A therapist's office with a client seated on a couch.
~2,000
Credentialed RDTs
across North America
6+
Distinct settings
where RDTs routinely work
$38 to 120k
Salary range
entry to senior/PP
3 to 5 yrs
Typical runway
before going private
Quick Answer

Drama therapists work in clinical mental health (hospitals, outpatient, community), schools, prisons, eldercare, refugee and trauma services, and private practice. US salaries typically run $40k to $90k depending on setting and seniority. The career requires a master's degree (2 to 3 years), supervised clinical hours, theatre experience, and the RDT credential through NADTA. Most drama therapists hold a second clinical licence (LMHC, LCSW, LMFT, or LCAT) for insurance billing.

Where Do Drama Therapists Work?

Drama therapists work across a wide range of settings, from children's hospitals to correctional facilities, from private psychotherapy practices to international development organizations. The breadth of settings is one of the most appealing aspects of a drama therapy career.

Mental Health Settings

  • Inpatient psychiatric units: facilitating drama therapy groups as part of multidisciplinary treatment teams
  • Outpatient mental health clinics: individual and group therapy with adults, adolescents, or children
  • Community mental health centers: serving populations with chronic mental illness, often in group settings
  • Residential treatment programs: working intensively with adolescents, people in addiction recovery, or those with complex trauma
  • Veterans Affairs (VA) hospitals and programs: drama therapy has been recognized by the VA as an evidence-based approach for PTSD

Educational Settings

  • Schools (K-12): providing drama therapy groups for students with emotional or behavioral difficulties; supporting social-emotional learning
  • Special education programs: working with children with autism, learning disabilities, or developmental differences
  • Universities: training the next generation of drama therapists; conducting research

Medical Settings

  • Children's hospitals: supporting hospitalized children and their families through illness and medical procedures
  • Cancer care and palliative care: supporting patients and families through serious illness, end-of-life, and grief
  • Rehabilitation programs: supporting recovery from physical illness, injury, or neurological conditions
  • Memory care and dementia units: using drama and reminiscence theatre with elderly populations

Social Services and Community Settings

  • Domestic violence shelters and services
  • Refugee resettlement and trauma programs
  • Correctional facilities and juvenile justice programs
  • Homeless shelters and housing programs
  • Community arts organizations
  • International humanitarian work

Private Practice

Many experienced drama therapists establish private practices, seeing individual clients and facilitating groups. Private practice offers the most autonomy and income potential, but requires business development skills, a referral network, and typically several years of clinical experience first.

Drama Therapist Salary: What Can You Expect to Earn?

US salary ranges · 2026

What drama therapists earn

Wide spreads because the work spans agency floors to private clinics.

Stage Typical salary Common setting Notes
Entry (0 to 3 yrs) $38,000-$52,000 Community MH, schools, nonprofits Clinical breadth builds faster than pay
Mid-career (3 to 8 yrs) $52,000-$72,000 Hospitals, program coordination, senior clinical Medical settings typically pay more
Senior / PP (8+ yrs) $70,000-$120,000+ Private practice, leadership roles Session rate $120-$200; groups + training lift ceiling
Academic / training $60,000-$95,000 Graduate programs, supervision work Often combined with ongoing clinical practice

A note on these numbers

Salaries vary substantially by region, setting, and whether you hold additional licensure (LMFT, LCSW, LPC). Adding a mental-health licence is the single biggest lever for expanding income and reimbursement access.

A Day in the Life: Drama Therapist in a Community Mental Health Setting

A typical day for a drama therapist working in a community mental health center might look like this:

  • 9:00 AM: Review notes from previous sessions; prepare materials for morning group (props, music, warm-up games)
  • 10:00 AM: Facilitate a 90-minute drama therapy group for adults with depression and anxiety. Today's session uses roleplay to explore assertive communication in workplace relationships
  • 11:30 AM: Write clinical notes; brief check-in with a colleague about a shared client
  • 12:00 PM: Lunch
  • 1:00 PM: Individual drama therapy session with a teenager working through trauma related to family separation. Use Narradrama techniques to externalize "The Worry Monster"
  • 2:00 PM: Individual session with an adult client using Role Theory to explore their sense of identity after a major life transition
  • 3:00 PM: Supervision with BCT supervisor (biweekly): discuss complex cases, receive clinical support
  • 4:00 PM: Administrative tasks: documentation, emails, treatment plan updates
  • 5:00 PM: Professional development: reading the latest issue of Drama Therapy Review
Two different careers, same credential

Employed vs. private practice

Most drama therapists work in both modes across a career, rarely at the same time.

Employed (agency / hospital) Private practice
Income ceiling Fixed salary; predictable Variable; higher ceiling, higher risk
Caseload Assigned; often complex acuity Chosen; niche-shaped
Autonomy Work within team and protocol Own treatment frame and rates
Overheads None, employer carries them Rent, insurance, platform, marketing
Best fit for First 3 to 5 years; deep clinical breadth After 3 to 5 yrs + specialty + licence

Building Your Drama Therapy Career: Practical Advice

Getting Your First Job

Most drama therapy positions are not advertised as "drama therapy jobs." They're listed as expressive arts therapist, creative arts therapist, group facilitator, or mental health counselor. Search broadly and lead with your clinical credentials when applying.

The best sources for drama therapy positions:

  • NADTA's job board (nadta.org)
  • Indeed, LinkedIn (search "expressive arts therapist" or "creative arts therapist")
  • State and local mental health association job boards
  • Graduate program alumni networks (often the richest source of opportunities)
  • Direct outreach to organizations where you want to work

Building Toward Private Practice

Private practice is a long-term goal for many drama therapists. Before going independent, most spend 3 to 5 years building clinical experience, a professional reputation, and a referral network. Key steps:

  • Get additional licensure (LMHC, LCSW, MFT) to expand your client base and insurance credentialing options
  • Build a specialty (trauma, children, veterans, eating disorders) that creates clear referral pathways
  • Develop an online presence: a website, directory listings (Psychology Today, NADTA directory)
  • Network actively with psychiatrists, pediatricians, school counselors, and other referral sources

Multiple Income Streams

Many drama therapists build diverse practices combining:

  • Individual clinical work (private pay and/or insurance)
  • Groups (community, clinical, or workshop format)
  • Training and supervision of other therapists
  • Consultation to schools, organizations, or theatre companies
  • Writing, teaching, or presenting at conferences
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Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a drama therapist earn?

Drama therapist salaries in the US range from $38,000-$52,000 for entry-level positions, $52,000-$72,000 at mid-career, and $70,000-$120,000+ for senior and private practice roles. Salaries vary by location, setting, experience, and whether you hold additional mental health licensure. Private practice drama therapists in major cities can earn above $100,000.

Where do drama therapists work?

Drama therapists work in a wide range of settings: mental health centers and outpatient clinics, psychiatric hospitals, schools and educational settings, medical hospitals and palliative care, rehabilitation centers, correctional facilities, community arts organizations, refugee support services, and private practice. Some drama therapists also work in corporate settings and with performing artists.

Is drama therapy a stable career?

Drama therapy is a growing field with increasing recognition in mental health settings. However, it is a relatively small profession, there are approximately 2,000 credentialed RDTs in North America. Many drama therapists combine drama therapy with additional mental health licensure (LMFT, LCSW, LPC) to expand employment options and reimbursement access. Building a career requires flexibility, networking, and often some entrepreneurial initiative.

Do drama therapists need additional licensure?

The RDT credential alone qualifies drama therapists to practice in many settings, but additional state licensure (such as LMFT, LCSW, or LPC) significantly expands career options and enables insurance reimbursement. Many approved drama therapy graduate programs are designed to fulfill requirements for both the RDT credential and state mental health licensure. This dual credentialing is strongly recommended.

Can drama therapists work in schools?

Yes. Drama therapists work in educational settings from preschool through higher education. In schools, they may work as school-based therapists, expressive arts specialists, or in social-emotional learning programs. School-based drama therapy has strong evidence for social-emotional development, anxiety reduction, and supporting students with behavioral or learning difficulties. Some positions require additional teaching or school counseling credentials.

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