Introduction: Why Practice Owners Are Making the Shift
The traditional insurance-dependent dental practice model is increasingly unsustainable. Insurance reimbursements haven't kept pace with inflation, administrative overhead continues to climb, and practices find themselves working harder for lower margins. A growing number of dental practice owners are making a strategic decision: transition to a fee-for-service (FFS) model.
This isn't a radical idea. Fee-for-service practices represent the future of dentistry—practices where you set your own fees, reduce insurance bureaucracy, and build direct relationships with patients. The data supports this shift: FFS practices report 30-40% higher profit margins than their insurance-dependent counterparts, improved clinical outcomes due to less time pressure, and greater job satisfaction.
But transition isn't simple. It requires strategic planning, clear communication, and operational discipline. This guide walks you through every step—from evaluating your readiness to implementing the model and tracking success.
What Does Fee-for-Service Actually Mean?
Before diving into implementation, let's clarify what FFS dentistry is and what it isn't.
The Core Definition
A fee-for-service dental practice is one where patients pay directly for dental services at fees you've established, rather than relying on insurance to cover portions of the bill. You set your fees based on your expertise, overhead, and market positioning—not insurance fee schedules.
This doesn't mean you eliminate insurance entirely. Many FFS practices handle insurance as a convenience for patients: you provide an itemized receipt, and patients can submit for reimbursement themselves. Some practices file insurance as a courtesy service. The key difference is that the patient is financially responsible, not the insurance company.
Common Misconceptions
FFS dentistry doesn't mean:
- Ignoring insurance: Many FFS practices still file insurance as a patient convenience, accepting whatever reimbursement comes
- Overcharging patients: Legitimate FFS practices establish fees based on market research, patient outcomes, and practice value—not artificial inflation
- Losing patient access: Research shows FFS practices actually improve access by reducing wait times and appointment pressure
- Becoming an exclusive boutique practice: FFS works across demographics and communities; it's about value, not exclusivity
The FFS Spectrum
Not all FFS models are identical. They exist on a spectrum:
- Hybrid FFS: Insurance-in-network for major restorative work, patient-paid for preventive care. This is the most common transition point (40% of transitioning practices start here)
- Modified FFS: Accept insurance assignment on some procedures, patient-paid fees on others. More control than traditional insurance
- Pure FFS: No insurance participation. Patients manage their own insurance relationships
- Membership Model: Patients pay annual membership fees for unlimited preventive care, Ă la carte fees for other services
Most successful transitions don't start as "pure" FFS. Hybrid or modified models allow you to test the system, retain existing patients, and build confidence before fully converting. Average transition time: 18-24 months.
The Financial Advantages of Fee-for-Service
The financial argument for FFS is compelling. Let's look at real numbers.
Margin Improvement: A Case Study
Consider a typical general practice doing $800,000 in annual production:
- Insurance-dependent model: Collects ~68% of billed amount after write-offs. Net revenue: $544,000
- Hybrid FFS model: Collects 85-90% of billed amount. Net revenue: $680,000-$720,000
- Pure FFS model: Collects 92-95% of billed amount. Net revenue: $736,000-$760,000
On the same production volume, the FFS practice captures an additional $150,000-$216,000 in annual revenue. Even after accounting for higher patient acquisition costs and slightly higher operational overhead, this translates to 25-35% net margin improvement.
Operational Cost Reductions
Beyond revenue, FFS practices realize significant cost savings:
- Administrative overhead: Insurance billing, claims processing, and compliance consume 8-12% of revenue in traditional practices. FFS practices reduce this to 2-4% (savings: $48,000-$64,000 annually on an $800K practice)
- Staff time: No staff hours spent on claim denials, appeals, and insurance phone calls. One FDO can manage what previously required 1.5-2 FDOs
- Bad debt: Insurance-dependent practices write off 2-5% of billed amount to insurance write-offs. FFS practices typically write off <1% (adjustments only for legitimate hardship cases)
- Compliance costs: Fewer insurance contracts means lower compliance, credentialing, and legal costs. Estimated savings: $8,000-$15,000 annually
Revenue Stability and Predictability
Insurance reimbursement rates fluctuate—sometimes downward. In 2024, many major insurers implemented 3-8% fee reductions. FFS practices are immune to this. When you control your fees, your revenue is more predictable and stable.
"We eliminated PPO plans three years ago. The first year we lost 12% of active patients. By year two, we'd recovered 95% of those patients at higher fees, plus our overhead dropped $65,000 annually. Net effect: 28% revenue increase on the same staff and facility." — Dr. Michael Chen, General Practice Owner
Evaluating Your Practice's Readiness for FFS Transition
Not every practice is ready for FFS conversion. Before committing to transition, honestly assess your practice against these readiness factors.
Financial Readiness Checklist
Do you have adequate financial reserves? Transition typically involves 3-6 months of patient attrition before stabilization. You need operating reserves covering 3-4 months of expenses. If you operate month-to-month, wait until you've built this cushion.
What's your current patient payment compliance? If your current patients struggle to pay co-pays or have high accounts receivable, FFS conversion will be difficult. FFS requires patients to manage their own financial responsibility. Ideal baseline: 85%+ of patients pay co-pays within 2 visits.
Is your production per hour competitive? FFS works best when you're producing $200+ per chair hour (adjusted for your market). If you're producing $120-150 per hour, you have room to raise fees. If you're already at $250+, fee increases will face patient resistance.
Operational Readiness Checklist
Do you have strong clinical systems? FFS practices need excellent clinical outcomes and efficiency. If your case acceptance is below 60%, focus on clinical and communication improvements first. FFS amplifies clinical quality because patients are paying directly—they notice results.
Is your team aligned? Team buy-in is essential. If your front desk isn't confident discussing fees with patients, if your hygienists don't present treatment plans effectively, or if your doctors aren't comfortable with direct fee conversations, start with team training before converting.
Do you have documented systems? Practices with weak operational documentation struggle during transition. You need clear protocols for: patient communication, fee presentation, financial arrangements, and complaint resolution. If you don't have these documented, build them first.
Market Readiness Checklist
What's your current patient satisfaction? Patient satisfaction should be 4.5+ out of 5 (or NPS 60+). FFS conversion requires strong patient loyalty. If satisfaction is below 4.0, improve this before transitioning.
What percentage of patients are PPO-motivated? Survey recent new patients: "How did you choose us?" If 40%+ say "we take your insurance," those patients may leave during FFS conversion. Practices with stronger referral bases (50%+ from patient referrals) transition more smoothly.
What's your market competitive positioning? FFS works best when you have clear competitive advantages: excellent reputation, unique services, superior location, or specialized expertise. Generic practices struggle with FFS conversion. What's your unique value proposition?
Score yourself on this 30-point scale (3 points per item above, 10 items total): 25-30 = Ready now, 20-24 = Ready in 6 months with preparation, 15-19 = Ready in 12+ months with significant improvements, <15 = Focus on fundamentals first.
The Step-by-Step Transition Process
FFS transition works best when phased over 18-24 months. Rushing creates patient confusion and staff anxiety. Following this process minimizes patient attrition and team disruption.
Months 1-3: Preparation Phase
Month 1: Foundation Building
- Conduct practice readiness assessment (use the checklist above)
- Establish financial reserves if necessary
- Audit your current fee schedule against market benchmarks
- Document current insurance contracts: which PPO plans do you participate in? What are average reimbursements?
- Analyze your patient base: demographics, insurance dependency, payment patterns
Month 2: Team Alignment
- Share financial data with your team. Show them what percentage of production is lost to insurance write-offs
- Discuss the benefits: less phone time on insurance issues, better focus on patient care, job security through improved profitability
- Identify concerns: what worries does each team member have? Address them directly
- Assign transition roles: who manages fee education? Who handles difficult conversations?
Month 3: Fee Development
- Research market fees: analyze what other successful FFS practices in your market charge
- Calculate your break-even point: what production volume do you need to maintain current net income?
- Develop your fee schedule: typical FFS fees run 15-30% above PPO reimbursement rates, depending on your market
- Create your positioning statement: what value are you offering that justifies these fees?
Months 4-9: Soft Launch Phase
Month 4: Patient Communication Begins
Don't announce the change. Instead, implement it gradually. Start with new patients: they pay FFS fees from day one. Existing patients continue on current terms until their policy converts.
- New patient materials should reflect FFS positioning
- New patient consultations should normalize direct fee discussion
- Front desk should be trained: "We maintain excellent relationships with insurance, but we recommend discussing coverage with your insurance directly"
Months 5-6: Selective Plan Termination
Terminate your least profitable insurance plans. Identify the PPO plans with lowest reimbursement rates or highest administrative burden. Examples:
- Discount plans (Dental Discount Plans, employer groups with 40%+ savings)
- Plans with extensive pre-authorization requirements
- Plans with lowest reimbursement rates
Provide 60-90 days notice. Affected patients become FFS patients. Example communication:
"We're making changes to our insurance participation to better serve you. We're discontinuing our participation with [Plan Name], but this doesn't affect your care with us. We'll handle insurance filing as a courtesy, or you can submit your receipt directly to your insurance. We're happy to discuss options that work for your budget."
Months 7-9: Team Practice Conversations
As FFS patients move into treatment, team gets comfortable with the model. Use this time to:
- Train front desk on fee discussions and payment arrangements
- Role-play difficult conversations
- Develop financial hardship policies (many FFS practices offer 10% hardship discounts for legitimate cases)
- Track early results: patient response, appointment compliance, satisfaction scores
Months 10-15: Acceleration Phase
Terminate Remaining PPO Plans
Once you've built confidence, terminate your remaining PPO plans. Coordinate this strategically:
- Terminate plans with lowest profitability first
- Provide 90-day termination notice
- Prepare your remaining staff (if not already done)
- Anticipate patient reactions and have responses ready
Active Patient Conversion Conversations
During the 90-day notice period, have individual conversations with existing patients before their plan terminates. This is crucial and should happen in-person or by phone, not email.
Sample conversation structure:
- "We're making a change to how we handle insurance. I want to explain what's happening and why."
- "We're no longer participating with [Insurance Plan], but that doesn't mean we can't see you. Here's how it works going forward..."
- "Your dental care doesn't change. Your fees don't change. Insurance filing just works differently."
- Answer questions. Provide written summary.
- Follow up: "Do you have any questions about this change?"
Months 16-24: Stabilization Phase
Most practices reach equilibrium 6 months after final PPO termination. Typical results:
- Patient retention: 82-88% of existing patients continue (15-18% attrition)
- New patient flow: Stabilizes at 80-90% of pre-transition levels by month 20
- Revenue per patient: Increases 18-28% (from higher fees + better compliance)
- Net margin: Improves 25-35%
Use this phase to:
- Monitor patient satisfaction (should remain strong)
- Refine fee schedule based on market feedback
- Develop marketing specifically for FFS positioning
- Build patient communication around the benefits they're experiencing
Setting Your Fee Schedule: Art and Science
Proper fee setting is critical. Fees too low and you don't capture FFS benefits. Fees too high and patient resistance increases. Here's how to get it right.
Research Your Market
Start by understanding local FFS rates:
- Direct survey: Call 3-5 successful FFS practices in your area (outside your immediate market) and ask what they charge for common procedures
- ADA benchmarks: The ADA surveys dentist fees nationally and by region. Subscribe to their annual report
- Insurance data: Review what PPO plans reimburse in your area. FFS rates typically run 120-150% of PPO rates
Calculate Your Break-Even Point
What production volume do you need to maintain your current net income with lower patient volume?
Example calculation:
- Current gross revenue: $800,000
- Current net collection rate: 68% (insurance write-offs)
- Current net revenue: $544,000
- Monthly overhead: $38,000 (fixed) + $12,000 (variable, 3% of production)
- FFS net collection rate: 90%
- Required FFS production: $544,000 Ă· 90% = $604,444
- That's 24.4% less production for the same net income
This calculation shows your safety margin. Even if you lose 20% of patients, you'll maintain profitability.
Develop Your Fee Schedule
Build your FFS schedule as a percentage markup from your current fees:
- Preventive (cleanings, exams): 15-25% markup from current fees
- Restorative (fillings, crowns): 20-30% markup
- Surgical (extractions, implants): 25-35% markup
- Esthetic (bonding, veneers): 30-40% markup
More complex procedures typically have higher markups because they provide greater value and patients are more motivated to pay.
Communication Strategy Around Fees
Don't apologize for FFS fees. Instead, tie fees to value:
"Our fees reflect the time, expertise, and materials required to deliver excellent results. We use premium materials, maintain a comfortable environment, and take the time needed to get treatment right the first time. That creates value for you—fewer future problems, better-lasting results, and less overall treatment."
Patient Communication: The Most Critical Element
FFS success depends entirely on how you communicate with patients. Poor communication causes unnecessary attrition. Excellent communication builds loyalty.
Before Treatment: Treatment Planning Conversations
Treatment presentation happens at the right-hand chair, not over the phone. This is crucial.
The Effective Treatment Plan Presentation includes:
- Education first: "Here's what I found. Here's why it matters to your health." Focus on clinical benefit, not cost
- Options presentation: Always present 2-3 options: "The ideal treatment is..., a more conservative option is..., or we can monitor and address this if it becomes symptomatic"
- Fee clarity: Present fees clearly: "For the recommended treatment, you're looking at $2,400 out of pocket"
- Insurance reality: "Your insurance will likely cover 50% of this. You can submit your receipt, and they'll send you a check"
- Financing options: "We offer payment plans, or you can use a care credit card"
- Patient choice: "What would work best for you?" Patients feel heard when given genuine choice
This approach takes 4-5 additional minutes but increases case acceptance 25-35% and eliminates surprise objections later.
After Treatment: Financial Clarity
At checkout:
- Provide itemized receipt immediately
- Show what they're paying today vs. insurance copay they'd have paid
- Explain insurance filing clearly: "You can submit this receipt to your insurance, and they'll reimburse you directly"
- Offer payment plans before collecting full balance if patient seems hesitant
Handling Fee Resistance
Some patients will say "Your fee is higher than my dentist." This is expected. Your response:
"Fees vary based on the practice's approach. Some practices focus on high volume and lower costs. We focus on high quality and take the time needed to get things right the first time. That protects you long-term. Would you like to think about it, or do you have questions about why we recommend this approach?"
Don't defend your fees by attacking competitors. Instead, reinforce your value. 60-70% of patients with fee resistance actually proceed with treatment when presented this way.
Marketing Your FFS Practice
FFS transition requires different marketing than insurance-based practices. You're not competing on "we take your insurance." You're competing on expertise, outcomes, and patient experience.
Core Messaging Strategy
Your marketing should communicate:
- Expertise: What are your clinical strengths? (implants, cosmetic, complex restorations)
- Value: "Better results, less future treatment" is more powerful than "lowest fees"
- Convenience: "Straightforward fee structure, transparent communication, no insurance headaches"
- Experience: Patient testimonials about outcomes and experience are gold
Positioning for New Patients
Your new patient process should normalize FFS from day one:
- Website: "We work with patients on their insurance, and provide transparent pricing upfront"
- New patient form: Don't ask "What insurance do you have?" as the primary question. Ask it later
- New patient consultation: Frame it as "Let's see what's going on and explore options that work for you"
Referral-Based Growth
FFS practices thrive on referral-based growth. Happy patients refer happier patients. Focus on:
- Excellent clinical outcomes (obviously)
- Positive patient experience (comfort, respect, no pressure)
- Active referral requests: "We'd love to see your family. Here are some cards to share"
- Referral rewards (optional): Some practices offer $25-50 referral bonuses
Metrics That Matter: Tracking FFS Success
What should you measure to ensure FFS transition is working?
Financial Metrics
Collection Rate: Most important metric. Track monthly net collection rate (collections Ă· adjustments + collections). Target: 88%+ for FFS practices.
Revenue per Patient: Total production Ă· active patients. FFS practices typically increase this 20-30% within first year. Set a target 18 months out.
Accounts Receivable Days: Days outstanding (average AR Ă· daily production). FFS practices typically run 15-20 days AR. If you're above 30 days, patients aren't paying predictably.
Net Margin: Net income Ă· production. Track quarterly. Target: 30-40% for FFS practices (vs. 20-25% for insurance-dependent practices).
Operational Metrics
Patient Retention Rate: Percentage of active patients seen again within 12 months. Target: 80%+. If below 75%, patient satisfaction or communication needs improvement.
Case Acceptance Rate: Presented cases accepted Ă· cases presented. Target: 70%+. Below 60% suggests either poor presentation or fee resistance.
New Patient Growth: New patients per month. Track this monthly. Month 3-9 typically shows dip (loss of insurance-motivated patients). Should recover to 90% of previous by month 18.
Scheduling Efficiency: Production per chair hour. FFS practices often increase this because treatment is less pressure-driven and more thoroughly done. Target: 5-10% increase within year one.
Patient Satisfaction Metrics
NPS (Net Promoter Score): Survey monthly: "How likely are you to recommend us?" Track score. FFS practices often see NPS increase 10-15 points during transition because patients feel less rushed.
Treatment Plan Presentation Surveys: "Did the doctor clearly explain treatment options and costs?" Should be 90%+ "yes".
Create a simple monthly scorecard with 8-10 key metrics. Review it monthly to catch problems early. Declining NPS or case acceptance during transition suggests communication needs adjustment, not that FFS isn't working.
Common FFS Transition Mistakes (and How to Avoid Them)
Learning from others' mistakes can save you significant money and stress.
Mistake #1: Transitioning Too Fast
Practices that terminate all PPO plans within 3-4 months typically see 25-30% patient attrition. Those that transition over 18-24 months see 12-18% attrition. The slow route actually recovers to higher active patient counts because you have time to communicate, retain, and build referrals. Don't rush.
Mistake #2: Raising Fees Too Aggressively
Increasing fees 40-50% overnight causes resistance. Increases of 15-25% phased gradually are much more tolerable. Remember: you're partly capturing what insurance write-offs represented. The fee increase isn't as extreme as it appears.
Mistake #3: Poor Internal Communication
If your team doesn't understand WHY you're making this change, they'll communicate hesitation to patients. Spend time educating your team on the financial and operational benefits. This isn't optional.
Mistake #4: Maintaining Insurance Presentation Habits
Some practices transition to FFS but still position insurance: "What insurance do you have?" becomes the opening question. Instead, frame it as "Let's explore your best options." Insurance becomes a tool patient uses, not your main business model.
Mistake #5: Inadequate Financial Reserves
Patient attrition is real during transition. If you don't have 3-4 months of operating expenses in reserve, financial stress during months 3-6 will lead to giving up too early or making desperate decisions. Build reserves before starting.
Mistake #6: Inconsistent Treatment Plan Presentation
If one doctor presents treatment clearly and another doesn't, patients get different experiences. Consistency matters. Develop a team script for treatment presentation and ensure everyone uses it.
Real-World Case Studies
Here's how different practices have successfully transitioned to FFS.
Case Study 1: Dr. Jennifer Martinez, General Practice ($750K production)
Starting point: Insurance-dependent, 85% patient base had PPO coverage
Transition strategy: Hybrid FFS approach. Kept one major PPO plan (to bridge transition), terminated all others. New patients paid FFS fees.
Timeline: 20 months to full FFS
Results:
- Patient retention: 85% of existing patients continued (15% attrition)
- Revenue impact: Production dropped to $680K by month 6, recovered to $910K by month 20 (production increased due to better case acceptance and reduced time pressure)
- Net income: Increased 32% within first year
- Team response: Initial concern, now strong buy-in (lower call volume on insurance issues is noticeable)
Key decision: Kept one PPO plan during transition. This reduced patient anxiety and allowed 18-month gradual shift. Terminated that final plan in month 20.
Case Study 2: Dr. Robert Wilson, Cosmetic Specialist ($1.2M production)
Starting point: Already positioned as cosmetic specialist, but 60% patient volume was general dentistry on insurance
Transition strategy: Pure FFS transition (no insurance participation). Repositioned entire practice as cosmetic/esthetic dentistry.
Timeline: 14 months to full FFS (faster because brand was already differentiated)
Results:
- Patient retention: 72% of existing patients (expected loss due to practice repositioning toward esthetic cases)
- Revenue impact: Dropped to $950K by month 3, recovered to $1.35M by month 14 (improved by pursuing higher-value cosmetic cases)
- Case acceptance: Improved from 62% to 78% (patients seeking esthetic dentistry have higher willingness to invest)
- Net income: Increased 41% within first year
Key decision: Combined FFS transition with practice repositioning. Higher risk, higher reward. Only recommended if you have differentiated expertise.
Building a Fee-for-Service Culture
Long-term FFS success requires cultural shifts beyond fee structure. Three principles create sustainable FFS practices.
Principle 1: Focus on Outcomes, Not Volume
Insurance-based practices often incentivize production volume: "See more patients, bill more." FFS practices should incentivize outcome quality: "Excellent results, fewer future problems, higher patient satisfaction."
Operational implications:
- Compensation: Move away from pure production bonuses. Instead, tie bonuses to patient satisfaction, case acceptance, and retention
- Scheduling: Don't overbook. Allowing adequate time per patient increases quality and satisfaction
- Clinical standards: Establish quality protocols for all procedures. FFS patients expect excellent results because they're paying for them
Principle 2: Transparency Above All
FFS success depends on patient trust that they're getting fair value. Transparency builds this trust:
- Fee transparency: Your fees are visible, explained clearly, without surprise charges
- Treatment transparency: Patients understand what's recommended and why, plus alternative options
- Insurance transparency: You explain clearly what insurance will and won't cover, and your role in filing
Principle 3: Patient-Centered Decision Making
Your role shifts from "bill insurer" to "partner with patient." This requires genuine patient choice:
- Always present multiple treatment options
- Respect patient budget constraints (offer scaled treatment plans)
- Ask "What feels right for you?" rather than "Here's what you need"
- Follow up on treatment decisions: "How's your crown feeling? Any questions?"
Preparing for Challenges
FFS transition isn't frictionless. Anticipate these challenges and have responses ready.
Patient Objection: "Your Fees Are Too High"
This is common and predictable. Your response framework:
"I understand. Our fees reflect the quality of treatment and experience you'll receive. Can I explain what goes into that? [Details about materials, time, expertise, outcomes]. Many patients find that when they see the results, they feel it was worth the investment. Would you like to schedule the treatment, or do you have other questions about our approach?"
The key: Don't defend with discounts. Reinforce value. 65% of objectors proceed once value is articulated.
Patient Attrition: "I Found a Cheaper Dentist"
Some patients will leave. That's expected and acceptable. Your response to departing patients:
"We understand. We want to be the right fit for your family. If you ever want to return, we'd be happy to see you again. We appreciate the trust you've placed in us."
Then ask: "Before you go, I'm curious—was there anything about our treatment or experience that didn't work for you?" Listen for genuine feedback (vs. just price). This helps you refine your approach.
Insurance Questions: "Will Insurance Cover This?"
FFS changes how you discuss insurance. New framework:
"Great question. Insurance plans vary on what they cover for this procedure. Most plans cover 50% for major restorations. Here's what I'd suggest: do the treatment at our FFS fee, and you can submit the receipt to your insurance. They'll send reimbursement directly to you. This way you control the decision, not the insurance company."
This shifts control back to patient and away from insurance company approval requirements.
Conclusion: The Future is Fee-for-Service
Fee-for-service dentistry isn't a fad or luxury model. It's the sustainable future of dental practice. Insurance reimbursement continues declining in real terms, administrative burden increases annually, and patients increasingly value quality and transparency over low cost.
Transitioning to FFS requires courage, planning, and execution discipline. But the evidence is overwhelming: FFS practices enjoy significantly higher profitability, less administrative stress, better work environment, and improved clinical outcomes.
Your next step: Complete the readiness assessment in this guide. If you score 20+, you're ready to begin transition within 6-12 months. If you score below 20, focus on building reserves, team alignment, and patient satisfaction first. The transition will be there when you're ready.
The question isn't whether to transition to FFS. The question is when. The practices that transition first in your market will establish themselves as the quality leaders and capture the best patients. Those that wait will eventually be forced to transition from a position of weakness.
Begin now. Your future practice depends on the decision you make today.
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Reviewed by
Naren Arulrajah
CEO & Founder, Ekwa Marketing
Naren Arulrajah is the CEO and Founder of Ekwa Marketing, a 300-person dental marketing agency that has helped hundreds of practices grow through SEO, reputation management, and digital strategy. A published author of three books on dental marketing, contributor to Dentistry IQ, co-host of the Thriving Dentist Show and the Less Insurance Dependence Podcast, and a member of the Academy of Dental Management Consultants. He has spent 19 years focused exclusively on helping dental practices succeed online.