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Dental Practice Brokerage Β· Florida

Florida Dental Business Brokerβ€” Sell Your Practice at Maximum Value

Florida Business Sellers connects dental practice owners with licensed dental-industry brokers, 6,200+ qualified buyers, and verified DSO acquirers β€” with zero upfront fee and complete seller confidentiality.

Deals Closed
0 B+
87%
Dental practice sale closure rate through our network
94
Average days from listing to signed letter of intent
6,200+
Pre-qualified dental buyers and DSO acquirers
$0
Upfront fee – success-based commission only
Definition

What Is a Dental Business Broker?

AΒ dental business brokerΒ is a licensed Florida business intermediary who specializes exclusively in the sale, acquisition, and transition of dental practices. Unlike general business brokers, a dental-specific broker understands practice management software, patient base valuation, Florida Board of Dentistry licensing requirements, and dental-specific SDE recast methodology.

A dental business broker in Florida manages the full transaction lifecycle: financial recast, blind listing creation, NDA management, buyer qualification (verifying active Florida dental licensure and liquid capital), due diligence coordination, and purchase agreement execution through to a funded close.

Florida Business Sellers maintains a network of IBBA-credentialed brokers with dedicated dental transaction experience, each holding active DBPR registration with the State of Florida.

Why a Dental-Specific Broker Produces Better Outcomes Than a General Business Broker

IBBA Certified Intermediaries
DBPR Registered β€” Florida
Dental-Specific Experience
Healthcare M&A Expertise
Practice Valuation

How Much Is a Dental Practice Worth in Florida?

Florida dental practice valuations depend on specialty type, annual gross collections, EBITDA margin, patient base quality, and location. Use this reference table to estimate your practice’s value range before requesting a broker-conducted formal appraisal.

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Dental Specialty Valuation Basis Typical Multiple Range Example ($900K Collections) Buyer Type
General Dentistry % of Annual Gross Collections 60% – 80% $540K – $720K Associate dentist, individual buyer
Orthodontics SDE Multiple + Patient pipeline 3Γ— – 5Γ— SDE Varies by active case count Orthodontist, specialty DSO
Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery EBITDA Multiple 4Γ— – 7Γ— EBITDA High equipment value factor Oral surgeon, hospital group
Periodontics / Endodontics SDE Multiple + Referral network 2.5Γ— – 4Γ— SDE Referral strength premium Specialist buyer, DSO
Pediatric Dentistry % of Annual Gross Collections 65% – 85% Patient retention premium Pediatric dentist, regional DSO
Multi-Location / DSO EBITDA Multiple 6Γ— – 12Γ— EBITDA PE-grade institutional valuation Private equity, large DSO platform
* Valuation ranges reflect Florida market comparables as of 2025–2026. Actual practice value depends on EBITDA margin, patient retention rate, lease terms, equipment condition, and location. A licensed dental broker appraisal is required for a defensible asking price.

Primary Dental Practice Valuation Factors

Annual Gross Collections

The total revenue collected from patient services before any deductions. Florida general dentistry practices use 60–80% of annual gross collections as the baseline valuation formula. Higher collections do not automatically produce a higher multiple β€” profitability and overhead ratio matter equall

Adjusted EBITDA / SDE

Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization β€” adjusted for owner compensation, personal expenses, and one-time costs. A practice with $900K collections but 45% overhead produces a higher EBITDA multiple than a $1.2M practice running at 65% overhead.

Patient Base Quality

Active patient count (seen within 18 months), patient retention rate, average patient value, recall compliance rate, and new patient acquisition channel. A practice with 1,200 active patients and 78% recall compliance commands a goodwill premium over a practice with 800 patients and declining retention.

Location and Lease Terms

Florida dental practices in high-demand markets (Miami-Dade, Broward, Palm Beach, Tampa Bay, Orlando MSA) command 10–20% valuation premiums. Lease terms of 5+ years remaining with renewal options are a buyer requirement for SBA financing approval.

Transaction Process

How to Sell a Dental Practice in Florida β€” The Complete Process

Five stages from listing submission to funded close. A licensed Florida restaurant business broker manages every step while you continue operating your restaurant.

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Average Timeline
6–10 months from listing to funded close for general dentistry. Specialty practices average 9–14 months due to a smaller qualified buyer pool.
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No Upfront Fee
The brokerage earns a success fee β€” a percentage of the final transaction value β€” paid only at a funded close. Sellers are never charged for valuation, marketing, NDA management, or buyer qualification services.
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Complete Confidentiality
Practice staff, patients, insurance carriers, and competitors do not learn of the sale until the close date, per standard Florida dental practice transition protocol.
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DSO vs. Individual Buyer
DSO acquirers typically offer 10–25% higher purchase prices than individual dentist buyers but may require a longer seller transition service agreement (12–24 months). The broker presents both buyer types with a full financial comparison so the seller can make an informed decision.

Dental Practice Types We Broker in Florida

Our dental broker network handles every dental specialty category recognized by the American Dental Association (ADA) and the Florida Board of Dentistry.

Florida Dental Practice Exit Planning

Everything a Florida Dental Practice Owner Needs to Know Before Selling

Tax Implications of Selling a Florida Dental Practice

The structure of a dental practice sale β€” asset sale vs. stock sale β€” determines the seller's tax liability. Most Florida dental practice sales are structured as asset sales, where goodwill, patient records, equipment, and supplies are sold separately. Personal goodwill in a dental practice may qualify for long-term capital gains treatment if structured correctly with a CPA experienced in dental transactions.

Florida has no state income tax on capital gains, which provides dental sellers a meaningful advantage over practitioners in states such as California, New York, or Illinois. Federal capital gains rates of 15–20% apply to the goodwill allocation. Equipment and supply allocations are taxed as ordinary income. Pre-sale tax planning with a dental-experienced CPA can reduce effective tax rates by 8–15%.

Real Estate: Own vs. Lease Considerations

Dental practices located in seller-owned real estate have two sale options: sell the real estate with the practice (asset bundle) or retain the property and lease it to the buyer. Retaining dental real estate provides long-term passive income but requires the seller to become a landlord post-closing.

Many Florida dental sellers retain the property and negotiate a 10-year NNN lease with the buying dentist or DSO acquirer.

Employment and Staff Considerations

Florida is an at-will employment state. The seller has no legal obligation to guarantee staff employment post-closing, but staff retention is a key buyer requirement for SBA financing approval and for maintaining patient retention post-transition.

The broker structures staff retention incentives, key employee agreements, and transition communication plans to protect both parties.

Dental Practice Insurance During the Sale

Malpractice tail coverage is a critical closing requirement. Sellers with claims-made malpractice policies must purchase extended reporting endorsement (tail coverage) effective on the closing date.

Tail coverage premiums range from $15,000–$80,000 depending on specialty and years of practice, and are typically netted from the purchase price. The broker addresses tail coverage in the purchase agreement prior to closing.

DEA Permit and Controlled Substance Inventory

DEA registration does not transfer in an asset sale. The buyer must obtain a new DEA registration before the closing date. Controlled substance inventory is handled via DEA Form 222 (Schedule II substances) or direct transfer to a licensed pharmacist or reverse distributor.

Non-compliance with DEA controlled substance transfer protocols is a federal violation β€” the dental broker coordinates DEA inventory resolution during the due diligence phase.

Patient Record Transfer β€” HIPAA Compliance

Patient records are transferred under a HIPAA-compliant patient notification protocol. Florida dental sellers must notify patients of the practice sale via written notice (mail or email) and provide patients the option to request their records before the transition date.

The Florida Board of Dentistry requires a minimum 30-day notice period for practice closures, and similar best practices apply to ownership transitions.

Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently Asked Questions About Selling a Dental Practice in Florida

Answers to the most common questions Florida dental practice owners ask before engaging a dental business broker.

Florida dental practices typically sell for 60–80% of annual gross collections for general dentistry, and 2.5–7Γ— SDE for specialty practices. A $900,000 general dentistry practice in a high-demand Florida market (Miami, Orlando, Tampa) typically sells for $600,000–$800,000 in practice value, not including real estate. Specialty practices command higher multiples due to smaller buyer pools and higher income concentration. A licensed Florida dental broker provides a formal valuation after reviewing 3 years of financial statements.

General dentistry practices priced within 5% of market value receive qualified buyer interest within 45–60 days and close within 6–10 months on average. Specialty practices (orthodontics, oral surgery, periodontics) have smaller active buyer pools and typically require 9–14 months. DSO transactions involving multi-location groups may take 12–18 months due to institutional due diligence requirements. SBA loan approval adds 45–60 days to the closing timeline after LOI execution.

No. The practice listing publishes as a blind profile β€” specialty type, revenue range, and location region only. No practice name, address, owner identity, or staff information is disclosed. Buyers must sign a mutual NDA and provide proof of dental licensure and liquid capital before receiving the full Confidential Information Memorandum. Practice showings are scheduled outside of business hours. Staff, patients, and insurance carriers are notified only after the purchase agreement is fully executed and the funded close date is confirmed.

DSO acquirers typically offer 10–25% higher purchase prices than individual dentist buyers, but often require a seller transition service agreement (TSA) of 12–24 months and may restructure the clinical team. Individual dentist buyers typically close faster, require shorter TSAs (3–12 months), and maintain the existing practice culture. The dental broker presents both buyer types with a full financial comparison β€” purchase price, TSA terms, payment structure, and staff impact β€” so the seller can make an informed decision based on both financial and personal priorities.

Florida Business Sellers charges no upfront fee to dental practice sellers. The brokerage earns a success fee β€” a percentage of the final transaction price β€” paid only at a funded close. Sellers are never charged for practice valuation, blind listing creation, NDA management, buyer qualification, due diligence coordination, or closing support. The success fee structure aligns the broker's incentive with the seller's objective: maximum sale price, minimum time on market.

In a dental practice asset sale, the buyer purchases specific assets β€” goodwill, patient records, equipment, supplies, and the lease β€” without assuming the entity's historical liabilities. Asset sales are preferred by buyers because they receive a stepped-up tax basis on purchased assets and avoid predecessor liability. In a dental stock sale, the buyer purchases the entity itself (corporation or LLC), inheriting all historical liabilities including unknown claims. Most Florida dental practice transactions are structured as asset sales. The tax treatment differs significantly: goodwill in an asset sale may qualify for capital gains treatment, while corporate stock gains are also capital gains but without asset step-up benefits for the buyer. A dental-experienced CPA and M&A attorney should be engaged before selecting the transaction structure.

Florida Dental Practice Brokerage

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