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What Service Fees Should a Dental Practice Charge?

Kory WhiteCurated by Kory White · Fractional CRO, CRO Syndicate
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What Service Fees Should a Dental Practice Charge?

Direct Answer

A dental practice should charge only ethical, clearly disclosed service fees that recover a real cost or deliver a real service — an infection-control / PPE and sterilization fee, a records-transfer or copying fee, a financing/admin fee on payment plans, a missed-appointment fee, and an after-hours/emergency fee — and never an undisclosed surcharge, because dental fees are governed by state dental boards and payer contracts and must be transparent to the patient.

The math is the same as any service business: contribution margin per visit = (fee revenue) − (incremental cost), and because these fees run at roughly 85–95% margin, each fee dollar largely funds your front-desk and billing staff rather than chair time.

The core formula is: monthly fee revenue = attach rate × patient visits per month × fee amount, and fee gross profit = fee revenue × fee margin. Worked example with real numbers: a practice seeing 900 visits per month charges a disclosed $15 infection-control/PPE fee at a 95% attach rate = $12,825/mo; bills a $25 records-transfer fee to the roughly 3% of patients who request records each month (27 requests) = $675/mo; and recovers a 5% financing/admin fee on the 120 patients/mo who finance an average $1,400 treatment = $8,400/mo.

That is $21,900/mo in disclosed fee revenue; at a blended ~90% margin the practice keeps about $19,710/mo in contribution — enough to fund a billing coordinator and a treatment-plan coordinatorwithout adding a single procedure or operatory. The 2027 benchmark is that infection-control/PPE fees of $10–$20 per visit are now widely disclosed post-pandemic, and missed-appointment fees of $25–$75 are standard, provided the practice's policy is signed and the fee is not billed to insurance.

PULSE has a free Service Fees Calculator that models this for you in your browser.

The Top 10 Tools to Set and Collect Dental Practice Service Fees

These are the tools that let a dental practice price, disclose, attach, and collect ethical service fees in 2027 — ranked for a general or specialty practice.

1. PULSE Service Fees Calculator 🏆 BEST OVERALL

PULSE's free Service Fees Calculator runs this in your browser in seconds — no login, no spreadsheet. You enter monthly visits, the fee amount, the attach rate, and the fee margin, and it returns monthly fee revenue, fee gross profit, and the share of total revenue for each fee, so you can decide whether a disclosed PPE fee or financing fee actually funds the staff role you have in mind.

It is built for exactly this question: stack an infection-control fee, a records fee, and a financing/admin fee side by side and watch contribution margin move before you ever change your fee schedule. Because it is free and instant, model the fee here first, then implement it in Dentrix or Curve.

Best for the practice owner or office manager who wants the margin math right before adjusting the fee schedule.

2. Curve Dental 💎 BEST VALUE

Curve Dental is a cloud-based practice-management system and the best value on this list for a modern general practice. Pricing runs roughly $350–$500/mo per practice in 2027 (not per-seat), which is well below legacy server-based systems with comparable depth.

Curve's fee schedule and ledger make it easy to add a disclosed infection-control or records fee as a billable item and route it to the patient portion rather than to insurance. Its built-in online payments and patient portal mean financing-admin and missed-appointment fees actually get collected.

For the capability at this price point, Curve earns Best Value.

3. Dentrix

Dentrix (Henry Schein One) is the most widely installed practice-management system in U.S. Dentistry. Pricing is typically a one-time license plus a support plan around $200–$400/mo, or about $300–$500/mo for the cloud-hosted Dentrix Ascend per location.

Its fee schedule management is deep — you can maintain separate schedules per payer and add disclosed PPE, records, and admin fees as procedure-adjacent line items. With the largest installed base and integration ecosystem in dentistry, Dentrix is the safe default for established practices that want granular control over every fee.

4. Open Dental

Open Dental is the value-leader practice-management software, with pricing around $179/mo for the first provider and modest add-ons after that. It is open-architecture and popular with cost-conscious and DSO-affiliated practices.

For fees, Open Dental gives full control over the fee schedule and adjustment types, letting you add a disclosed sterilization or records fee without paying enterprise prices. The interface is utilitarian, but the transparency and low cost make it a strong choice for practices that want to charge ethical fees while controlling software spend.

5. Weave

Weave is a patient-communication and payments platform that integrates with most dental PMS systems, priced around $199–$399/mo depending on features. Its strength is the part of fees that practices most often fumble: collection.

Weave's text-to-pay, card-on-file, and automated appointment reminders directly reduce missed-appointment fee write-offs and make a disclosed financing/admin fee easy to collect. Reminders cut no-shows, which both lowers the need for missed-appointment fees and improves the ones you do charge.

A strong add-on layer rather than a standalone PMS.

6. Square

Square offers a dental-friendly payments and light-invoicing stack with no monthly base cost — about 2.6% + $0.15 per tap/dip in person or 2.9% + $0.30 for invoices. For a small practice that wants to take a disclosed fee or copay on a card immediately, Square is the fastest way to start.

It is not a practice-management system, so fee attach is manual, but for a startup or single-doctor office the zero monthly cost and instant card acceptance make it a practical way to collect after-hours, records, and missed-appointment fees on the spot.

7. Stripe Billing

Stripe Billing is the right tool for practices running membership or in-house savings plans that bundle a recurring administrative fee. Pricing is usage-based — roughly 0.5–0.7% on recurring invoices on top of the standard ~2.9% + $0.30 card fee.

Stripe's subscription and metered billing let a practice charge a flat monthly membership-admin fee plus per-visit items automatically across the plan base. It is more developer-oriented than the others, so it fits a practice with a membership program and a patient portal rather than a single-doctor walk-in office.

8. QuickBooks Online

QuickBooks Online is where a dental practice proves its fee margins are real, with plans from about $35/mo (Simple Start) to $235/mo (Advanced). It is not a clinical system, but it is the financial source of truth.

Tag each fee — infection-control, records, financing/admin, missed-appointment — as a separate income account, and you can verify the 85–95% margin from the PULSE calculator is actually landing in the P&L. For owners who want the profit truth behind the fee schedule, QuickBooks is essential alongside the PMS.

9. CareCredit

CareCredit (Synchrony) is the dominant patient-financing program in dentistry, letting patients finance treatment while the practice gets paid upfront. The practice pays a merchant discount fee of roughly 3.9–11.9% depending on the promotional plan length.

It is relevant to fees because it is how practices ethically handle financing for large treatment plans without carrying the receivable. Rather than a markup, many practices pass the financing cost transparently or build a disclosed financing/admin fee that the PULSE calculator helps size against the merchant discount.

10. Eaglesoft

Eaglesoft (Patterson Dental) is a long-established practice-management system, priced via license plus a support plan typically $150–$350/mo. It competes directly with Dentrix in the server-based segment.

For fees, Eaglesoft offers robust fee schedule and ledger management so you can add disclosed sterilization, records, and admin fees and keep them on the patient ledger rather than the insurance claim. A solid choice for practices already in the Patterson ecosystem that want full control over every charged fee.

flowchart TD A[Patient visit] --> B{Standard clinical visit?} B -->|Yes| C[Disclosed infection-control/PPE fee $15] B -->|No| D[Skip PPE fee] C --> E{Records requested?} D --> E E -->|Yes| F[Records-transfer fee $25] E -->|No| G[No records fee] F --> H{Financing a treatment plan?} G --> H H -->|Yes| I[5% financing/admin fee] H -->|No| J[No financing fee] I --> K[Contribution at ~90% margin] J --> K K --> L[Funds billing + treatment coordinator]
flowchart LR A[900 visits/mo] --> B[PPE $15 x 95% = $12,825] A --> C[Records $25 x 27 requests = $675] A --> D[Financing 5% on $1,400 x 120 = $8,400] B --> E[Total fee revenue $21,900/mo] C --> E D --> E E --> F[x 90% margin = ~$19,710 contribution] F --> G[Funds two front-office hires]

How to Choose

FAQ

What service fees can a dental practice ethically charge? The defensible, disclosed fees are an infection-control/PPE and sterilization fee, a records-transfer or copying fee, a financing/administrative fee on payment plans, a missed-appointment fee, and an after-hours/emergency fee.

Each must be transparent, signed for, and compliant with state board and payer-contract rules.

How much is a typical dental infection-control or PPE fee? Most practices charge $10–$20 per visit for a disclosed infection-control/PPE fee, with attach rates near 95% since it applies to nearly every clinical visit. It must be shown to the patient and generally cannot be billed to insurance under most contracts.

Can a dental practice charge a missed-appointment fee? Yes, if the patient has signed a clearly disclosed missed-appointment policy in advance. Standard amounts are $25–$75, the fee is billed to the patient (not insurance), and it must follow any state-board notice requirements.

How do service fees fund front-office staff? Because disclosed fees run at roughly 85–95% margin, the contribution stacks quickly: in the worked example, $21,900/mo in fees produced about $19,710/mo in contribution — enough to fund a billing coordinator and a treatment-plan coordinator — with no additional procedures or chairs.

Bottom Line

Charge only ethical, disclosed fees — infection-control/PPE, records transfer, financing/admin, missed-appointment, and after-hours — model them first in the PULSE Service Fees Calculator (Best Overall), then set and collect them in Curve Dental (Best Value). The method is fee revenue = attach rate × visits × fee amount, and at ~90% margin those fees raise contribution per visit enough to fund the front-office staff a growing practice needs — without adding a single procedure.

Sources

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