Dental Credentialing Done with Strategy: Your Fast Pass to Profit as a New Dental Practice Owner

By: Angela Holland

Launching your first dental practice is a thrilling leap into ownership, a chance to build something your own way. But amidst the excitement of setting up shop, there’s a critical step that can either turbocharge your profits or leave you scrambling: insurance credentialing.

If you’re thinking it’s just a box to check, think again. Done strategically, credentialing isn’t a chore, it’s your fast pass to profitability from day one. Without a plan, you’re at the mercy of insurance companies, stuck with low fees and a slow start.

Let’s explore why a smart approach to credentialing is the key to thriving as a new practice owner, and how to make it work for you.

The Stakes Are High for New Dental Practice Owners

As a new dental practice owner, you’re juggling a lot: hiring staff, outfitting your office, and attracting patients.

Cash flow is king, and insurance patients are a big part of that equation. According to the American Dental Association (ADA), private insurance covered 51% of the $174 billion in U.S. dental spending in 2023, with 45% of dental visits tied to insured patients. That’s a massive pool of potential revenue, but only if you’re credentialed to tap into it. Without in-network status, you’re either turning away patients or billing them at out-of-network rates they won’t pay. Either way, your bottom line suffers.

Here’s the catch: credentialing isn’t just about getting approved. It’s about getting approved smartly. The ADA notes that general dentists’ net income dropped 7% in 2022, despite working 4.5% more hours, thanks to rising costs and stagnant reimbursements. New owners can’t afford to lock into lousy rates or overcommit to too many plans. Strategic credentialing flips the script, turning insurance into a profit driver instead of a time sink.

Strategy Over Guesswork

So, what does “strategic credentialing” mean? It’s about precision, knowing your market, picking the right plans, and negotiating fees that reflect your worth. Too many new owners take a scattershot approach, signing up with every insurer they can find. That’s a rookie mistake. 

Overloading your practice with PPOs can drown your team in claims, stretch your schedule thin, and tie you to fee schedules that barely cover overhead. Instead, focus on the top 4-5 payers in your area, the ones with the most patients and the best potential rates.

Take Dr. Ben Sirrine, a first-time owner in Colorado. When he acquired his practice, the seller’s contracts were outdated, with fees that hadn’t budged in years. We stepped in, analyzed his patient base, and targeted his top payer. After sharp negotiations, we secured a 45% fee increase, meaning Dr. Sirrine was earning 45% more per patient than the seller, right out of the gate.

We didn’t stop there; we optimized several other plans, boosting his ROI without adding a single extra appointment. That’s the power of strategy: more profit, less grind.

Negotiation: Your Secret Weapon

Here’s a truth most new owners miss: fee schedules aren’t set in stone. The ADA’s Health Policy Institute shows private insurance dominates dental funding, yet many dentists accept the first offer they get.

Big mistake. Negotiation can mean the difference between scraping by and thriving. Not every insurer will budge, but many will, especially if you know what to ask for. For Dr. Sirrine, that 45% jump wasn’t luck; it was knowing the payer’s flexibility and pushing for rates that matched his market’s Usual, Customary, and Reasonable (UCR) fees.

Don’t have negotiation chops? You don’t need them. Partnering with experts, like Preferred Dental Solutions, takes the guesswork out. We dig into your demographics, study payer trends, and fight for every dollar. The result? You start with a fee schedule that pays you what you deserve, not what the insurer hopes you’ll settle for.

Timing Is Everything

Credentialing takes time, 90 to 180 days, sometimes more. Start too late, and you’re stuck in limbo, unable to bill in-network while your practice bleeds cash. We’ve seen new owners lose thousands because they didn’t kick off the process soon enough. The fix? Begin as soon as you sign the lease or hire your first associate. Get ahead of the curve, and you’ll be cashing insurance checks the day you open your doors.

Avoid the Pitfalls

Rushing credentialing can also backfire. Submitting claims with the wrong provider info—like using a colleague’s NPI while you wait, can flag you for fraud. Overcommitting to plans can overwhelm your billing team, leading to denials and burnout. Strategic credentialing sidesteps these traps. We handle the details, from applications to follow-ups, ensuring accuracy and efficiency so you can focus on patients, not paperwork.

Your Profit Fast Pass

You didn’t buy a practice to work harder for less. Strategic credentialing sets you up to win from the start—higher fees, better plans, and a streamlined process. Dr. Sirrine’s story isn’t an outlier; it’s what happens when you prioritize profit over chaos. At Preferred Dental Solutions, we make it happen: market analysis, expert negotiation, and a live dashboard to track every step. The ADA says 17.4% of dentists are under 35, many new owners like you. Don’t learn the hard way. Let credentialing be your edge, not your enemy.

Ready to fast-track your profits? Strategic credentialing isn’t just a step, it’s your launchpad. Let’s make your first year your best yet.

Keep Reading: Congratulations on Hiring a Dental Associate! Here’s What to Know About Insurance & Credentialing

Photo by RDNE Stock project

Angela Holland

Angela Holland

Angela Holland is a highly regarded Dental Insurance Expert with a proven track record of success. In 2023, she sold her dental RCM company to a NASDAQ-listed firm and is now focused on helping dentists maximize reimbursements and streamline insurance processes. With experience in managing over $1 billion in dental insurance collections, Angela is committed to playing a key role in the industry’s evolution, with a goal of contributing to over $100 billion in insurance collections in the future.