Funding, receipts, and reimbursement

Clear expectations from the start

Root to Rise Coaching is generally a private-pay service unless otherwise stated. This page is written to help families and organizations ask the right questions without making unsupported insurance or funding claims.

How payment is described

Services are generally private-pay unless otherwise stated in writing. Receipts are available for services rendered.

Receipts do not guarantee reimbursement, tax treatment, or funding eligibility. Whether a service can be reimbursed or supported depends on the insurer, funding program, province, provider credentials, and the exact type of support being delivered.

Important note

Root to Rise Coaching is non-clinical. It is not presented as therapy, treatment, rehabilitation, or regulated healthcare unless a licensed professional is actually delivering that service within scope.

What some clients may explore

Possible funding paths vary case by case

Depending on the client’s situation, some families or participants may want to ask about community funding, caregiver-related support, individualized support budgets, employment-related programs, or other local funding sources.

Caregiver or family support funding

Some programs focus on support for families, routine stability, caregiver relief, or individualized community support. Eligibility rules vary widely.

Employment-related support

When coaching is connected to independence, routine consistency, self-management, or readiness for work, some clients may want to ask whether employment-related supports exist in their region.

Organization-sponsored support

Schools, nonprofits, or community programs sometimes have their own professional development or participant-support budgets for workshops or group learning.

What to ask before booking

Questions worth confirming

  • Does the program accept services from a non-clinical coach?
  • What wording should appear on the receipt?
  • Do you need a service agreement, invoice, or session log?
  • Is funding tied to a licensed provider category?
  • Are there limits on online services, wellness support, or workshop fees?

Who to ask

  • Your insurer
  • Your funding coordinator or case worker
  • Your program administrator
  • Your accountant or tax professional
Future growth

Language that leaves room for thoughtful expansion

The service language on this website is intentionally built around adaptive support, functional routine support, daily living support, transition-to-adulthood support, community participation, and employment-readiness support where appropriate.

That makes it easier to grow into clearer service categories over time while staying accurate about the current non-clinical scope.

What stays true now

Private-pay, non-clinical coaching remains the clearest description of the current model. Any future move toward broader reimbursement should be supported by the right structure, documentation, and provider credentials.

Still unsure?

Bring your funding questions to the fit call

We can explain how services are described and what documentation is available, while you confirm eligibility with the appropriate third party.