Most retiring physicians leave significant money on the table by accepting an all-cash sale. Here's everything you need to know about seller financing — how it works, what it pays, and how to protect yourself.
"What if the way you sold your practice could also fund your retirement — month by month, with interest?"
Seller financing — also called a seller-held note or purchase money mortgage — means you act as the bank. Instead of a lump sum, you receive a down payment at closing and then collect monthly principal and interest payments directly from the buyer over an agreed term. The result: more total money, tax advantages, and a retirement income stream that rivals an annuity.
On a $1,200,000 practice sale, the difference between an all-cash deal and seller financing isn't small. It's life-changing. Here's the side-by-side reality.
Under IRS installment sale rules (IRC Section 453), when you spread a sale over multiple years you only pay capital gains tax on the portion you receive each year — not on the full sale price in year one. For a physician in a high income year, this alone can save tens of thousands of dollars in taxes. Consult your tax advisor to model your specific situation.
Adjust the sliders to model your specific practice sale. See exactly what monthly income you'd generate — and how much more you'd earn compared to a cash sale.
From handshake to first payment — here's the complete process of structuring and closing a seller-financed practice sale.
Seller and buyer negotiate the sale price, down payment percentage, interest rate, and repayment term. These are fully negotiable — there is no fixed formula. PracticeAmerica's AI deal broker helps both parties find terms that work.
🩺 Typical terms: 10–30% down · 6–8% interest · 5–10 year termA healthcare attorney drafts a Promissory Note — the legal document that obligates the buyer to make monthly payments. This note specifies the principal amount, interest rate, payment schedule, and consequences of default. This is the most important document in the deal.
⚖️ Always use a healthcare-experienced attorneyA UCC-1 filing is recorded with the state, giving the seller a secured interest in the business assets — equipment, patient records, goodwill, and receivables. This means if the buyer defaults, the seller has a legal claim on those assets before other unsecured creditors.
📋 Filed with your state's Secretary of State officeSmart sellers require the buyer to maintain a life insurance policy equal to the outstanding note balance, with the seller named as beneficiary. If the buyer dies unexpectedly, the note is paid in full. This is non-negotiable protection that costs the buyer very little.
🛡️ Term life policy — costs buyer ~$50–150/month typicallyAt closing, the buyer pays the agreed down payment. The Purchase Agreement, Promissory Note, and all supporting documents are signed. The practice officially transfers ownership. The seller's monthly payment stream begins the following month.
🏦 Escrow typically handles the closing fundsEvery month for the agreed term, the buyer makes a principal and interest payment directly to you. PracticeAmerica provides payment tracking infrastructure so both parties have full visibility into the balance, payment history, and remaining term — no ambiguity, no disputes.
💰 Payments continue until note is paid in fullMany practice acquisitions use a combination of an SBA 7(a) loan and seller financing. Understanding how these two work together — and the important standby requirement — is critical for any seller considering this structure.
The buyer obtains an SBA-backed loan for the majority of the purchase price. SBA loans offer favorable rates and terms for practice acquisitions. The SBA lender is in first position — they get paid before anyone else in a liquidation.
You hold a note for 10–20% of the purchase price. This is in second position behind the SBA loan. The SBA actually encourages — and sometimes requires — seller financing as part of the deal structure because it shows the seller's confidence in the buyer.
The buyer brings a minimum of 10% as a cash down payment at closing. This skin-in-the-game requirement aligns the buyer's incentives and reduces default risk significantly.
This structure allows buyers who can't put 30–40% down to acquire practices they otherwise couldn't afford — expanding your qualified buyer pool dramatically.
When an SBA loan is involved, the SBA requires that the seller's note go on full standby for a period — typically 24 months from closing. This means:
During the standby period, you receive no payments on your seller note. The buyer is making SBA loan payments only. Your note balance continues to accrue interest, but no principal or interest is paid to you until standby ends.
After standby ends, normal monthly payments resume for the remainder of your note term. Many sellers negotiate a higher interest rate on their note to compensate for the standby period — this is standard and acceptable to the SBA.
Seller financing is not risk-free. Understanding the downside scenarios — and structuring your deal to protect against them — is essential. Here's an honest look at both sides.
SBA 7(a) loans have a historical default rate of roughly 1–2%. Physician buyers — with professional licenses, personal guarantees, and active careers at stake — represent among the lowest-risk borrowers in any asset class. A well-structured seller-financed deal with proper documentation is a fundamentally sound financial instrument. That said, no deal is risk-free. Work with qualified legal and financial advisors to structure yours correctly.
Important Disclaimer: The information on this page is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or tax advice. Every practice sale is unique. PracticeAmerica strongly recommends consulting a healthcare M&A attorney, a CPA experienced in medical practice transactions, and a financial advisor before structuring any seller-financed deal. Tax laws and SBA regulations are subject to change.
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