The Essentials: Form — Dental Practice
Establishing the Form phase correctly sets your dental practice business on a stable foundation. This guide covers the essential requirements, common mistakes, and specific action steps for dental practice operators.
READY TO TAKE ACTION?
Use the free LaunchAdvisor checklist to track every step in this guide.
What Form Means for Dental Practice
Form is the legal and regulatory setup that lets you operate legally and protects your personal assets. For dental practice, this includes Dental license (state board exam, license reciprocity varies), DEA registration (controlled substances), business license, Seller's Permit. Skipping Form work is not just risky; it can result in fines, permit denials, or loss of operating rights. This phase is about getting each requirement in writing, not about complexity. Most dental practice operators can complete Form in 4–8 weeks.
Entity Type: LLC vs. S-Corp vs. C-Corp
For most dental practice founders, an LLC is the right starting point: it protects your personal assets, is taxed as a pass-through (simpler than C-corp), and costs $50–$300 to form depending on state. S-corp election makes sense once you are netting $40,000–$60,000/year in profit (saves self-employment tax). C-corp is rare unless you are planning to raise institutional capital. File your entity in the state where you operate or where most customers are; formation is 1–2 weeks via online services like LegalZoom or your state secretary of state.
Industry Licenses and Certifications
Dental license (state board exam, license reciprocity varies), DEA registration (controlled substances), business license, Seller's Permit are required before you can legally operate. Verify requirements with your state board and local government. Do not assume a contractor friend's list applies to you—requirements vary by jurisdiction. Get a compliance checklist in writing from the relevant agency. Budget for exam fees ($100–$500), continuing education ($50–$200/year), and renewal cycles (usually annual or biennial).
Common Form Mistakes
Forming an entity without understanding your state's specific requirements. Waiting to get licensed until you have a client—this causes delays. Not separating business and personal finances from day one. Assuming one license covers all your planned services—some require separate credentials. Not keeping licenses current (renewal deadlines sneak up). Get this right and you avoid costly delays or fines.
Your Form Checklist
□ Form your LLC (or elect S-corp after ~12 months of profits). □ Get your EIN from the IRS (free, 10 minutes online). □ Identify all required licenses/permits and file applications with relevant agencies. □ Open a separate business bank account in your entity name. □ Set calendar reminders for all license renewal deadlines and keep certifications current.
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
What is the most important thing to do in the Form phase for a dental practice?
Focus on the core requirement for your dental practice: for Form, this is documented in the 'What Form Means' section above. Most founders either skip this phase or do it halfway—doing it fully now prevents costly rework later.
How long does the Form phase typically take for a dental practice?
For a dental practice, expect the Form phase to take 2–8 weeks depending on your market and business model. Do not rush—a thorough form phase prevents far more expensive problems downstream.