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What is the best tech stack for a dental practice in 2027?

👁 0 views📖 3,308 words⏱ 15 min read5/28/2026

Direct Answer

The best tech stack for a 2027 dental practice is built around a practice management system as the spine — Dentrix (Henry Schein) or Eaglesoft (Patterson) for established offices, Open Dental for cost-conscious or tech-forward practices, and Curve Dental for cloud-first teams — wired to a digital imaging platform like Dexis, Carestream, or Planmeca Romexis, with Weave or NexHealth running patient communication, recall, and online scheduling, DentalXChange or Vyne Dental handling insurance verification and electronic claims, CareCredit plus Sunbit or Cherry covering patient financing, and Dental Intelligence turning chairside data into production analytics.

Around that core sit reputation management (Birdeye, Google, Weave), payments (Weave Payments), VOIP phones (Weave, RingCentral), and accounting (QuickBooks). A dental practice runs fewer tools than a SaaS company, but each one is load-bearing because the schedule, the chart, the claim, and the recall list are the entire business — and they all have to reference the same patient record.

Why the Dental Practice Tech Stack Works Differently

A dental practice is a clinical operation and a small business at the same time, and four mechanics explain why the tech stack looks nothing like a generic small-business setup.

  1. The practice management system is the spine, not just a CRM. In most industries the CRM is one tool among many. In a dental office the practice management system owns the appointment book, the clinical chart, the treatment plan, the patient ledger, insurance estimates, and the recall list all at once. Every other tool either feeds it or reads from it. Choosing this layer is the single biggest decision in the stack, because migrating off it later means moving years of charts, ledgers, and imaging pointers — which is why incumbents like Dentrix and Eaglesoft have such sticky installed bases and why Open Dental's open data model is a genuine selling point.
  1. Imaging and clinical capture have to integrate at the operatory, not the front desk. A dental practice generates X-rays, intraoral camera images, and increasingly cone-beam (CBCT) scans on every visit, and those images have to attach to the right patient chart instantly so the dentist can diagnose chairside. The imaging bridge between the sensor software (Dexis, Carestream, Planmeca Romexis) and the practice management system is where stacks break — if the bridge is flaky, the assistant is re-entering patient IDs or hunting for images mid-procedure. The clinical layer is judged on how invisibly it lands images into the chart.
  1. Insurance claims and patient financing are the cash-flow engine, and the economics are brutal. A typical practice collects from two payers per visit: the insurance company and the patient. Insurance verification, electronic claims, attachments, and ERA posting (via DentalXChange or Vyne Dental) decide how fast the insurance half gets paid and how much gets written off. The patient half increasingly depends on financing — CareCredit, Sunbit, or Cherry — because case acceptance on a $4,000 crown-and-implant plan collapses without a monthly-payment option. The stack lives or dies on collecting both halves cleanly.
  1. Recall, hygiene, and patient engagement are recurring revenue in disguise. A dental practice's most reliable production is the hygiene recall every six months. Filling those chairs is a retention problem identical to SaaS renewal — and it runs on automated reminders, two-way texting, online scheduling, and reactivation campaigns through Weave, NexHealth, Solutionreach, or RevenueWell. A practice that lets its recall list go cold is leaking its most profitable, lowest-acquisition-cost production, so the engagement layer earns its keep by keeping the schedule full.

The Core Stack, Layer by Layer

A dental practice runs a tighter stack than a SaaS company, and that is correct — a solo office should skip layers a group or DSO needs. Each layer names the best-fit product, a sentence of why, a rough price, and an alternate where the choice genuinely splits.

Practice Management — Dentrix (alternates: Eaglesoft, Open Dental, Curve Dental). The system of record for scheduling, charting, treatment planning, the ledger, and insurance estimates. Dentrix (Henry Schein) and Eaglesoft (Patterson) are the entrenched server-based incumbents with the deepest feature sets and the largest support ecosystems; Open Dental is the cost-effective, open-data alternative that tech-forward practices favor for its low licensing cost and exportable database; Curve Dental and Denticon lead the cloud-native side.

Dentrix and Eaglesoft run roughly $300-$600/month per office plus support plans; Open Dental is about $179/month with no per-seat lock-in; Curve runs $400-$600+/month as a cloud subscription.

Cloud Practice Management for Groups & DSOs — Denticon (Planet DDS) (alternate: tab32). Multi-location operators need one cloud platform that consolidates scheduling, billing, and reporting across every office. Denticon by Planet DDS is the DSO standard for centralized operations and cross-location analytics; tab32 is a cloud-native alternate aimed at groups that want an all-in-one with patient engagement built in.

Pricing is custom per location, commonly several hundred dollars per office per month.

Digital Imaging — Dexis (alternates: Carestream, Planmeca Romexis). Captures and stores intraoral X-rays, panoramic images, intraoral camera photos, and CBCT scans, attaching them to the patient chart. Dexis (Envista) is a common choice tightly bridged to most practice management systems; Carestream Dental is strong on hardware-plus-software for panoramic and CBCT; Planmeca Romexis is the heavyweight for 3D, CBCT, and CAD/CAM workflows.

Imaging software often ships with the sensors and CBCT hardware; standalone licenses and bridges run a few hundred to a few thousand dollars plus the imaging hardware itself.

Patient Communication, Recall & Online Scheduling — Weave (alternates: NexHealth, Solutionreach, RevenueWell). Two-way texting, automated appointment reminders, recall and reactivation campaigns, and online booking that writes back into the schedule. Weave bundles communication, phones, and payments into one platform popular with solo and small-group practices; NexHealth is the modern API-first choice that syncs cleanly with many practice management systems for online scheduling; Solutionreach and RevenueWell are established patient-engagement specialists.

Expect roughly $250-$600/month depending on bundle and patient volume.

Insurance Verification & Electronic Claims — DentalXChange (alternate: Vyne Dental). Real-time eligibility checks, electronic claim submission, attachments (X-rays and perio charts), and ERA posting back into the ledger. DentalXChange and Vyne Dental are the two dominant clearinghouses; many practice management systems also offer a native claims module, but a dedicated clearinghouse usually clears and posts faster with better attachment handling.

Pricing is typically per-claim or a monthly subscription in the low hundreds of dollars.

Payments & Patient Financing — Weave Payments + CareCredit (alternates: Sunbit, Cherry). Card-present and text-to-pay collection for the patient balance, plus third-party financing so patients can say yes to larger treatment plans. Weave Payments (or the practice management system's integrated processor) handles everyday collection; CareCredit is the entrenched healthcare credit line patients already carry; Sunbit and Cherry are newer point-of-sale financing options with higher approval rates and friendlier terms for buy-now-pay-later style plans.

Processing runs the usual card rates; financing programs charge the practice a merchant fee per funded plan.

Practice Analytics & BI — Dental Intelligence (alternate: Jarvis Analytics). Reads production, collections, hygiene reappointment rate, case acceptance, and provider performance straight out of the practice management database and turns it into dashboards and morning-huddle reports.

Dental Intelligence is the broad standard for single and small-group practices; Jarvis Analytics is favored by larger groups and DSOs that need cross-location benchmarking. Expect roughly $300-$500/month per location.

Reputation & Reviews — Birdeye (alternates: Weave, Google Business Profile). Automated review requests after appointments plus monitoring and response across Google and Facebook, because local search ranking and the star rating drive new-patient calls. Birdeye is the dedicated reputation platform; Weave includes review requests in its bundle; a disciplined office can run the basics directly through a well-managed Google Business Profile.

Birdeye runs roughly $250-$400/month; Weave's reviews are included in its subscription.

Phones & VOIP — Weave (alternate: RingCentral). The phone system is still where most appointments are booked and missed-call recovery happens, so dental-specific VOIP that pops the patient chart on an incoming call is high-leverage. Weave integrates phones with texting, payments, and the chart in one platform; RingCentral is the general-business VOIP alternate where a practice wants a standalone phone system.

Weave bundles phones into its subscription; RingCentral runs roughly $20-$35/user/month.

Accounting — QuickBooks. General-ledger accounting, payroll, and tax prep sit outside the practice management system. QuickBooks Online is the near-universal choice for dental practices, with the office manager or an outside dental CPA reconciling production and collections from the practice management reports into the books.

QuickBooks Online runs roughly $35-$235/month depending on tier.

Real Operators & What They Run

These are representative dental practice profiles and the stacks they typically run. Specific vendors shift, but the shape is consistent across solo offices, growing groups, and DSOs.

The pattern across all five: one practice management system as the spine, imaging bridged into the chart, a recall-and-communication layer keeping the schedule full, a claims path to the insurer, and a financing option for the patient. The brand names differ by size and budget; the architecture rhymes.

Integration Architecture

The practice management system is the operational hub where scheduling, charting, and billing happen, and it is also the patient record everything else references. Imaging software bridges X-rays and scans into the chart; the engagement platform reads the schedule and recall list and writes appointments back; the clearinghouse pulls claims and procedure data out and posts ERAs and payments back into the ledger; analytics reads the whole database and reports on production.

Financing and payments flow against the patient balance, and accounting reconciles the production and collections totals into the general ledger.

flowchart TD PMS[Practice Management - Dentrix / Eaglesoft / Open Dental] --> CHART[Patient Chart + Ledger] IMG[Imaging - Dexis / Carestream / Romexis] --> CHART ENG[Engagement - Weave / NexHealth] --> SCHED[Appointment Book + Recall] SCHED --> PMS PMS --> CLM[Claims - DentalXChange / Vyne] CLM --> INS[Insurance Payer] INS --> CLM CLM --> LEDG[ERA Posting to Ledger] LEDG --> PMS PAY[Payments + Financing - Weave Pay / CareCredit / Sunbit] --> LEDG PMS --> BI[Analytics - Dental Intelligence / Jarvis] PMS --> ACCT[QuickBooks Accounting]

The second view is the patient lifecycle — how a single patient moves through the stack from new-patient call to completed treatment and back into the recall list, and which tool owns each stage.

flowchart LR NP[New-Patient Call / Online Booking] --> APPT[Appointment Booked in PMS] APPT --> CHK[Check-In + Insurance Verification] CHK --> EXAM[Exam + Imaging Captured] EXAM --> TP[Treatment Plan Presented] TP --> FIN[Financing / Case Acceptance] FIN --> TX[Treatment Delivered] TX --> CLAIM[Claim Filed + Patient Balance Collected] CLAIM --> RECALL[Hygiene Recall Scheduled] RECALL -->|6-Month Reminder| APPT RECALL -->|Lapsed| REACT[Reactivation Campaign]

Failure Modes

Four mistakes wreck dental practice stacks more reliably than any missing tool.

  1. Treating the practice management system like a commodity and skipping the data-portability question. Practices sign onto Dentrix or Eaglesoft without asking how they would ever get their data back out, then discover at sale or transition that the chart, ledger, and imaging are effectively hostage. The fix is to weigh data portability up front — Open Dental's exportable database and cloud systems with clean export tools are worth real money the day you grow, sell, or switch.
  1. A broken or neglected imaging bridge. When the sensor software and the practice management system do not talk cleanly, assistants re-key patient IDs, images land in the wrong chart, and the dentist loses minutes per operatory hunting for X-rays. Validate the imaging bridge before you buy, keep the imaging software and practice management versions in sync, and never let an upgrade ship until the bridge is retested in a live operatory.
  1. Letting the recall and reactivation list go cold. The most profitable production in the office is the hygiene patient who comes back every six months, and it is the cheapest to acquire because you already have them. Practices that fail to automate reminders, fill cancellations, and reactivate lapsed patients through Weave, NexHealth, or RevenueWell quietly leak their best margin while chasing expensive new patients to replace them.
  1. Weak revenue cycle — slow claims and no financing at the point of yes. Claims that sit unsubmitted, missing X-ray attachments, and aging insurance AR starve the practice of cash it already earned; and presenting a large treatment plan with no CareCredit, Sunbit, or Cherry option at the chair tanks case acceptance. Tighten the clearinghouse workflow so claims go out same-day with attachments, and put a financing option in front of every plan over a few hundred dollars.

Budget & Sizing

Costs scale with chairs, providers, and locations rather than software tiers alone. Ranges below are total monthly software spend for the practice stack, excluding imaging hardware, computers, and payment-processing volume fees.

30/60/90 Day Implementation Plan

A staged rollout that lands the system of record and clinical capture first, then revenue motion, then analytics.

FAQ

Should a dental practice choose Open Dental over Dentrix or Eaglesoft? Open Dental wins on cost and data portability — about $179/month, no per-seat lock-in, and an open, exportable database that makes future migration, sale, or analytics far easier. Dentrix and Eaglesoft win on feature depth, the size of the support and add-on ecosystem, and the comfort of an entrenched standard.

Tech-forward and cost-conscious practices increasingly pick Open Dental; offices that want a deep incumbent with abundant local support and training stay on Dentrix or Eaglesoft.

Do I need a cloud practice management system like Curve or Denticon, or is a server-based one fine? A single-location practice runs perfectly well on a server-based system like Dentrix, Eaglesoft, or Open Dental. Cloud systems earn their keep at multi-location groups and DSOs, where Denticon's centralized scheduling, billing, and cross-office reporting eliminate the headache of syncing separate servers — and at brand-new startup practices that would rather not own and maintain an on-prem server at all.

Is a separate clearinghouse worth it if my practice management system has a native claims module? Usually yes once claim volume is real. A dedicated clearinghouse like DentalXChange or Vyne Dental typically clears faster, handles X-ray and perio attachments more reliably, and posts ERAs back into the ledger more cleanly than a bare native module.

A very small practice can start native and add the clearinghouse when aging insurance AR starts costing more than the subscription.

Why offer Sunbit or Cherry when CareCredit already exists? CareCredit is the entrenched healthcare credit line many patients already hold, but its approval rate leaves cases on the table. Sunbit and Cherry are newer point-of-sale financing options with higher approval rates and friendlier terms, so offering them alongside CareCredit raises case acceptance on larger plans — the patient who gets declined by one is often approved by another, and the case gets done.

What is the highest-leverage tool to add after the practice management system? The patient communication and recall platform — Weave, NexHealth, or RevenueWell. The most reliable, lowest-cost production in any practice is the hygiene patient returning every six months, and automated reminders, two-way texting, online scheduling, and reactivation campaigns are what keep those chairs full.

It protects the recurring revenue the practice already earned and consistently pays for itself fastest.

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