Therapy & Consult Room Pods
Private Practice in Your Backyard
A confidential, soundproofed consulting room for psychologists, counsellors, social workers, and allied health practitioners. No clinic rent. $18,500 base.
The Financial Case
Why Therapists Choose a Pod Over Renting a Room
Clinic room rental in Australian capital cities ranges from $30 to $80 per hour, or $15,000 to $40,000 per year for a therapist seeing clients four to five days a week. That recurring cost disappears when you own your consulting room.
Beyond the financial return, the pod gives a therapist control over the environment in a way that a shared clinic never does. Furniture, lighting, plants, artwork, the temperature, and the sound environment are all yours to manage. For practitioners whose therapeutic modality depends partly on setting, this matters.
- No travel to a clinic, saving time between sessions
- Flexible scheduling without booking a shared room
- Set the temperature, lighting, and ambience precisely
- Clients arrive and leave without entering your home
- Potential depreciation claim as a business asset
- Permanent asset that stays on your property
Client Confidentiality
Soundproofing & Confidentiality
Session confidentiality requires that the content of a conversation cannot be overheard outside the room. The standard SIP pod provides meaningful attenuation of normal speech levels at the physical distance it sits from the house and the boundary.
For a consulting room, the acoustic standard to aim for is that a conversation at normal speaking volume inside the pod is not intelligible outside. This is different from a music studio requirement. It does not require a floating floor or a room-within-a-room; it requires the right wall mass and an absence of flanking paths.
Acoustic upgrade for therapy rooms
Adding 50mm acoustic mineral wool panels to the SIP solid wall sections increases mass and reduces mid-frequency speech transmission significantly. Combined with a compression door seal and a door sweep on the entry door, this brings most pods to a speech privacy level suitable for confidential consultations.
For practitioners who work with clients who are distressed or vocal, the full acoustic panel treatment plus a white noise generator at the entry point (a discreet fan or white noise machine outside the door) provides additional privacy assurance without a structural upgrade.
Practice Separation
Separate Entrance: Keeping Practice Separate from Home
A consulting room in the backyard only works professionally if clients do not pass through the house to reach it. The pod design accommodates a separate client access path from the street or driveway directly to the pod.
Gate and path from street
A side gate with a keypad or intercom allows clients to access the backyard directly without ringing the front door. A path from the gate to the pod keeps the route defined and professional. Discuss the site layout at quote stage so we can advise on the best pod placement for client access.
Waiting space
A small covered deck or bench outside the pod entry gives clients a waiting point without entering the pod before the previous session ends. A simple timber bench under an extended roof overhang, or a deck with a chair, fulfils this role for most practices.
Visual privacy from the house
The pod can be positioned so the client entrance faces away from the main house windows. This means arriving and departing clients are not visible from the kitchen or living room, which protects client privacy further and maintains the separation between home life and practice.
After-hours access
A keypad or smart lock on the pod entry allows clients to check in for an appointment independently if the practitioner is running between sessions. Evening sessions are supported by the pod's independent lighting and power supply without needing to open the house.
Room Design
Setting Up Your Consult Room
The interior of a therapy pod should communicate safety, calm, and professionalism in a way that puts clients at ease from the moment they enter. Here are the core fit-out elements that practitioners commonly specify.
- Two chairs or a chair and couch at a slight angle, not directly facing, with a low table between them
- Warm LED lighting on dimmers rather than overhead fluorescent
- Indoor plants to soften the space and introduce a living element
- Artwork or a single meaningful object rather than clinical emptiness
- Tissue box on the low table, always
- Blinds or privacy film on the glass sections for when full privacy is needed
- A small bookcase with professional titles visible from the client seating
- White noise machine or fan near the entry door, positioned outside
The glass walls introduce natural light and a garden view, which many practitioners find clients respond positively to. A view of greenery from the client chair contributes to the calming effect of the space.
Business Considerations
Tax & Insurance Considerations
For practitioners operating as sole traders or through a company, the pod used exclusively for professional consultations is treated as a business asset with potential depreciation and running cost deductions.
A structure used exclusively for business may be depreciable over its effective life under ATO rules. Running costs including electricity, insurance, and maintenance may also be deductible. Your entitlement depends on your business structure and individual tax position. A registered tax agent or accountant who works with allied health practitioners can confirm what applies. See our tax deductions guide for background.
Most professional indemnity and public liability policies held by therapists cover sessions conducted at a home consulting room, but the specific wording and whether a separate structure in the backyard qualifies varies between insurers and policies. Confirm with your insurer before commencing practice from the pod. Some insurers require the address to be listed as a practice location on the policy. See our insurance guidance page for further detail.
Investment
Therapy Room Pod Pricing
Single consulting pod
- 6 × 3m SIP insulated structure
- Double-glazed glass panel walls
- Flat-pack delivery to site
- 6-day professional installation
- Pre-routed electrical conduit
- Structural engineering certificate
Delivery by state
| State | Delivery cost |
|---|---|
| QLD | $400 – $1,200 |
| NSW | $1,500 – $2,200 |
| VIC | $2,200 – $3,000 |
| ACT | $1,800 – $2,500 |
| SA | $2,800 – $3,500 |
| WA | $4,500 – $6,000 |
| TAS | $3,500 – $4,500 |
| NT | $5,500 – $7,500 |
Acoustic panel upgrade: $2,000 to $4,000. A fully fitted consulting room with electrical, split-system, acoustic treatment, and furniture typically runs $24,000 to $30,000. Payback against clinic rent is typically under 12 months for a full-time practice.
FAQ
Therapy Room Pod FAQ
Get Started
Get a Therapy Room Pod Quote
Tell us your state, your practice type, and your site dimensions. We confirm suitability and advise on the acoustic treatment approach. Display at Valdora, Sunshine Coast QLD.
Request a Quote Call 0490 537 205