June 25, 2026
Selling or transitioning your dental practice is one of the most important financial decisions a private practice dentist will make.
For many dentists, it represents years of clinical work, patient relationships, team development, and personal sacrifice. Whether you are considering a private sale, associate buyout, partner transition, DSO affiliation, or retirement, the process can affect your finances, taxes, income, staff, patients, and future lifestyle.
The biggest mistake many dentists make is waiting until an offer, letter of intent, or purchase agreement is already on the table before planning. By that point, some of the best financial and tax planning opportunities may be limited.
A successful dental practice transition is not just about getting to closing. It is about making sure the transition supports your life after closing.
The Sale Price Is Only Part of the Story
When dentists begin thinking about selling a practice, the first question is usually: “What is my practice worth?”
That question matters, but it should not be the only focus.
A stronger transition plan also considers:
A high purchase price may look attractive, but taxes, earnouts, rollover equity, post-sale compensation, and work requirements can all change the real value of the transaction.
The better question is not just, “Can I sell my practice?”
The better question is, “Will this transition help me become financially independent?”
Why Early Planning Matters
Early planning gives private practice dentists more control, more clarity, and more options.
Before entering serious transition discussions, you should understand:
This preparation helps you evaluate offers with a clearer view of what each option means financially and personally.
The Role of Your Trusted Advisor
Your trusted advisor should be involved as soon as you begin considering a transition.
Their role is not simply to review documents near the end of the process. Their role is to help you understand how each decision affects your financial outcome.
Your advisor can help evaluate:
This guidance can help you compare offers more accurately. One deal may have a higher purchase price but more risk, less flexibility, or weaker post-sale income. Another may offer better terms, fewer restrictions, or a smoother path toward retirement.
The details matter.
Common Dental Practice Transition Options
Every dental practice transition is different. The right path depends on your goals, timeline, buyer options, and desired level of involvement after the sale.
Selling to Another Dentist
A private sale to another dentist may be a good fit if you want a traditional handoff and strong continuity for your patients, team, and practice culture.
This option may offer:
Key considerations include buyer financing, purchase terms, transition timing, and your role after closing.
Associate Buy-In or Partner Buyout
An associate buy-in or partner buyout can provide a more gradual transition.
This may work well if you want:
The structure should clearly define ownership percentage, compensation, decision-making authority, financing, and future buyout terms.
DSO or Group Affiliation
A DSO or group affiliation may appeal to dentists who want liquidity, administrative support, or continued clinical work with fewer management responsibilities.
This option may provide:
However, the highest offer is not always the best offer. Review post-closing compensation, clinical autonomy, culture fit, work requirements, earnouts, rollover equity, payment timing, and tax impact before moving forward.
Key Financial Areas to Review Before a Sale
Practice Value
Dental practice value may be influenced by:
Clean financials make the transition process smoother and help buyers understand the true earning power of the practice.
Tax Planning
Tax planning should happen before the deal is finalized.
Important questions include:
The structure of the sale can significantly affect what you keep after taxes.
Common Mistakes Dentists Should Avoid
A dental practice transition can be rewarding, but rushed decisions can create unnecessary stress.
Avoid these common mistakes:
A practice transition is both financial and personal. Both sides deserve attention.
Frequently Asked Questions About Dental Practice Transitions
When should a dentist start planning for a practice transition?
Ideally, planning should begin years before a potential sale or ownership transition. Early planning gives you time to improve practice performance, review tax strategies, organize financial records, and determine whether a transition supports your long-term goals.
What affects the value of a dental practice?
Dental practice value is influenced by profitability, revenue trends, patient base, hygiene production, staff stability, location, equipment, technology, payer mix, and how dependent the practice is on the owner-doctor.
Is selling to a DSO different from selling to another dentist?
Yes. A DSO or group affiliation may involve different deal terms, compensation structures, earnouts, rollover equity, work requirements, and operational changes. A private sale may feel more traditional, but both options should be reviewed carefully.
What tax issues should dentists consider before selling a practice?
Dentists should review asset versus entity sale structure, purchase price allocation, ordinary income versus capital gains treatment, retirement plan contributions, timing of expenses, debt payoff, and post-closing compensation.
Why should a dental CPA or business advisor be involved early?
A dental CPA or business advisor can help evaluate the full financial impact of the transition, including taxes, cash flow, deal structure, retirement planning, and whether the transaction supports your long-term goals.
Not sure where to start? Contact us today!