How to Handle Key Doctors and Employees When Selling Your Medical Practice
When physicians think about selling their medical practice, they often focus on valuation, financing, and timing.
3 min read
Allura Engel
:
Mar 11, 2026 6:30:00 AM
There is a financing option available to doctors that many simply do not know exists.
When physicians begin exploring practice ownership, the conversation almost immediately centers around SBA loans. The SBA 7(a) program is widely known and commonly used for small business acquisitions.
But for certain medical practice purchases, there is a more strategic option.
If you are a licensed physician buying a practice from another doctor, you may qualify for specialized medical financing structured specifically around:
This type of program can offer higher loan amounts, competitive rates, long repayment terms, built in working capital, and even real estate financing.
It is not widely advertised. Only a limited number of banks offer this type of physician focused lending, and access typically depends on knowing how to structure and position the transaction properly.
Most doctors are simply never introduced to it.
These physician focused programs evaluate the average of the past two years of gross revenue of the practice being acquired.
Depending on specialty, financing may be available up to:
Yes, revenue.
While revenue plays a significant role in loan sizing, the practice must still demonstrate sufficient cash flow. These programs typically require a minimum debt service coverage ratio of approximately 1.15.
In many strong practices, the actual coverage is far higher.
Let’s walk through a structured example.
Assume a medical practice has:
Purchase price:
$475,000 × 3.8 = $1,805,000
Add:
Total capital required: $1,933,000
Assume:
This produces:
A 1.95 DSCR is well above the 1.15 minimum requirement.
After servicing the debt, the acquiring doctor still retains substantial cash flow.
Now here is what makes this structure particularly powerful.
The $100,000 in working capital is funded as part of the loan and deposited directly into the acquiring doctor’s business account at closing.
Day one.
That means the new owner steps into the practice with liquidity already in place to:
Too many acquisitions struggle because the buyer enters ownership undercapitalized.
This structure does the opposite. It sets the acquisition up for success from day one.
Using the same $2,580,000 revenue base, potential acquisition financing could look like this:
In some specialties, financing capacity can exceed the negotiated purchase price.
That creates flexibility to:
All while maintaining healthy coverage above the 1.15 requirement.
In addition to acquisition financing, some of these banks also offer commercial real estate loans tailored specifically to doctors.
This allows physicians to:
Owning both the practice and the real estate can significantly strengthen long term wealth building.
This financing is not available at every bank. It is offered by a small number of institutions that understand physician acquisitions.
Access depends on:
This is where experience and guidance make a measurable difference.
If you are exploring practice ownership and want to understand:
I offer a complimentary consultation to review your specific scenario and, when appropriate, introduce you to the limited banks that offer this program.
Understanding your financing options early can dramatically improve how you negotiate and structure your acquisition.
To learn more about the author, Allura Engel, Medical and Healthcare Transition Specialist at EDGE Business Advisors, and to view her full bio and services, click here.
If you would like to schedule a free consultation to discuss your acquisition goals and explore whether this financing option is available to you, reach out to start the conversation.
To learn more about the author, Allura Engel, Medical and Healthcare Transition Specialist at EDGE Business Advisors, and to view her full bio and services, click here.


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When physicians think about selling their medical practice, they often focus on valuation, financing, and timing.
After working with physicians at different stages of their careers, one pattern shows up again and again:
Selling your medical practice is one of the most significant financial and personal decisions of your career.