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How to Start a Physical Therapy Practice LLC in Minnesota (2026) — Step-by-Step Guide

Everything you need to form your Physical Therapy Practice LLC in Minnesota: official filing fees, processing times, licensing requirements, insurance, and estimated startup costs.

Minnesota LLC Quick Facts

Filing Fee
$155
Processing Time
5–7 business days (online)
Annual Fee
No annual fee
State Income Tax
Yes
Registered Agent
Required — must have a Minnesota address
Filing Agency
Minnesota Secretary of State

Minnesota note: Minnesota requires an annual renewal but charges no fee for it — meaning once formed, your LLC has no state maintenance fees each year.

Why Form an LLC for Your Physical Therapy Practice in Minnesota?

Operating as a sole proprietor leaves your personal assets — your home, savings, and car — exposed to business lawsuits. A Minnesota LLC creates a legal wall between you and your Physical Therapy Practice business. Here is why that matters for your specific type of business:

  • Separates personal assets from professional malpractice risk
  • Enables insurance credentialing as a professional entity
  • Allows multiple PT owners to structure equity in the practice
  • Provides a formal entity for Medicare and Medicaid enrollment

How to Start a Physical Therapy Practice LLC in Minnesota — Step by Step

Follow these steps in order. Most new Physical Therapy Practice owners can complete the LLC formation in 1–2 weeks.

  1. 1
    Earn your Doctor of Physical Therapy (DPT) degree from an accredited program
  2. 2
    Pass the NPTE (National Physical Therapy Examination)
  3. 3
    Apply for your state physical therapy license
  4. 4
    Consult a healthcare attorney on the best ownership structure for your state
  5. 5
    Form your LLC or Professional LLC (PLLC) as required
  6. 6
    Get your EIN and open a business bank account
  7. 7
    Apply for NPI (National Provider Identifier) number
  8. 8
    Credential with insurance panels (BCBS, Aetna, Medicare, etc.)
  9. 9
    Lease and equip your clinic space
  10. 10
    Launch your scheduling system with Session.care

Minnesota LLC Formation Details

Requirement Details
State filing fee $155
Processing time 5–7 business days (online)
Annual report / fee Annual renewal required — No annual fee
Registered agent Required — must have a Minnesota address
State income tax Yes
Filing agency Minnesota Secretary of State

Physical Therapy Practice Licensing in Minnesota

Required License: Doctor of Physical Therapy (DPT) + state PT license

Physical Therapy Practice businesses in Minnesota are licensed by the State Physical Therapy Licensing Board. You must hold the appropriate license before offering services commercially. Your LLC filing with the Minnesota Secretary of State is separate from and does not replace your professional license.

Contact the Minnesota State Physical Therapy Licensing Board directly for current education requirements, exam schedules, and application fees specific to Minnesota.

Insurance for a Physical Therapy Practice LLC in Minnesota

Your LLC protects your personal assets legally, but insurance covers you financially. Most Physical Therapy Practice businesses in Minnesota need several types of coverage:

  • Professional liability (malpractice) — essential for all PT services
  • General liability — covers premises injuries
  • Workers' compensation — required in most states with employees
  • Commercial property — covers treatment tables, exercise equipment, and modalities
  • Cyber liability — important for storing protected health information (PHI)

Estimated Startup Costs for a Physical Therapy Practice in Minnesota

Low-end estimate
$75,000
Home-based or mobile setup
Full commercial setup
$300,000
Retail space + full build-out

These are estimates for Minnesota. Costs vary significantly by city, lease rates, and equipment choices. Typical staff for this business type: Licensed PTs, PTAs, administrative staff, billing specialists.

Frequently Asked Questions

In many states, licensed healthcare professionals are required to form a Professional LLC (PLLC) or Professional Corporation (PC) rather than a standard LLC. The rules vary significantly by state. Some states allow PTs to use a standard LLC; others require a PLLC. Always check with your state PT licensing board and a healthcare attorney.

Yes. A growing number of physical therapists are opening cash-pay (direct access) practices that do not bill insurance. This avoids the administrative burden of credentialing and insurance contracts but requires a patient population willing to pay out of pocket. Pricing is typically higher per session but overhead is lower.

The National Provider Identifier (NPI) is a unique identification number for healthcare providers. Both individual PTs and group practices (your LLC) need separate NPIs. You can apply for both at no cost through the NPPES registry at nppes.cms.hhs.gov. Your NPI is required to bill Medicare, Medicaid, and most private insurers.

Credentialing involves submitting your license, malpractice insurance, NPI, and practice information to each insurer. The process takes 60–120 days per insurer. Many new practices use a credentialing service ($200–$500 per payer) to handle this. Plan to open as a cash-pay practice while credentialing is pending.

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Also read: Complete guide to starting a Physical Therapy Practice business →

Physical Therapy Practice LLC Guides for Other States

Other Care Business LLC Guides for Minnesota