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What to know about dental practice acquisitions

GW

By George Wellmer

Cofounder & CEO

Key diligence, valuation, financing, and transition considerations for buyers evaluating dental practice acquisitions.

Dental Practices Are Healthcare Transactions

Buying a dental practice requires the same regulatory, legal, and compliance framework as any healthcare acquisition, plus the unique demands of dentistry specifically. Before engaging seriously in any dental practice transaction, retain a dental-specific M&A attorney and a CPA with healthcare transaction experience. HIPAA compliance, state dental board licensing requirements, DEA registration transfer (for practices with controlled substance schedules), and payer credentialing timelines are all deal-path considerations that general business attorneys and accountants are not equipped to navigate. The transaction infrastructure for dental is specialized enough that using generalists is a risk that can introduces delays, compliance gaps, and negotiation blind spots that experienced dental transition advisors eliminate.

Patient Retention Is the Valuation Anchor

The goodwill in a dental practice, typically representing 70–80% of total value, is only worth what patients will pay post-transition. A practice with 95% patient retention following an ownership change maintains its earnings base; one with 60% retention has lost its foundation. Assess patient retention risk honestly before setting your offer price by analyzing: active patient count (patients seen in the last 18 months), hygiene recall rate, new patient flow, and the percentage of production attributed specifically to the selling dentist's personal patient relationships. According to ADA data, practices with documented systems, team stability, and a structured transition process average patient retention significantly above those that close abruptly or manage the transition poorly. A seller willing to commit to a 6–24 month transition period is providing material value.

How Dental Practices Are Valued

Dental practice valuations in the broker market typically run 0.8x to 1.1x of trailing gross collections, with well-performing practices at the upper end and those with operational issues at 0.6x or below. The ADA's 2024 Practice Transition Survey found that successful practice sales averaged 1.1x gross revenue, while practices with issues averaged 0.6x. Fee-for-service practices command a premium of 15–25% over PPO-heavy practices because of higher margins and more predictable net revenue per patient visit. Private equity and DSO (Dental Service Organization) buyers have become dominant forces in dental M&A, paying premium multiples for practices that can serve as platform or add-on acquisitions. Individual dentist-buyers typically cannot match PE multiples on pure economics but can compete on cultural alignment and clinical independence, factors that matter to many selling physicians.

Payer Mix and Insurance Contract Analysis

The composition of a dental practice's payer mix is one of the most direct drivers of sustainable earnings. Commercial insurance reimbursement typically runs 30–50% higher than Medicare Advantage or Medicaid rates, and fee-for-service patients generate the highest per-visit revenue of all. Request a detailed payer mix breakdown for the trailing 24 months and analyze the trend direction; practices with increasing government payer exposure face structural margin compression that current earnings numbers will not yet fully reflect. In addition to mix, verify the assignability of in-network insurance contracts: many contracts require re-credentialing of the new dentist before they can bill under the practice's existing provider number. This process takes 60–120 days and can disrupt revenue flow during transition if not planned for carefully.

Staff, Hygienists, and Team Stability

Dental hygienists build genuine long-term relationships with patients. A hygienist who has worked at a practice for eight years and knows every patient by name is providing patient retention infrastructure that is not fully captured in any financial statement. A dental hygienist or front desk coordinator who leaves in the first 90 days post-acquisition can trigger patient attrition that exceeds the value of their salary many times over. Identify the key team members before closing, understand their compensation, satisfaction, and intentions. Negotiate retention agreements for critical staff as part of the transaction. The buyers who achieve the strongest outcomes in dental transitions are those who invest heavily in staff relationships from the first day of ownership.

Equipment, Technology, and Real Estate

Dental equipment like chairs, x-ray systems, CBCT scanners, CAD/CAM systems, sterilization units, amongst others depreciates quickly and represents significant replacement cost. Practices with digital imaging, modern chairside technology, and practice management software aligned with current standards command premium multiples because buyers face lower immediate CapEx requirements. Request a full equipment list with purchase dates and assess the technology generation of the practice's core clinical tools. Practices still operating analog x-ray systems or outdated practice management software (Dentrix versions more than a generation old, for example) will require near-term technology investment that should be reflected in your offer. If the practice real estate is owned by the seller separately, normalize rent to fair market value in your financial analysis and negotiate clear lease terms as a condition of closing.

Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to common buyer questions for this market.

Insurance credentialing is the most time-sensitive operational task in a dental acquisition. The process: submit a credentialing application to each carrier the practice participates with, providing your dental license, DEA registration, malpractice insurance documentation, and NPI number. Processing times vary by carrier; Delta Dental, MetLife, and Cigna each have different timelines. Plan for 60 to 180 days depending on carrier and specialty. During the gap between closing and credentialing completion, you can bill under the previous dentist's provider number in some states using a locum tenens arrangement. This requires specific language in the purchase contract and carrier approval. Confirm this before you structure the deal. Engage a dental credentialing service immediately upon LOI signing. This is not work to do yourself while simultaneously managing an acquisition and a clinical practice.