By: Dr. David Rice
Buying your first dental practice is one of the most exciting — and daunting — decisions you’ll ever make. When you do it right, it’s your launchpad to fulfillment, wealth, and a self-determined future. When you do it wrong, it can trap you in stress, burnout, and financial struggle.
As we guide dentists to make empowered, predictable, and profitable decisions through our 12-month Acquisition Coaching Program, we’ve seen what works — and sadly — we’ve seen what doesn’t.
So before you sign on the dotted line, avoid these five common (and costly) mistakes.
1. Buying Based on Revenue, Not Systems
The Mistake
Many dentists buy a practice based solely on collections, thinking a $1M practice automatically equals success. But revenue doesn’t guarantee a good investment if the practice is chaotic behind the scenes.
Long-time owners get away with a lot of mistakes because of their long-standing patient and team relationships. As a new owner who lacks that history, you won’t be able to pull it off.
The Fix: Focus on Systems Control and Ask
- Are SOPs documented and followed? Can you show me?
- Is the team calibrated, trained, and aligned? Oh — and are they sticking around?
- Does the practice have a defined patient flow and schedule to goal? Can I gain access to the PMS and verify?
The best practices run on process, not personality. Yes — people are the foundation. Double yes — a calibrated team, or at least a curious team that desires calibration, is key.
2. Ignoring the Culture and Team Dynamics
The Mistake
New owners often walk into an existing team assuming they’ll adapt. But if you don’t assess the people, you risk resistance, toxicity, and high turnover in your first 90 days.
When you purchase a practice, much of what you’re investing in is goodwill. You need the people to want to be a part of your future.
The Fix: Leverage Ignite’s People Control Accelerators
- Conduct team DiSC profiles during due diligence
- Evaluate job clarity, leadership gaps, and team morale
- Set agreements early to align expectations and values
Buying a practice without vetting the team is like buying a race car without checking the engine. Brokers and sellers are going to push back on this. Be ready for it and do not accept it. If a seller truly wants the best for their team and patients when they transition, they’ll make it happen.
You can’t scale without people aligned to your vision.
3. Underestimating the Power of Financial Control
The Mistake
Many new buyers don’t fully understand what they’re really buying. They look at high-level numbers but don’t dig into collections, AR, overhead, and profitability by procedure.
The Fix: Master Financial Control Before You Buy
- Break down profitability by provider and procedure
- Analyze AR aging and PPO vs. FFS breakdown
- Evaluate production trends (monthly, seasonal, year-over-year)
- Benchmark team wages and fixed costs
Use Ignite’s KPI Tracker to assess where the practice is bleeding — and where it could thrive with a few focused changes.
4. Failing to Evaluate Clinical Opportunity
The Mistake
Clinical excellence is often overlooked during acquisition. Many practices run outdated diagnostics, incomplete exams, or “tooth-at-a-time” care, limiting growth potential.
The Fix: Evaluate Clinical Control as a Growth Lever
- Assess hygiene systems: are they maximizing perio, reactivation, and complete care?
- Review diagnostic philosophy: is there alignment with your ideal model? This is key and a deal breaker if your philosophy is a 180 from the seller.
- Identify production opportunities: clear aligners, implants, sleep, same-day dentistry that isn’t currently happening — if you can bring it.
You’re not just buying what they did — you’re buying what it could become. Use your clinical strengths as a growth engine. Conversely, if the seller does a lot of specialty procedures you do not do — red flag.
5. Not Having a Transition Plan
The Mistake
Dentists assume the previous owner will stick around to help — or that their leadership will be enough to make everything work. In reality, most transitions fail due to lack of structure, training, and planning.
If the practice cannot support you and the seller, you’ll need them to exit quickly. If, however, the practice can support you and the seller, having a runway with them present is a big win.
The Fix: Build a 90-Day Onboarding and Leadership Plan Before the Ink Dries
- Define your expectations with the seller: exit date, handoff process, messaging to patients
- Establish trust transfer (handoff) systems with the team and patients
- Plan your first team meeting, KPIs, and milestones (let us know if you want help)
A clear transition plan turns confusion into confidence — for the team, the patients, and you.
Conclusion: A Practice Should Power Your Future — Not Derail It
At IGNITEDDS, we help dentists move from guessing to leading — from overwhelmed to in control. Owning a practice should be your first step toward the dream that started in dental school — but only if you do it right.
We believe your investment should give you:
- A thriving team
- A profitable system
- A clinical platform for growth
- And ultimately — a self-determined future
Ready to Buy a Practice Without the Guesswork?
✅ Choose the right practice — feel free to ask us how. We don’t broker, but we have serious connections.
✅ Set the foundation for success — focus on the top five above. Of course, there’s more to it — we find focus to be the key to speed to success.
✅ Align your team and systems — once your LOI is in and the deal is going to happen, get with your new team, share your vision, and build — build — build your systems.
✅ Start producing at goal within 90 days — most new owners take too long to ramp up. It’s not necessary. People + process + production will make you profitable within 90 days.
📞 Have questions? Let’s talk before you buy. I’m going to do what most would never do — give you my cell: 716-912-7970. Shoot me a message. I will find 60 minutes to give you. Your success is too important to leave to chance — and until then — remember our mantra …
Together We Rise,
David R. Rice, DDS
Founder & CEO, IGNITEDDS
Keep Reading:
Top 5 Mistakes Dentists Make When Starting a Practice & How to Avoid Them
What Your Team Says in the First 30 Seconds Determines Everything