If you are thinking about becoming a doula, the salary question is the one everyone tiptoes around. Most online figures lump full-time and part-time doulas into a single average, which makes the number look smaller than it really is.
The honest answer sits somewhere between $35,000 and $55,000 a year for a working birth doula. But a lot of that depends on whether you take 2 clients a month or 8, whether you live in San Francisco or a rural county, and whether your name is on the preferred list at the local OB clinic.
Per-birth fees range from about $800 in lower-cost regions up to $2,500 in major metro areas, with a national median that hovers near $1,500 in 2026. Postpartum doulas usually charge by the hour, somewhere between $25 and $50, with experienced overnight specialists in cities like New York and Los Angeles charging $75 or more. End-of-life doulas, a newer specialty, charge anywhere from $50 to $100 an hour, though most of that work is still part-time and project-based rather than salaried.
This guide breaks down what you can realistically earn at each stage of a doula career, what changes the number, and which states are paying doulas the most. The Medicaid reimbursement shift over the last few years has also rewritten the math for working doulas, and most older salary articles still get that wrong. If you want a starting point on how the role itself works, our what does a doula do guide covers the day-to-day.
The short version: doula income is not a flat number, it is a curve. Year 1 doulas typically clear $5,000 to $20,000 while building referrals.
By year 5, an established practice with 4-6 births a month plus postpartum hours can pull $60,000 to $90,000. A small number of doulas with a teaching arm or package model break six figures. Knowing where you land on that curve is the difference between treating doula work as a side gig or a real career.
One more thing worth saying up front: the doula industry has no central salary database. The Bureau of Labor Statistics does not track doulas as a separate occupation, so most reported figures come from member surveys at DONA, CAPPA, and ProDoula.
Those surveys skew toward established certified doulas, which is why the numbers you see online often look optimistic. We have cross-referenced 2024-2026 survey data with state Medicaid reimbursement rates, hospital doula program salaries, and what real working doulas report in their own communities. The result is a less polished but more accurate picture of what you can actually expect to make in this profession.
Per-birth fee: $800-$2,500 (median $1,500). Annual full-time: $35,000-$60,000.
Birth doulas charge a flat package fee that typically covers 2-3 prenatal visits, on-call availability for 2-4 weeks around the due date, continuous labor support, and 1-2 postpartum follow-up visits. A busy birth doula takes 4-6 clients a month. At $1,500 per birth, that is $6,000-$9,000 monthly, but on-call burnout caps most birth doulas at around 4 clients before quality slips. New birth doulas often charge $500-$900 while building a portfolio.
Hourly rate: $25-$50 (up to $75+ in NYC, SF, LA, Boston). Overnight shift: $300-$600/night. Annual full-time: $40,000-$70,000.
Postpartum doulas bill by the hour or by the shift, which makes income more predictable than birth work. Overnight specialists who help families with newborn sleep can command $40-$60/hr in most cities. A postpartum doula working 25-30 hours a week at $40/hr earns roughly $50,000-$60,000 a year. Postpartum is usually the highest-paying doula specialty for steady income.
Hourly rate: $50-$100. Package fee: $1,500-$5,000 per family. Annual: mostly part-time, $15,000-$45,000 for active practitioners.
End-of-life doula work is the newest specialty and the income is the most variable. Most are part-time, supplementing a nursing or social work career. Full-time death doulas serving 3-5 families per month with package fees of $2,500 can hit $60,000+, but the market is still building public awareness. Hospice partnerships and grief workshops add income on top.
Doula income is shaped by 5 levers, and most of them are within your control. Location is the biggest single factor. A birth doula in Manhattan charging $2,500 per birth is normal. The same package in rural Mississippi would be $800, sometimes less. Cost of living in the area drives both what families can pay and what doulas can charge without losing clients to a competitor across town.
Certification is the second lever. DONA International, CAPPA, ICEA, and ProDoula certifications signal training and accountability, and certified doulas typically charge 20-40% more than uncertified peers. Hospitals and insurance-reimbursed programs often require certification before they will refer you, so it pays for itself within the first 3-5 clients. Our doula certification guide walks through which credential matches which career path.
Independent doulas keep 100% of the fee but pay their own taxes, insurance, marketing, and supplies. Agency doulas split fees 60/40 or 50/50 with the agency, which provides clients and admin. Hospital-employed doulas earn a salaried wage, usually $40,000-$55,000 with benefits, but lose the per-birth upside. Most established doulas eventually go independent because the math favors it once your referral network is strong.
Year 1 doulas often charge $500-$900 to build testimonials. By year 3, with 20-40 births under your belt, you can defend $1,500-$2,000. By year 5, doulas with a specialty (twins, VBAC, high-risk, military families) and a 5-star review wall can charge $2,500-$3,500 and book out 2 months in advance.
The path from intro pricing to premium pricing is roughly 5 years, faster if you specialize early. Looking for client work while you scale? Doula jobs near me covers the agency, hospital, and community channels.
The highest-earning doulas almost never sell only birth support. They package birth + postpartum together, add lactation visits, run weekend childbirth classes, sell sleep-training packages, or train new doulas. A doula running 4 births plus a Saturday class twice a month plus 2 postpartum clients can clear $8,000-$12,000 in a strong month.
Diversifying also smooths out the income volatility that comes with birth work. If a client cancels or your due-date cluster shifts, postpartum hours and class income fill the gap. Doulas who refuse to diversify report 30-50% wider monthly income swings than those who run 2-3 revenue streams. Knowing what families typically buy helps you price packages and decide which add-ons make sense for your market.
This is the biggest recent shift in doula pay. As of 2026, at least 12 states reimburse doula care through Medicaid (New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, California, Minnesota, Maryland, Illinois, Michigan, Virginia, Massachusetts, and Washington DC), with several others piloting. Reimbursement rates run $700-$1,500 per pregnancy bundle.
That is below private pay, but it opens an entirely new client base and stabilizes income for doulas willing to do the paperwork. For postpartum support that families often pay for out of pocket regardless of insurance, see our postpartum doula guide.
Geography is the single biggest variable in doula income. It controls both what families can pay and what other doulas in the area charge. California, New York, Massachusetts, Washington, and the DC metro consistently produce the highest birth doula fees, with established practitioners charging $2,000-$3,500 per birth in major cities.
Texas, Florida, Georgia, and Colorado fall in the middle, with $1,200-$1,800 fees typical in Austin, Atlanta, and Denver. The Midwest and Deep South generally run $800-$1,400 per birth, though college towns and state capitals often pay closer to coastal rates.
The picture flips when you factor in cost of living. A doula charging $1,200 in Kansas City often has more disposable income than a doula charging $2,200 in San Francisco. The states with the best income-to-expense ratio for doulas in 2026 are North Carolina (Raleigh-Durham), Minnesota (Twin Cities, Medicaid reimbursed), Colorado (Denver-Boulder), and Tennessee (Nashville). These markets combine middle-to-high fees with moderate housing costs and a culturally receptive client base.
Urban doulas charge more but face steeper competition. A new doula in Brooklyn may take 18 months to build a sustainable client base because there are already 200+ doulas competing for visibility. Rural doulas charge less but often face zero local competition, which means OBs and midwives funnel every referral to them. A rural doula in upstate New York charging $1,000 per birth with 5 clients a month earns $60,000 with almost no marketing cost.
The 12 states with active Medicaid doula reimbursement have effectively created a salary floor for doulas willing to credential. In New Jersey, where reimbursement is $1,166 per pregnancy bundle, a doula serving 4 Medicaid clients a month grosses $4,664. Add 1-2 private-pay clients at $1,500 each, and monthly income reaches $7,000-$8,000. Oregon, Minnesota, and Rhode Island have similar models. For a deeper look at certification pathways that qualify you for Medicaid credentialing, see how to become a doula.
The doula income curve is one of the steepest in the helping professions. The reason is not low demand. It is the time it takes to build a referral network and a portfolio of testimonials that convert leads into paying clients. Anyone selling a doula career as quick income is misleading new doulas. Here is what realistic year-by-year earnings look like for a working birth doula starting from scratch.
You complete training (typically doula training runs 16-40 hours plus reading and observation). You take 5-10 clients at $500-$900 each to build reviews. Most income goes back into supplies, insurance, and certification fees. Many year 1 doulas keep a part-time job.
You complete certification, raise prices to $1,200-$1,500, and start getting OB/midwife referrals. Postpartum hours fill the gaps between births. Most doulas can go full-time by month 18 if they market consistently.
You are an established name in your market. You charge $1,500-$2,200, take 4-5 births a month, and have a waitlist. Postpartum and teaching add another $500-$1,500/month. This is when the math finally works out.
The top quartile of doulas adds a training program, certifies new doulas, sells courses, or runs an agency. This is where six figures becomes realistic. Doulas who consider end-of-life work as a second specialty open another income stream, see end-of-life doula for what that looks like.
New doulas almost always charge too little. The instinct is to compete on price, but pregnancy clients rarely shop on price the way they shop for a roof or a car. They shop on trust, referrals, and gut feeling. A doula charging $800 looks suspicious in a market where the average is $1,500. A doula charging $1,400 looks like a confident professional. Pricing communicates value, and underpricing actively hurts the trust signal.
Start by surveying 8-10 doulas in your city. Look at their websites, listed rates, or ask discreetly through a local doula group. Set your rate at the 25th percentile if you are brand new, the 50th percentile by year 2, and the 75th percentile once you have 30+ births and strong reviews. Adjust upward $200-$300 every 18 months. Most clients who balk at price were not your clients anyway, and chasing the cheapest tier is how doulas burn out.
A standard birth package includes: 2-3 prenatal meetings (90 min each), unlimited phone and text support from 38 weeks until delivery, continuous labor support, 1-2 postpartum visits, and access to a lending library or prep materials. Premium packages add lactation support, sibling preparation, photography, or postpartum meal planning. For deep dives on what families actually want, our birth doula guide covers the standard scope, and doula services breaks down typical add-ons that justify premium pricing.
Most doulas charge 50% on contract signing and 50% by 36 weeks. This protects you if a client cancels late, and it locks in their commitment. Always have a clear refund policy in writing: prorated refunds for pre-labor cancellation, no refund once labor begins, partner doula attends if you are unavailable. Without a written policy, every client conflict becomes a legal headache and a public relations risk in a referral-driven business.
Doulas are almost always sole proprietors or single-member LLCs. Track every dollar of business expense from day 1: mileage at the federal IRS rate (currently $0.67/mile), home office percentage of rent/utilities, training and certification fees, supplies (rebozo, comfort tools, books), liability insurance, phone and internet portion, and professional memberships.
A doula earning $40,000 gross typically deducts $6,000-$9,000 in business expenses, leaving $31,000-$34,000 taxable. Set aside 25-30% of net income for federal and state self-employment tax. Hire a CPA after year 2 once income stabilizes.
One overlooked income protection move is forming a backup pact with 1-2 trusted doulas in your area. When you are sick, on vacation, or already attending another birth, your backup steps in and you split the fee (typically 70/30 in favor of whoever attends).
This protects your reputation, keeps the client happy, and means you almost never refund a full package. Doulas without backup partners lose roughly 5-10% of annual income to canceled bookings, and that gap closes the moment you formalize a pact.
Six-figure doula income is real but rare, and the path is consistent across doulas who hit it. They specialize in 1-2 high-demand niches (twins, VBAC, military, surrogacy), sell packages instead of individual services, and teach childbirth classes, doula training, or lactation.
A typical $100K doula has 4 births a month at $2,200, 20 hours of postpartum work at $50/hr, a monthly childbirth class with 8 attendees at $250 each, and trains 1-2 new doulas a year at $1,500 each. That is a real, sustainable business, not a side hustle, and it usually takes 5-7 years to assemble.
What separates six-figure doulas from $50K doulas is not talent at births. It is treating the practice like a small business. They review pricing quarterly, track which referral sources convert, run a real website with SEO, send invoices on time, and protect their on-call calendar fiercely.
Most importantly, they say no. They turn down clients who do not fit their niche, cap births at 4 per month so quality never slips, and never apologize for charging premium rates. That mindset, more than any single tactic, is what builds a doula career into a real income.