The Short Answer
Most dental practices sell for roughly 60% to 85% of annual collections under the traditional method, or 4x to 7x EBITDA for larger, associate-driven practices attractive to dental service organizations (DSOs). A solo practice collecting $1M typically sells for $600,000–$850,000; a larger multi-provider practice with real EBITDA can command significantly more on the DSO model.
Dental is a professional practice, so valuation blends business fundamentals with clinical realities: collections quality, payer mix, hygiene recall, and whether the practice runs on associates or entirely on the selling dentist.
Get a confidential, no-obligation valuation of your dental practice based on your real numbers — not a generic online estimate.
How Dental Practices Are Valued
Two frameworks are common. The traditional method values a practice as a percentage of annual collections (typically 60–85%), which implicitly bundles goodwill, equipment, and patient records. The second, used for larger practices and by DSOs, values the practice on a multiple of EBITDA after normalizing for a market-rate dentist compensation — because a buyer must pay a dentist to do the clinical work the owner did.
The EBITDA method is why scale matters so much: a solo practice where the owner produces most of the dentistry has little "true" EBITDA after paying a replacement dentist, so it trades on collections. A practice with productive associates generates EBITDA above the owner's own production, and DSO buyers pay premium multiples for it. See how businesses are valued for the underlying logic.
Dental Practice Valuation Benchmarks
| Practice profile | Typical value | Basis |
|---|---|---|
| Solo, owner produces most dentistry | 60%–75% of collections | Goodwill + equipment; limited true EBITDA |
| Strong solo, good hygiene & recall | 75%–85% of collections | Efficient, transferable patient base |
| Associate-driven, real EBITDA | 4x–6x EBITDA | Profit beyond owner's own production |
| Larger group / DSO target | 5x–7x+ EBITDA | Scale, associates, systems, buyer demand |
What Drives a Dental Practice's Value Up or Down
What pushes the value up
- Strong, growing collections with clean, verifiable reporting
- A favorable payer mix — fee-for-service and in-network PPO over heavy Medicaid/HMO dependence
- Productive associates and a full hygiene schedule with strong recall
- Broad, active patient base with steady new-patient flow — low patient concentration on the owner
- Modern equipment (digital, CBCT), good location, and an assignable lease
What drags the value down
- Practice depends entirely on the selling dentist's clinical production and relationships
- Declining collections or an aging, shrinking patient base
- Unfavorable payer mix or heavy reliance on one insurance plan
- Weak hygiene program and poor recall
- Deferred equipment, short lease, or a difficult landlord
Dental Practice Values in Southern California
Southern California is a highly active dental market with strong buyer demand from both individual dentists and DSO-backed groups, which supports healthy valuations for well-run practices. California dental practices must be owned by a licensed dentist or a properly structured professional entity, so DSO transactions are typically arranged through a management services organization (MSO) model — a structure buyers' attorneys examine carefully. High local real estate and lease costs make the lease a meaningful value factor. A smooth transition — the selling dentist introducing patients and staying on briefly — helps preserve goodwill and protect the price.
Example: Collections vs. EBITDA
A solo dentist collects $1M and personally produces 80% of the dentistry. Traditional valuation lands around 75% of collections — $750,000, because after paying a replacement dentist there's little EBITDA left. A second practice also collects $1M, but two associates drive most production and the owner mostly manages; it throws off $300,000 of normalized EBITDA and, as a DSO target at 5x, is worth $1.5M. Same collections — double the value — because one practice runs without the owner and the other doesn't.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much is a dental practice worth?
Most dental practices sell for 60% to 85% of annual collections under the traditional method, or 4x to 7x EBITDA for larger associate-driven practices attractive to DSOs. A solo practice collecting $1M typically sells for $600,000 to $850,000.
What percentage of collections does a dental practice sell for?
Traditionally, dental practices sell for about 60% to 85% of annual collections. Efficient practices with strong hygiene recall, a favorable payer mix, and a transferable patient base command the higher end; owner-dependent practices with declining collections fall lower.
How do DSOs value dental practices?
Dental service organizations value practices on a multiple of EBITDA, typically 4x to 7x or more, after normalizing for a market-rate dentist compensation. This rewards larger, associate-driven practices that generate profit beyond the owner's own clinical production, which is why scale and associates raise value substantially.
What lowers a dental practice's value?
Total dependence on the selling dentist's production and relationships, declining or aging collections, an unfavorable payer mix or reliance on one insurance plan, a weak hygiene and recall program, and deferred equipment or a short, non-assignable lease.
What Is Your Dental Practice Worth?
Get a confidential valuation from a broker who understands collections-based and EBITDA/DSO valuation, payer mix, and California practice structure. No obligation, just a clear number.
Request a Confidential Valuation Call or text: 818-633-3254 · 365navarro.martin@gmail.com