At Dental & Medical Counsel, we guide physicians through the complex transition from employee to practice owner while working through corporate practice of medicine restrictions that prohibit traditional business ownership structures. Many hospital-aligned groups and MSO-supported practices offer future ownership opportunities, but these arrangements must comply with state laws that forbid non-physicians from controlling medical practices.
Understanding compliant ownership structures and negotiating comprehensive buy-in terms during initial employment protects your path to ownership and prevents costly legal violations. Many physician practice transitions involve carefully structured arrangements that separate clinical practice ownership from business operations to maintain legal compliance.
Corporate practice of medicine laws prohibit non-physicians from owning, controlling, or interfering with medical practices, protecting physician autonomy and preventing commercial interests from compromising patient care. State-by-state variations create dramatically different enforcement landscapes, with California, Texas, and New York maintaining strict enforcement while Florida, Nevada, and other states take more lenient approaches.
CPOM restrictions affect hospital employment models, MSO arrangements, and private equity investments by preventing traditional corporate ownership structures common in other industries. Professional corporation requirements mandate that only licensed physicians can own shares in medical practices, creating barriers to conventional business investment and partnership structures.
Penalties for CPOM violations can be severe, including mandatory practice closure, medical license revocation, contract voidability rendering agreements unenforceable, and potential criminal prosecution in egregious cases. However, an important exception allows business aspects like facilities, equipment, and administrative services to be owned separately from clinical practice operations.
This separation principle enables compliant ownership structures that divide medical services (which must be physician-owned) from business operations (which can include non-physician investors), creating pathways for employed physicians to achieve partial ownership without violating state medical practice laws.
The Professional Corporation with MSO model separates clinical practice from business operations, with physicians owning the PC that provides all medical services while an MSO (potentially including non-physician owners) provides administrative support, facilities, and equipment under management services agreements.
The friendly PC model maintains 100% physician ownership of the professional corporation providing medical services while an affiliated MSO handles business functions, preserving complete clinical autonomy while leveraging MSO resources and potentially allowing MSO equity participation for physicians seeking business ownership.
Equity participation in MSOs allows physicians to receive ownership stakes in management companies, sharing in business profits without owning the medical practice itself, and to participate in practice growth while maintaining strict CPOM compliance by separating clinical and business ownership.
Partnership tracks within group practices offer traditional buy-in opportunities to physician-owned professional corporations, representing the most straightforward path to ownership when no hospital affiliation or private equity involvement complicates the ownership structure. Our partnership agreement expertise helps physicians properly address these conventional buy-in arrangements.
How each structure maintains CPOM compliance while enabling ownership:
Partnership eligibility timelines require securing specific, binding timeframes (typically 2 to 5 years) for ownership opportunities, converting vague promises into contractual obligations that protect your investment in the practice and your career development.
Valuation methodology provisions determine how ownership will be valued, using goodwill formulas, tangible asset assessments, income multiples, or fair-market-value appraisals conducted by qualified third parties. Vague valuation terms create disputes during buy-in negotiations when current owners and incoming partners disagree on the practice's worth.
Payment structure terms establish capital contribution requirements, seller financing options, installment payment schedules, and interest rates that make ownership financially achievable rather than theoretically available but practically impossible. Understanding practice transition guidance helps physicians evaluate whether buy-in terms align with industry standards.
Critical provisions employment contracts should include regarding future buy-in:
Performance metrics for eligibility should focus on objective criteria, such as productivity measured in RVUs, quality scores from patient satisfaction surveys, patient volume growth, and collections performance, rather than subjective assessments that enable favoritism or discrimination.
Vesting schedules determine how ownership interest accrues over time, with cliff vesting requiring completion of the full vesting period before any ownership transfers, versus graduated vesting, which provides incremental ownership annually. First refusal rights provide priority access to ownership opportunities before outside buyers or new partners, protecting your investment and career commitment.
Vague buy-in language using terms like "potential opportunity" or "possible partnership" without concrete timelines or binding commitments suggests ownership may never materialize despite recruitment promises. Valuation methodologies that seem arbitrary, heavily favor current owners with formulas producing inflated prices, or lack objective standards create buy-in terms that appear available but remain financially unattainable.
Excessive capital requirements make ownership financially impractical for most physicians, particularly when combined with student loan debt and family financial obligations. Partnership opportunities consistently delayed for years beyond original timelines or offered only to select favored physicians suggest systemic problems with buy-in processes or ownership culture.
No written documentation of buy-in paths despite repeated verbal promises during recruitment indicates employers may not intend to honor ownership commitments once you've joined and become dependent on the income. Financial performance showing declining revenue, increasing debt levels, or unsustainable practice economics raises questions about whether ownership represents a valuable asset or a financial liability.
High partner turnover suggesting internal conflicts, unfair terms, or dysfunctional governance indicates problems you'll inherit upon achieving ownership status. MSO fees consuming large proportions of practice revenue with minimal services provided suggest management arrangements that extract excessive value from physician-owned practices.
The complexity of physician ownership structures and corporate practice of medicine compliance requires specialized legal expertise that understands both healthcare regulations and business transactions. At Dental & Medical Counsel, our experience with corporate formation services and physician buy-in arrangements ensures your employment contracts include comprehensive ownership terms that protect your interests.
Whether you're negotiating initial employment with future buy-in opportunities or evaluating existing partnership offers, our team provides the expertise needed to structure compliant arrangements and negotiate favorable terms. We review employment contracts, partnership agreements, and MSO relationships to identify problems before you commit to arrangements that may disappoint or financially harm you. Schedule a consultation with our healthcare attorneys today to discuss your employment negotiations and ownership opportunities.
Q: What is the corporate practice of medicine, and why does it matter for physician ownership?
Corporate practice of medicine laws prohibit non-physicians from owning or controlling medical practices. These laws are designed to protect physician autonomy and patient care, but they significantly affect how ownership, buy-ins, and investments must be structured. Physicians must understand these restrictions to avoid illegal ownership arrangements.
Q: Can a physician still become an owner if a practice is hospital-aligned or MSO-supported?
Yes, but ownership must be structured carefully. In many cases, physicians own the professional corporation that provides medical services, while an MSO owns or manages the business operations. Buy-in opportunities may exist at the PC level, the MSO level, or both, depending on the structure and state law.
Q: What is the difference between owning the medical practice and owning an MSO?
Owning the medical practice means holding equity in the professional corporation that delivers clinical care, which generally must be physician-owned. Owning an MSO means holding equity in the entity that provides non-clinical services such as management, facilities, staffing, and equipment. MSO ownership allows financial participation without violating CPOM restrictions.
Q: Are promises of future partnership in employment agreements legally enforceable?
Only if they are clearly written and binding. Vague language referencing a “potential” or “future” partnership is often unenforceable. Physicians should negotiate specific timelines, eligibility criteria, and valuation methods in their employment contracts to protect their path to ownership.
Q: What valuation methods are commonly used for physician buy-ins?
Valuation may be based on goodwill formulas, income multiples, asset-based approaches, or independent fair market value appraisals. The method used significantly affects the cost of ownership. Clear, objective valuation terms help prevent disputes when it is time to buy in.
Q: How long does it typically take to buy into a practice?
Partnership tracks often range from two to five years, though some phased acquisitions span three to seven years. The key is securing a defined timeline in writing rather than relying on informal expectations or verbal assurances.
Q: What red flags suggest a buy-in opportunity may not be real?
Red flags include vague partnership language, repeated delays in eligibility, arbitrary or inflated valuations, excessive capital requirements, lack of written documentation, high partner turnover, or MSO fees that consume an unreasonable share of practice revenue.
Q: Can private equity be involved in a physician-owned practice without violating CPOM laws?
Yes, but only through compliant structures. Private equity may invest in MSOs or other non-clinical entities, not directly in the medical practice itself. Improper structures can render agreements unenforceable and expose physicians to regulatory risk.
Q: What happens if a buy-in structure violates CPOM laws?
Consequences can include void contracts, forced restructuring, fines, loss of ownership rights, and in extreme cases, licensure consequences. Even unintentional violations can create serious legal and financial exposure for physicians.
Q: When should a physician involve an attorney in employment or buy-in negotiations?
As early as possible. Many of the most important ownership terms are negotiated at the employment stage. Early legal review helps ensure that buy-in opportunities are real, compliant, and financially viable before you commit your time and career to a practice.
At Dental & Medical Counsel, PC, we understand navigating the legal process can be tricky. We believe every dentist, optometrist, and doctor deserves the best advice and service, so they can focus on what they do best: treating their patients. We make their lives easier by providing expert guidance, so they can focus on their personal and professional aspirations. We are healthcare attorneys.
About Ali Oromchian, Esq.
Your Dental, Optometry, Healthcare Lawyer
In addition to being a healthcare lawyer for almost 20 years, Ali is also a renowned speaker throughout North America, on topics such as practice transitions, employment law, negotiation strategies, estate planning, and more! Ali has helped thousands of doctors realize their professional goals and looks forward to aiding you in navigating the legal landscape.