Wow I can not thank you enough for your response and the way you laid everything out! You answered many of my questions and explained them the best way I have heard! I appreciate you taking your time to do this and help a confused student at a cross roads! Did you do it full time or part time while pursuing your doctorate? Is there a benefit to doing it either way besides the timeline obviously! Lastly, my main goal is to one day have my own private practice and provide therapy/counseling to my clients, with this in mind is just sticking to my masters the best bet? I have heard for what I want to do I can just do it with a masters but if I can make significantly more income having a doctorate in private practice vs a masters I would probably take the time to get the doctorate and not leave any potential earnings on the table, what are you thoughts? Thanks again for all your help & feedback, means a lot!
No problem, I hope it was helpful!
I did full time. I would not personally go the part-time route. If it is of the same rigor and quality of a full time program, it would take much longer to complete anyways. Also most part time programs are "online" or part of stand alone "professional" schools that frankly do not have a good reputation (you may see them mentioned by name in various threads). Some professional schools in some fields are fine (i.e. medicine), but there's something to be said about having the resources and integration of a full university with the program. Another consideration is the cohort model works best in a full time program; being alongside the same small group for 4-6 years can really make the tough journey a bit easier. Plus good support and networking. Many full time programs are upfront with the time commitment and some do design their schedules so you could work part time but once practicums, internships, dissertation comes into play it gets harder; also semester to semester some courses may be at different times of the day and some may require longer hours than others.
If you are solely interested in therapy and mostly in a private setting, IMO a good quality masters in Clinical/Counseling Psych or in Clinical Social Work would allow for that. However, I would note a few caveats. You wouldn't be providing assessments/evaluations and you would be heavily reliant on show rates. You'd also need to see more clients per week on average than a doctoral level in private practice. Many LPCs and LCSWs end up in settings like community health early on which is fine but very low pay. Those who have moved into private practice often build the practice with others, sometimes in different fields. For example I know one LPC that focuses on eating disorders and body dysmorphia and she teamed up with a nutritionist to offer a more comprehensive "one stop" experience. I know another that was interested in sex therapy and LBGTQ populations, eventually started their own practice but brought in other therapists with expertise in those areas. To be honest if you want your own practice you'll likely start out on the side with it while working elsewhere; you'll eventually need to look into having others working in your practice to offset costs and will in essence be managing a small practice. Many simply find good already established group practices and build caseloads there, which is often easier because you do not have to generate and build your own referral bases.
As others have said it is incredibly expensive and time consuming to build a practice from scratch (and psychologists have the same problem but can recoup costs faster with assessments, evaluations, higher hourly, etc). One course in my doctoral program had a portion of the course dedicated solely to business management and practice building; it's expensive and you're reliant on ensuring a steady flow of cases. You also end up responsible for your own healthcare, own retirement (often with no match), self-employment taxes, operating expenses, advertising expenses, etc. Many group practices as they grow are able to offer some benefits.
Another big consideration is options. At the doctoral level, especially when licensed, you will have many more opportunities and diversity in the roles and work you can take on. At that level you can offer assessment/evaluation services alongside therapy, earn more per hour, and you have likely more opportunities if you choose to teach, engage in research, etc. A masters level clinician or therapist better love either straight therapy planning to fill 30-35 slots a week (assuming some no shows and cancels) and/or be interested in "moving up" to management in a variety of managed care/mental health agencies.
Money isn't everything of course and many will tell you that the debt needed for a PsyD is going to cost more than a Masters, but I think there's more opportunities and diversity of work available as a psychologist vs a masters level therapist. And more opportunities to earn more income both in terms of hourly rates and jobs available.
Sorry if it's a lot in one post, but the TLDR: If you want to teach, do assessments/evaluations, make more per hour on therapy then get the doctorate. If you love therapy, hate assessments/evaluations (which is ok!), then a masters is fine. Realistically look for a group practice to join rather than trying to build your own practice from ground up unless you have a niche that the market in your area has a need for.