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Choosing an outsourced bookkeeper is about dental expertise, reliability, and data security, not just price. Here is how to evaluate one.
Most dentists did not go to school to reconcile bank statements, and the ones who try to keep their own books usually pay for it later in missed insights and tax-season scrambles. Outsourcing the bookkeeping fixes that, but only if you pick the right provider.
Below is a practical guide to evaluating outsourced dental bookkeeping: why practices make the move, what separates a good provider from a generic one, what the transition actually looks like, and how to handle the concerns that hold most owners back.
The math on doing it yourself rarely works. An hour spent categorizing transactions is an hour not spent chairside, and the productivity of that chair is almost always worth more than the savings. That is the simple version. The fuller version is that practice finances are genuinely different from those of a retail shop or a consulting business, and a generalist bookkeeper often misses the things that matter most.
A few reasons owners make the switch:
The American Dental Association publishes practice and economic data showing how thin margins can get once overhead climbs, which is exactly why owners want numbers they can trust month to month.
This is where most owners shop on price and regret it. Price matters, but it is the last filter, not the first. Evaluate the provider on the things that determine whether the books are actually useful.
A bookkeeper who works across restaurants, law firms, and dental offices will treat your practice like any other small business. A dental specialist already knows the chart of accounts your practice needs, understands how to reconcile merchant deposits against practice management software, and can tell at a glance whether your supply spend (typically around 5 to 7 percent of collections) or your overhead (often near 60 percent) is drifting out of range. Ask a prospective provider how they handle insurance write-offs and patient credits. The answer reveals quickly whether they speak dental.
A monthly close that lands three weeks into the following month is barely worth having. By the time you see April, you are halfway through May and any course correction is late. Ask when the books close each month and hold the provider to it. At Reciprocity, books are closed by the 10th of the following month, which means you are making decisions on numbers that are still fresh.
A profit and loss statement tells you what happened. Dental KPI reporting tells you whether it is healthy. Look for a provider that delivers collection rate (a strong practice runs 98 to 100 percent), overhead percentage, and provider-level production alongside the standard financials. Numbers in context are what let you act, not just observe.
You are handing over bank access, merchant statements, and financial detail. Treat security as a hard requirement, not a nice-to-have. Ask how data is transmitted, where it is stored, and who can see it. The Federal Trade Commission publishes plain-language guidance on data security practices that is a reasonable yardstick for any vendor handling your financial records.
The best books in the world are useless if you cannot get a straight answer when you have a question. Find out who your point of contact is, how fast they respond, and whether you get a real person or a ticket queue. A provider who proactively flags anomalies (a sudden spike in adjustments, a vendor charge that does not fit) is worth far more than one who simply records what you send.
A good provider makes the handoff boring, which is the goal. You should not be losing sleep over whether the numbers will survive the move. Here is what a clean transition tends to look like.
A reasonable transition runs a few weeks, depending on how far behind the existing books are. Ask any provider to map the timeline before you sign so there are no surprises.
The hesitations are almost always the same, and they are all answerable.
"I will lose control of my finances." The opposite is usually true. Outsourcing the recording does not mean outsourcing the decisions. You keep full visibility and approval; you just stop doing the data entry. Done right, you have more control because you finally have reliable numbers.
"Nobody will understand my practice like I do." Fair, and that is why dental-specific expertise matters. A specialist provider has seen dozens of practices and can spot patterns you would not, precisely because they are not buried in the day-to-day.
"What if they make a mistake?" Ask about review processes and reconciliation. A serious provider reconciles every account every month and has a second set of eyes on the work. Mistakes get caught in the process, not at tax time.
"Switching sounds painful." It is a few weeks of setup, most of which the provider handles. The discomfort of switching is small and one-time. The discomfort of bad books is ongoing.
One note worth making: a bookkeeping firm and a CPA firm are not the same thing. Reciprocity is a dental bookkeeping and tax firm, not a CPA firm. A strong bookkeeping partner keeps your financials clean and reporting sharp, and coordinates cleanly with whoever files your return. Organizations like the Academy of Dental CPAs are a useful reference point for understanding how the bookkeeping and tax-filing roles fit together.
Ask specific questions. How do they record insurance write-offs and patient credits? How do they separate production from collections? Can they report on collection rate and overhead percentage? A generalist will hesitate on these. A dental specialist will answer without blinking.
A typical transition runs a few weeks, longer if prior periods need cleanup. Most of the work falls on the provider, not you. Ask for a written timeline before you commit so you know what to expect at each step.
It should be. Look for read-only bank access, secure document sharing rather than email attachments, and a clear answer on where data is stored and who can see it. If a provider cannot describe their security practices plainly, that is a signal to keep looking.
With the right provider, yes. Confirm who your point of contact is and how quickly they respond before you sign. Reporting is only useful if you can ask questions about it and get clear answers.
P.S. Reciprocity Accounting handles your monthly dental bookkeeping so you get clean, tax-ready books without doing them in-house. See how we can help your practice.