PracticeAmerica connects independent dermatologists with qualified physician buyers — no brokers, no private equity roll-ups, no middlemen.
Private equity has aggressively consolidated dermatology over the past decade. Independent derm practices that want to transition to another physician — not a PE roll-up — need a dedicated marketplace. That's PracticeAmerica.
Dermatology practices command some of the strongest multiples in physician practice M&A. PracticeAmerica ensures you capture full value in a doctor-to-doctor transaction.
Your cosmetic and medical patient relationships took years to build. PracticeAmerica keeps the transition physician-to-physician.
List at no cost. PracticeAmerica earns 5% at closing only — paid by the seller. Buyers register and browse for free.
Three-tier information release protects your identity, staff, and patients until you choose to disclose.
For high-value derm practices, seller financing can be structured to maximize after-tax proceeds while closing deals that SBA alone can't fully fund.
Built for independent practices that want to stay independent. Your practice sold on your terms, to a dermatologist who will care for it.
Dermatology practice valuations typically range from 3x to 5x EBITDA — among the highest of any physician specialty. The combination of medical dermatology, cosmetic procedures, and Mohs surgery creates multiple revenue streams with strong margins. Practices with an established cosmetic revenue line (injectables, laser, aesthetics) and a trained aesthetician staff command premium multiples.
Private equity has been particularly aggressive in dermatology consolidation, which has had the dual effect of elevating awareness of practice values while creating pressure on independent practitioners. For the seller who wants to transition to a physician buyer rather than a PE roll-up, PracticeAmerica provides the only dedicated doctor-to-doctor marketplace.
Given the high transaction values in dermatology, financing structures often combine SBA debt, conventional practice acquisition loans, and seller financing. The seller financing component is especially important for practices above the SBA loan ceiling.