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Medical Practice for Sale in Nevada

Nationally, similar businesses sell at 0.9x to 4.7x SDE. Compare live listings and connect with sellers.

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Market Snapshot

National transaction benchmarks for medical practice businesses.

Under $500K

Median revenue$452k
Median cash flow$133k
Median sale price$185k
Multiple range0.9x - 1.9x

$500K to $2M

Median revenue$1.12m
Median cash flow$338k
Median sale price$789k
Multiple range2.2x - 3.2x

Over $2M

Median revenue$3.34m
Median cash flow$918k
Median sale price$4.75m
Multiple range3.3x - 4.7x

Directional only. Small sample may not represent the broader market.

A variety of factors can cause businesses to trade outside this range, including earnings quality, operational transferability, key-person risk, growth trajectory, and geography, so a listing priced above or below the typical multiple usually reflects real differences in the underlying business.

What to know about buying Medical Practices

GW

By George Wellmer

Cofounder & CEO

Key diligence, valuation, financing, and transition considerations for buyers evaluating medical practices acquisitions.

Physician Practices Are Not Like Other Businesses

Acquiring a medical practice involves regulatory, licensing, and structural complexity that does not exist in most other SMB categories. Before engaging in any practice acquisition, retain a healthcare M&A attorney and a CPA with specific healthcare industry experience. Stark Law and Anti-Kickback Statute compliance govern how physicians can be compensated in connection with referrals, and violations carry severe civil and criminal penalties that survive asset purchases under certain conditions. Seemingly straightforward transactions like a retiring physician selling a primary care practice to a new physician buyer can trigger compliance issues that kill deals or expose buyers to inherited liability.

Key-Person Risk Is the Defining Factor

In most medical practice acquisitions, the seller is also the primary revenue generator. Patient relationships, referral networks, and payer contracts are frequently tied to the individual physician, not to the practice entity. Assess honestly what percentage of the practice's revenue is attributable to the selling physician specifically, and what the realistic patient retention rate will be post-sale. Studies consistently show that practices heavily dependent on a single physician experience 20–40% patient attrition following an ownership transition. This needs to be modeled into your purchase price and earn-out structure. A transition period of 6–24 months during which the seller remains in a clinical or consulting role is standard practice for a reason.

Payer Mix Drives Valuation More Than Revenue

Not all revenue is created equal in healthcare. Commercial insurance typically reimburses at rates 89% higher than Medicare. This means two practices with identical revenue can have vastly different earnings quality depending on their payer mix. Request a detailed payer mix report covering the last three years, and analyze trends in commercial vs. government payer composition. Practices with declining commercial payer percentages, driven by aging patient demographics, insurance market changes, or specialty-specific reimbursement pressures, face structural margin compression that current earnings numbers will not yet reflect. Medicaid-heavy practices face additional reimbursement volatility and should be valued conservatively.

Licensing, Credentialing, and DEA Numbers

The acquiring physician must be independently licensed and credentialed with each payer before they can bill for services rendered. This process typically takes 90–180 days depending on payer and specialty and during this window, cash flow can be severely disrupted if not planned for carefully. Request a full list of current payer contracts, credentialing status, and any pending contract negotiations. DEA registration (if applicable to the specialty) must transfer or be re-established. In specialties requiring hospital privileges, the acquiring physician must separately apply for and receive privileges. This process is independent of the practice acquisition timeline and can become a deal-critical path.

Real Estate and Equipment: Own or Lease?

Medical practices frequently occupy real estate owned by the physician-seller or a related entity, with rent paid at above- or below-market rates to the practice. Normalize the rent to fair market value when calculating SDE and determine whether the practice real estate is included in the transaction or subject to a separate negotiated lease. Medical equipment like imaging systems, diagnostic equipment, and EMR infrastructure depreciates quickly and represents significant replacement cost. Request full asset schedules with purchase dates, current book value, and independent FMV assessments for major equipment. EMR system compatibility and data migration costs are frequently underestimated in healthcare acquisitions.

Private Equity and What It Means for Independent Buyers

Private equity has become a meaningful force in physician practice M&A, particularly in high-margin specialties. PE-backed platforms pay elevated multiples because they are building scale through acquiring practices as add-ons and capturing multiple arbitrage at exit. Those multiples often do not reflect the economics available to an individual physician buyer acquiring a single practice. In the SMB channel, independent physician-to-physician sales, practices typically transact at .9x to 4.7x SDE, which reflects the true market for practices without institutional scale. Independent buyers can offer something PE platforms cannot: autonomy, clinical independence, and genuine continuity of care. Understanding which of those things the seller values is often the key to structuring a winning offer.