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How Do I Budget an Orthodontics or Oral-Surgery Office Buildout?

Kory WhiteCurated by Kory White · Fractional CRO, CRO Syndicate
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Don’t get screwed.</text><text x="58" y="258" font-family="Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif" font-size="30" font-weight="600" fill="#6b5b4d">Leases, TI, NNN &amp; buildouts — negotiated in your favor</text><g transform="translate(1010,86)" fill="none" stroke="#C0531F" stroke-width="9" stroke-linejoin="round"><rect x="20" y="40" width="150" height="130"/><line x1="20" y1="40" x2="95" y2="6"/><line x1="170" y1="40" x2="95" y2="6"/><rect x="50" y="80" width="36" height="36"/><rect x="104" y="80" width="36" height="36"/><rect x="74" y="128" width="42" height="42"/></g></svg>

How Do I Budget an Orthodontics or Oral-Surgery Office Buildout?

Direct Answer

Budget $150 to $300 per square foot for an orthodontics or oral-surgery office buildout — a typical 2,500-4,000 sq ft practice lands at $400,000 to $1,100,000 all-in, putting it among the most expensive professional fit-outs in commercial real estate. The cost is driven by medical gas, central vacuum and compressed air, imaging (pano/CBCT), radiation shielding, plumbing to every chair, and specialized HVAC, not finishes.

For oral surgery specifically, add a surgical suite with medical-grade gas (oxygen/nitrous), emergency power, and sterilization scope that pushes you to the top of the range.

The money move that protects you: negotiate a large tenant-improvement (TI) allowance ($60-$120 per sq ft) and free-rent buildout period, and make the landlord deliver the base building's plumbing, electrical service, and HVAC capacity — because a dental/surgical office is dramatically more demanding than the "vanilla shell" landlords price for.

The big-ticket lines are dental/surgical chairs and delivery units ($8,000-$40,000 per operatory installed), central air compressor and vacuum/suction systems ($15,000-$45,000), a CBCT/pano imaging room with lead shielding ($25,000-$120,000), medical gas piping (nitrous/oxygen) ($8,000-$30,000), and a sterilization/central supply room ($20,000-$60,000).

What Actually Drives the Number

This is medical construction wearing a retail address. Every operatory is a plumbing, electrical, gas, and vacuum endpoint.

Real Cost Ranges by Practice Type

PracticeSizeAll-in buildout
Orthodontics (open bay)2,500 sq ft$400,000-$650,000
Orthodontics + imaging3,500 sq ft$550,000-$850,000
Oral surgery (1-2 surgical suites)3,000 sq ft$700,000-$1,000,000
Oral surgery (multi-suite + sedation)4,500 sq ft$1,000,000-$1,400,000

Per RSMeans and CBRE Healthcare TI data, MEP, medical gas, imaging shielding, and sterilization run 60-70% of a dental/surgical buildout. Healthcare TI allowances are higher than retail because landlords know the use commands long, stable leases — use that leverage.

flowchart TD A[Identify medical/office space] --> B{Base power, plumbing, HVAC adequate?} B -- No --> C[Demand base-building upgrades as landlord work] B -- Yes --> D[Confirm floor loading + ceiling height for CBCT] C --> E{Radiation shielding + medical gas allowed?} D --> E E -- No --> F[WALK - imaging/surgery impossible] E -- Yes --> G[Negotiate high TI + free rent + long term] G --> H[Lock TI, shielding rights, restoration cap] H --> I[Sign 10-15 yr term with options]

Don't Get Screwed by the Landlord

Healthcare tenants are gold to landlords — long leases, strong credit — so you have real leverage. Use it.

  1. Get a healthcare-grade TI allowance. Don't accept a retail-level $25-$40/sq ft allowance. Push for $60-$120 per sq ft with progress draws, not back-end reimbursement that makes you finance the landlord's building.
  2. Make base-building deficiencies landlord work. If the space lacks adequate electrical service, water/sewer capacity, or HVAC tonnage, those are base-building items — negotiate them as landlord-delivered, separate from your TI.
  3. Secure shielding and medical-gas rights in writing. Some leases restrict penetrations, heavy equipment, or hazardous materials. Get explicit rights for radiation shielding, medical gas, and floor loading for a CBCT (imaging units are heavy).
  4. Cap restoration / surrender. Tearing out medical gas, shielding, and operatory plumbing at lease end is a $50,000-$150,000 liability. Negotiate to leave improvements (they raise the space's value for the next medical tenant) and cap your restoration.
  5. Free rent that matches the build. Medical buildouts take 5-9 months. Negotiate 120-180 days of free rent so you're not paying for an empty shell while contractors run gas lines.
  6. Exclusive / co-tenancy where it matters. Consider an exclusivity clause preventing the landlord from leasing to a competing practice in the same building or center.

Biggest dollar move: high healthcare TI + base-building upgrades as landlord work + 120-180 days free rent + restoration capped, on a 10-15 year term that lets you amortize a seven-figure build.

A Buildout Timeline That Protects Cash

flowchart LR A[LOI + space-planning + equipment list] --> B[Lease: TI, free rent, shielding rights, term] B --> C[Landlord base-building upgrades] C --> D[Permits + radiation-shielding plan approval] D --> E[Tenant fit-out: MEP, gas, operatories, sterilization] E --> F[Imaging install + shielding inspection] F --> G[Medical-gas certification + final inspection] G --> H[Open]

Long-lead items gate everything. Dental chairs, a CBCT, and sterilizers carry 8-16 week lead times, and the radiation-shielding plan needs state approval before you build the imaging room. Order and submit early.

How to Cut the Budget Without Cutting Corners

FAQ

How much does an orthodontics office buildout cost per square foot? Plan $150-$220 per sq ft for orthodontics and $220-$300 per sq ft for oral surgery. A 3,000 sq ft practice commonly lands $450,000-$1,000,000 depending on imaging, medical gas, and surgical suites.

What makes oral surgery more expensive than orthodontics? Medical-grade gas, surgical suite construction, emergency/standby power, sedation-grade HVAC and monitoring, and heavier sterilization push oral surgery $100,000-$400,000 above a comparable orthodontic build.

Should the landlord pay for any of this? Yes. Push for a healthcare TI allowance of $60-$120 per sq ft and make base-building deficiencies (power, water, HVAC capacity) landlord work. Healthcare tenants have strong leverage because the leases are long and the credit is strong.

Do I need to worry about radiation shielding? Yes — a CBCT or pano room requires a state-approved radiation-shielding plan and inspection before opening. Budget $10,000-$40,000 for the shielded room and confirm the lease permits shielding and the floor can carry the equipment weight.

How do I avoid a huge bill at lease end? Cap your restoration/surrender obligation and negotiate to leave the medical improvements in place — gas, shielding, and operatory plumbing raise the space's value for the next medical tenant, so the landlord usually agrees rather than facing a vanilla-shell teardown.

Sources

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