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Medical Practice Buy-Ins: How to Bring an Associate Physician in as a Partner

Medical practice buy-ins are notoriously complex. If you are preparing to bring in an associate physician as a partner in your practice, it is imperative that you ensure that everything is done properly. An associate physician can make a great partner. The right approach will protect your business interests. In this article, our Fremont business attorney for employers provides an overview of medical practice buy-ins and how to bring in an associate physician as a partner in a group medical practice in California. 

Know the California Ownership Rules Before Offering Equity

There are specific rules and regulations for the ownership of medical practices in California. A medical practice buy-in in the Bay Area must account for our state’s strict rules on professional medical corporations and the corporate practice of medicine. A general business investor cannot simply buy into a medical practice and share control over clinical operations. 

California Corporations Code § 13401.5 limits who may own shares, serve as officers, serve as directors, or work as professional employees in certain professional corporations. For a professional medical corporation, licensed physicians must remain in control. A practice that brings in an associate physician should confirm licensure, ownership eligibility, voting rights, and transfer restrictions before discussing price. 

You Need Value the Medical Practice With More than Near-Term Revenue 

Price matters for any business purchase. Whether it makes sense for you to allow an associate physician to become a partner depends on the prices. The buy-in price should reflect the actual economics of the California medical practice. A key point to remember is that the near-term revenue alone rarely tells the full story. With that in mind, you should be prepared to review collections, payer mix, physician compensation, accounts receivable, equipment, lease obligations, staff costs, malpractice history, goodwill, and expected future profitability. 

Medical Practices Should Use a Written Buy-In Agreement 

A handshake deal is not enough for a physician buy-in. The agreement should state the purchase price, payment schedule, interest rate if financed, consequences of default, tax treatment, and whether payments come from personal funds, reduced compensation, or future distributions. California medical practices should also coordinate the buy-in agreement with the shareholder agreement, bylaws, employment agreement, and any lender or landlord consent requirements. 

Medical Practice Governance Must Be Clearly Specified Before the Relationship Changes

A strong associate physician does not automatically become a good business partner. Before closing the buy-in, the practice should define governance rights with precision. The documents should address voting thresholds, management authority, hiring decisions, compensation formulas, call coverage, admission of future partners, debt approval, expansion plans, and major capital purchases. Clinical authority and business authority should also be separated where appropriate. In California, medical judgment must remain with licensed physicians. Still, not every physician-owner needs equal authority over every business decision.

You Need a Comprehensive Plan for Exit, Disability, Death, and Termination

Finally, a buy-in by an associate doctor for a group medical practice in California should always include a buy-sell structure. The associate may leave, lose a license, become disabled, retire, die, or be terminated for cause. The practice needs a clear repurchase right for each scenario. The agreement should state how shares are valued, when payment must be made, whether discounts apply, and whether restrictive covenants or patient-transition duties apply. 

Contact Our Bay Area Business Lawyer for Medical Practices Today

Lynnette Ariathurai is a California business attorney with extensive experience working with medical practices. If you have any questions about how to bring in an associate physician to a medical practice as a partner, we can help. Please do not hesitate to contact us today for a completely confidential case review. Our firm provides business law services to medical practices throughout the Bay Area. 

business planning, growing a medical practice, healthcare agency buy-ins