Your practice is opening or changing hands. Credentialing can't be the thing that slows you down.
Whether you're starting a practice from scratch, buying an existing one, or selling after years of building — credentialing is one of the most time-sensitive and consequential steps in the process. Credentialing DDS handles it completely, so you can focus on everything else.
Three situations. One credentialing partner.
Private practice credentialing needs vary significantly depending on where you are in your career and your practice lifecycle. We've built workflows for each scenario.
- Group and individual NPI enrollment
- All major payers enrolled simultaneously
- CAQH setup and complete profile management
- 10-business-day submission after CAQH completion
- Applications tracked to confirmed effective dates
- New owner credentialing under acquired entity
- Payer notification of ownership change
- Contract transfer or re-enrollment as needed
- Revenue continuity plan during transition window
- Associate provider enrollment if applicable
- Pre-sale credentialing audit and cleanup
- Transition documentation and payer notification
- Incoming provider enrollment support
- Continuity of care and billing protection
- Credential portability — your record stays with you
The credentialing clock starts the day you sign your lease.
Most dental startups underestimate how long credentialing takes — and start the process too late. The result is an open practice treating patients who can't be billed in-network, burning through working capital while waiting on payer effective dates.
What happens to credentialing when you buy an existing practice.
This is one of the most misunderstood areas in practice transitions. Many buyers assume the previous owner's payer relationships transfer automatically. They don't — and the gap can be expensive.
- The seller's payer contracts automatically transfer at closing
- Billing can continue uninterrupted under the new owner immediately
- Credentialing can wait until after the deal closes
- The seller's credentialing file is transferable as-is
- Payer contracts are between the payer and the individual dentist — not the practice
- New owner must be credentialed under the acquired entity before in-network billing
- This process takes 60–90 days — starting after close means 60–90 days of disruption
- Starting before close compresses or eliminates the gap entirely
- Audit seller's current payer participation and contract status
- Identify which payers require new owner re-enrollment vs. contract assignment
- Begin new owner CAQH setup and credential compilation before closing
- Submit new owner enrollment applications as soon as possible pre-close
- Notify all payers of ownership change at or immediately after close
- Establish interim billing protocol for the transition window
- Confirm effective dates as they are issued and enter into billing system
- Enroll any associate providers under new entity
- Schedule re-credentialing cycles for all enrolled providers
- Begin ongoing lifecycle management from close date
Your credentials belong to you — not the practice you work at.
One of the most overlooked aspects of credentialing for private practice dentists is portability. When credentialing is managed properly, your credentials travel with you — through a startup, through an acquisition, through a sale, and into whatever comes next.
Getting credentialed is the start. Staying credentialed is the job.
Once your practice is open and your payer enrollments are in place, the credentialing lifecycle begins. Re-credentialing cycles, document renewals, and payer portal maintenance require continuous attention — or they become the source of the next disruption.
- Re-credentialing across all payers — proactive, every cycle
- License and certificate expiration tracking and alerts
- Payer portal profile maintenance and attestations
- CAQH re-attestation management (required quarterly)
- New associate and provider enrollment
- Ownership and address change processing
- New payer enrollment as you expand your network
- Real-time reporting on your full credentialing status
What private practice dentists ask us most.
Starting, buying, or transitioning a practice? Let's talk.
Tell us where you are in your practice journey and we'll walk you through exactly what credentialing looks like for your situation — and how quickly we can get you credentialed and billing in-network.
Request a Free ConsultationNo commitment required. Typically a 20-minute conversation.