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Chiropractic & Physiotherapy

Chiropractic software compared: PMS, EHR, scheduling and the phone layer

A vendor-neutral guide to chiropractic practice management software for Canadian clinics, from EHR and scheduling to billing, plus the front-desk call layer most roundups ignore.

Max Feller Max Feller Co-Founder 5 min read
A chiropractic front desk in a Canadian clinic with practice management software open on the monitor and the phone within reach

Chiropractic practice management software pulls scheduling, electronic health records, SOAP notes, and billing into one secure platform that your front desk and providers live in all day. The strongest options for Canadian clinics are ChiroTouch, Jane, ChiroFusion, Genesis and Eclipse, with Jane a Toronto-built favourite, typically costing between roughly C$60 and C$300 per provider per month. The one layer every roundup forgets is the front desk phone that feeds the schedule its new patients.

Most "best chiropractic software" lists are written by a vendor that quietly ranks itself first, and every one of them stops at EHR, scheduling and billing. This is the honest version, including the part that decides whether a new patient ever reaches your schedule in the first place.

What chiropractic practice management software actually does

A chiropractic practice management system, sometimes sold as an EHR or EMR, is the operational core of the clinic. It holds the appointment book, the patient records and SOAP notes, the treatment plans, and the billing and claims. Good ones add online booking, automated reminders, and reporting so you can see retention and revenue at a glance.

What it does not do is sit at the front of house. The software assumes a booking has already been made. Someone, or something, still has to answer the phone, qualify the caller, and create that appointment. Hold that thought, because it is where most practices quietly lose money.

The chiropractic software stack compared

Here is how the main systems line up by category, rough price, and who each one suits. Prices are per provider, per month, and move with clinic size, so treat them as a starting point rather than a quote.

Tool Category Rough price Best for
ChiroTouch All-in-one PMS and EHR Around C$190 per provider Established clinics wanting one cloud system
Jane PMS, EHR and online booking From around C$90 Solo and multi-disciplinary clinics
ChiroFusion Chiropractic-specific EHR From around C$140 Chiropractic-first, claims-heavy clinics
Genesis EHR with billing service Custom, service-led High-volume clinics wanting billing done for them
Eclipse Server-based PMS One-time licence plus support Clinics preferring on-site software
Hey Jodie Front-desk call answering Flat monthly fee Any clinic losing calls the PMS never sees

Two things stand out. First, every one of these systems is a back-office tool; they run the practice once a patient is in it. Second, Jodie is the only row that works at the front door, before the PMS has anything to record.

EHR and SOAP notes: what to look for

If your clinic submits a lot of extended-health claims, the EHR matters most. Look for chiropractic-specific SOAP templates, fast charting (macros, spinal listings, diagram tools), and clean claim generation that plays nicely with TELUS Health eClaims. ChiroFusion and ChiroTouch are built around this; Jane handles it well and is friendlier for cash and multi-disciplinary clinics.

The trap is buying depth you will never use. A cash-based clinic rarely needs the heavyweight claims engine a claims-heavy practice depends on. Match the EHR to how you actually get paid.

Scheduling and billing: where the money goes

Scheduling and billing are where the real money, and the highest prices, sit. Online self-booking, automated reminders, waitlists, and recurring treatment plans cut admin and no-shows. Billing tools handle receipts, claims, and payment plans.

Most modern systems do both competently. The differences are at the edges: how good the reminders are, whether patients can rebook themselves, and whether billing is software you run or a service someone runs for you (Genesis leans the service way). None of this matters, though, if the patient who wanted to book never got through.

A chiropractic reception phone ringing while the front desk is unattended
The PMS records the bookings you make. It cannot make the booking for the call nobody answers.

The layer every PMS roundup forgets: answering the phone

Here is the gap in every other comparison. Practice management software does not answer the phone. It assumes the call was picked up, the patient was qualified, and the appointment was made. In a busy clinic, that assumption breaks all day: the front desk is with a patient, processing a claim, or already gone for the night, and a new patient rings out to voicemail and books the next clinic across town.

That missed call never shows up in any PMS report, because the booking it would have become never happened. It is invisible, which is exactly why it goes unfixed.

This is a separate category from the schedule, and it is the one Jodie owns. An AI receptionist answers every call instantly, day or night, holds a real conversation, captures the patient's details and reason for calling, and hands a clean booking to the schedule your PMS already manages. The chiropractic front desk playbook walks through the scripts and after-hours rules in detail.

How to choose your stack

Work it in two layers, not one. For the back office, pick the PMS or EHR that matches how you get paid: claims-heavy clinics want strong claim tools and chiropractic SOAP templates (ChiroFusion, ChiroTouch); cash and multi-disciplinary clinics are usually better served by something lighter and more flexible (Jane).

Then price the front office honestly. Add up the total cost of ownership, including the bookings you lose to unanswered calls, which the real cost of chiropractic marketing makes plain: the cheapest new patient is the one already calling you. A leaner PMS paired with a front desk that never misses a call will out-earn a top-tier EHR sitting behind a phone that rings out.

The right stack is the one that captures the patient and then runs the practice, in that order. To see how the front-desk layer works for a chiropractic clinic, take a look at Hey Jodie for chiropractors.

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Frequently asked questions

What is chiropractic practice management software?
Chiropractic practice management software brings scheduling, electronic health records, SOAP notes, and billing into one secure platform. It is the system your front desk and providers work in all day: booking visits, charting adjustments, submitting claims, and tracking patients. The leading options in Canada are ChiroTouch, Jane, ChiroFusion, Genesis and Eclipse, with Jane a homegrown favourite.
How much does chiropractic software cost?
Most chiropractic practice management software runs between roughly C$60 and C$300 per provider per month, with ChiroTouch around the middle of that range. Cloud platforms bill per provider monthly; older server-based systems sometimes charge a larger one-time licence. Always price it per provider, because a two-provider clinic pays roughly double a solo one.
Is there free chiropractic software?
There is no genuinely free, full practice management system worth running a clinic on. A few platforms offer free trials or stripped-back starter tiers, but the free versions usually cap patients, drop billing, or skip compliant record-keeping. For a working practice, the honest answer is to budget for a paid plan and weigh total cost of ownership, not the sticker price.
Does practice management software answer the phone?
No. Practice management software runs your schedule, records and billing, but it does not answer a ringing phone or book a new patient who calls after hours. That is a separate front-desk layer. An AI receptionist like Jodie answers every call, captures the patient details, and feeds the booking into the schedule your PMS manages.

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