Exit Tax Planning for Dentists: Protecting Your Life's Work
When dental practice owners and specialists sell or transition their dental practice, the tax consequences can consume 25-35% of the transaction value without advance planning. On a dental practice valued at $1,350,000, unplanned capital gains taxes reach $272,159+. With 2-3 years of advance exit tax planning, that liability can be reduced to $141,749 or less, saving $130,410+ in a single transaction.
Exit tax planning for Dentists is not a filing-season exercise. The most powerful strategies, including installment sales, QSBS elections, charitable remainder trusts, Opportunity Zone deferrals, and ESOP conversions, require implementation 1-5 years before the transaction closes. Every month of delay after the decision to sell reduces available planning options.
Valuation and Transaction Structure
For dental practice owners and specialists, dental practices command 60-85% of annual collections or 2-3x EBITDA. The transaction structure (asset sale vs. stock sale, earnout provisions, consulting agreements, non-compete allocations) determines how proceeds are taxed. In an asset sale, purchase price allocated to equipment and supplies generates ordinary income (taxed at 37%), while goodwill and going-concern value generate long-term capital gains (taxed at 20% + 3.8% NIIT). Strategic allocation between these categories, supported by qualified appraisals under IRC Section 1060, can shift $200,000-$500,000 from ordinary income to capital gains treatment.
IRC Section 1202 QSBS Exclusion
If the dental practice was structured as a C-Corporation and meets the qualified small business stock requirements of IRC Section 1202, up to $10 million (or 10x adjusted basis) in capital gains may be completely excluded from federal taxation. For a dental practice acquired or incorporated at least 5 years before sale with original assets under $50M, the entire capital gain of $944,999 could be tax-free under Section 1202.
The requirements are specific: the stock must be acquired at original issuance (not secondary market), held for 5+ years, issued by a C-Corporation with gross assets under $50M at issuance, and the business must be an active trade or business (not investment, real estate, banking, or professional services that rely on specific individual reputation). For Dentists whose businesses qualify, Section 1202 provides the single most powerful exit tax benefit in the IRC.
Installment Sales Under IRC Section 453
Installment sales spread gain recognition over the payment period, keeping income below higher bracket thresholds and managing NIIT exposure. A $1,350,000 sale structured as a 5-year installment with 20% annual payments generates $188,999 in annual gain rather than $944,999 in a single year. This reduces the marginal rate on each installment and can save $47,249+ through bracket management alone.
For Dentists planning to remain active post-sale (consulting, transition support), installment sales pair naturally with consulting agreements that provide ordinary income during the installment period while managing total annual taxable income within target brackets.
Charitable Remainder Trusts (CRT)
A Charitable Remainder Trust funded with appreciated dental practice assets before sale eliminates capital gains tax on the contributed assets while providing lifetime income to the seller. Contributing $405,000 of dental practice value to a CRT before closing avoids $96,390 in capital gains taxes, provides an immediate charitable deduction of $101,250 (worth $37,462 in tax savings), and generates 5-8% annual income ($24,300/year) for the seller's lifetime.
Projected Exit Tax Savings for Dentists
With 2-3 years of advance planning, Dentists can reduce exit transaction taxes by $130,410+ on a $1,350,000 dental practice sale. The combination of transaction structuring, installment sales, charitable planning, and QSBS qualification (where eligible) can reduce effective exit tax rates from 28-33% to 10-18%, preserving hundreds of thousands in after-tax proceeds.
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Book Your Free Discovery CallFrequently Asked Questions
How much can dentists save on exit taxes?
With 2-3 years of advance planning, dentists can reduce exit transaction taxes by 30-50%, often saving $300,000-$2,000,000+ depending on transaction size. Strategies include installment sales, QSBS exclusion, charitable remainder trusts, and Opportunity Zone deferrals.
When should dentists start exit tax planning?
The optimal planning window is 2-5 years before a sale. Many strategies (QSBS qualification, charitable trust funding, installment structuring) require implementation well before closing. Starting early maximizes available options and tax savings.
What is IRC Section 1202 QSBS and does it apply to dentists?
Section 1202 provides up to $10M in tax-free capital gains on qualifying small business stock held 5+ years. Eligibility depends on entity structure (must be C-Corp), business type, and asset size at issuance. Many dentists can qualify with proper advance structuring.
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