Running a dental practice means managing a complex mix of income, equipment costs, and employee expenses. Structured tax planning can significantly reduce what you owe each year.
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Without Tax Planning
You file as a sole proprietor with no entity structuring, no retirement contributions, and no cost segregation. Self-employment tax, federal income tax, and state taxes hit the full $400,000. No strategy. No savings.
With Tax Planning
S-Corp election reduces self-employment tax. A defined benefit plan shelters $80,000+ pre-tax. Section 179 and bonus depreciation cover equipment purchases. Remaining income taxed at a lower effective rate. Total savings: $84,000.
| Metric | Standard Filing (No Planning) | Dental Tax Strategy |
|---|---|---|
| Net Practice Income | $400,000 | $400,000 |
| Retirement Deduction | $0 | $80,000 |
| Equipment Deduction (Sec. 179) | $0 | $40,000 |
| S-Corp SE Tax Savings | $0 | $18,000 |
| Taxable Income | $400,000 | $262,000 |
| Federal + State Tax Due | $152,000 | $68,000 |
Total Savings from Filing
$84,000
Savings = (Gross Income × Standard Rate) − (Taxable Income × Effective Rate + SE Savings)
Dental practice tax planning is almost always the highest-leverage financial move available to practice owners, but it comes with strict timing rules, entity requirements, and common pitfalls. Four scenarios demand careful attention before you act.
Dentists who delay converting to an S-Corporation pay unnecessary self-employment taxes on every dollar of profit. Once your net income exceeds $80,000 annually, the SE tax savings from an S-Corp election typically exceed the administrative cost within the first year. Waiting costs real money every quarter.
Defined benefit plans for dental practice owners must be established and funded within strict IRS deadlines tied to your fiscal year. Missing the setup window by even one month can eliminate your ability to shelter six figures of income. Plan contributions must be calculated and committed before year-end with a qualified actuary.
Many dental accountants miss cost segregation opportunities on leasehold improvements, dental chairs, imaging equipment, and sterilization units. Misclassifying these as long-life assets instead of accelerated-depreciation property can delay deductions by 15 or more years. A proper cost segregation study typically yields five to seven times its fee in first-year deductions.
Dentists approaching retirement or a group practice sale often face unexpected ordinary income on goodwill and equipment recapture. Without an installment sale structure, a qualified opportunity zone election, or a pre-sale entity conversion, the tax liability on a $1M to $3M practice sale can consume 35% to 45% of the proceeds. Pre-sale planning must begin at least two years before a transition.
Not every strategy applies to every dental practice. Both the practice structure and the owner’s situation must meet specific conditions. Here is what you need to know.
Dentist Filing Requirements
6 / 6 Complete
S-Corporation or Professional Corporation Structure
The practice must be operated through an S-Corp or PC to qualify for salary/distribution splitting and SE tax savings. Sole proprietors and single-member LLCs taxed as disregarded entities do not qualify for this benefit.
Active Practice Income Over $80,000
The core strategies, including defined benefit plans and S-Corp restructuring, generate the greatest benefit when net practice income exceeds $80,000. Below this threshold, administrative costs may outweigh the tax benefit.
Capital Equipment Purchases or Leasehold Improvements
Section 179 and bonus depreciation apply to qualifying dental equipment, digital imaging systems, and practice buildouts. Equipment must be placed in service during the tax year and used more than 50% for business purposes.
Owner-Employee Status Within the Practice
Retirement contribution strategies such as SEP-IRA, Solo 401(k), and defined benefit plans require the dentist to be an active owner-employee of the practice. Passive owners or pure investors do not qualify for the same deduction tiers.
Consistent Annual Bookkeeping and Payroll Records
All deduction strategies, including defined benefit plans and cost segregation, require clean, consistent financial records. Practices without monthly bookkeeping risk IRS disallowance of deductions for lack of substantiation.
Individual Dentist or Professional Entity (Not a Hospital)
These strategies apply to private dental practices owned by individual dentists or small partnerships. Hospital-employed dentists and large DSO (Dental Service Organization) employees typically do not qualify for the same entity-level deductions.
| Requirement | Criteria |
| Business structure | S-Corporation or Professional Corporation |
| Minimum annual net income | $80,000 or more for full strategy benefit |
| Equipment eligibility (Sec. 179) | Placed in service during the tax year, 50%+ business use |
| Retirement plan type | SEP-IRA, Solo 401(k), or Defined Benefit Plan |
| Eligible practice type | Private dental practice; owner-operated or small group |
If your practice checks these boxes, you are in a strong position to reduce your tax burden substantially. When in doubt, verify before it is too late.
The best structure depends on your income level and whether you have employees. For solo practitioners with high income, a defined benefit plan can shelter $80,000 to $200,000 or more per year, far exceeding the limits of a standard 401(k). For practices with employees, a solo 401(k) or profit-sharing plan may be more cost-effective. A combination approach, pairing a defined benefit plan with a 401(k) for maximum deferral, is often used by dentists earning $300,000 or more annually.
Yes. Under Section 179 of the tax code, dental practices can deduct the full cost of qualifying equipment in the year it is placed in service, up to the annual limit (currently $1,160,000 for 2024). Bonus depreciation allows an additional first-year deduction on new and used equipment. This covers digital X-ray machines, dental chairs, CBCT imaging systems, autoclaves, and most other practice equipment. The equipment must be used more than 50% for business purposes and placed in service before December 31 of the tax year.
An S-Corporation election allows a dental practice to split its income into two portions: a reasonable salary (subject to self-employment tax) and a distribution (not subject to self-employment tax). For a practice earning $400,000, this split can reduce the SE tax burden by $15,000 to $25,000 per year. The election is filed with the IRS using Form 2553. To take effect for the current tax year, it must typically be filed within 75 days of the year start. Many dentists who delay this election pay unnecessary SE taxes for years.
A dental practice sale typically triggers multiple layers of tax. The components include:
Pre-sale planning options include structuring the sale as an installment agreement to spread income over multiple years, converting the entity structure before the sale to reduce recapture exposure, and exploring Qualified Opportunity Zone investments to defer capital gains. Planning should begin at least two years before an anticipated sale.
Dental practices are classified as a Specified Service Trade or Business (SSTB) under the tax code. This means the QBI deduction is phased out as your taxable income increases above the threshold ($191,950 for single filers, $383,900 for married filing jointly in 2024). If your income falls below these thresholds, you may claim a deduction of up to 20% of qualified business income. If your income exceeds these thresholds, the deduction is reduced or eliminated entirely. Proper entity structuring and retirement contributions can be used to bring taxable income below the threshold and preserve the deduction.
Disclaimer: This is not tax advice, and it is recommended to consult a tax professional, as every tax situation is unique.