported: Clinician observed (mood, affect, speech, behavior, engagement): Safety: Client [ ] denied / [ ] reported SI/HI. [Details if applicable:] Measures: [ ] PHQ-9: ___ [ ] GAD-7: ___ [ ] Other: ___ A — ASSESSMENT Clinical impression and progress: [How is the client doing in relation to treatment goals? What does the data from this session suggest clinically? What worked or didn't in this session?] Risk level: [ ] Low [ ] Moderate [ ] High — [details:] P — PLAN Frequency: [ ] Weekly [ ] Biweekly — Next session: ____________ Next session focus: Between-session tasks: Referrals / coordination: Clinician signature: _________________________ Date: _____________
Free BIRP Note Template for Therapy
BIRP (Behavior, Intervention, Response, Plan) is built around what you did in session — making it especially useful when billing insurance and needing to demonstrate medical necessity through clinical interventions.
SESSION DATE: ____________ CLIENT ID: ____________ SESSION #: ____________ B — BEHAVIOR [What did the client present with? What behaviors, thoughts, emotions, and statements were brought to the session? Include safety status.] Client presented with: Safety: Client [ ] denied / [ ] reported SI/HI. [Details:] I — INTERVENTION [What did YOU do? Specific techniques, approaches, and clinical skills used in session. Be specific — "supportive counseling" is weak; "Socratic questioning to identify cognitive distortions related to catastrophizing" is strong.] Interventions used: R — RESPONSE [How did the client respond to your interventions? What shifted during the session? What was the client's level of engagement, insight, and affect?] Client response: P — PLAN Next session: [ ] Weekly [ ] Biweekly — Date: ____________ Next session focus: Between-session assignment: Referrals / updates: Clinician signature: _________________________ Date: _____________
Which Format Should You Use?
Use SOAP when:
Use DAP when:
Use BIRP when:
How to Use These Templates in Your EHR
Most EHR platforms — SimplePractice, TherapyNotes, TheraNest — allow you to create custom note templates. Copy the relevant template above, strip out the formatting marks, and paste it into your EHR’s custom template builder. Then adjust based on your clinical workflow.
A few customization tips:
Add your common interventions as checkboxes. If you primarily use CBT, DBT, or IFS, you can pre-populate an intervention list so you’re selecting rather than typing from scratch each time.
Include a brief treatment goals section. Rather than referencing your treatment plan from another document each time, embed a short summary of active goals directly in the note template.
Create separate templates for intake, follow-up, and crisis notes. Your documentation needs differ significantly between session types.
A Note on Documentation Quality
A template is a container — not a substitute for clinical thinking. The therapists who write the most defensible, most useful progress notes are the ones who treat the note as a brief clinical argument: here’s what I saw, here’s what it means, here’s what I did, here’s what happens next.
Fill in these templates with that mindset and your documentation will serve both your clients and your practice well.
All templates on this page are free to use and adapt. For additional resources — including sample intake forms, treatment plan templates, and documentation guides — visit the TherapistDesk library.