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Chapter 4 — The Population Behind a £2 Million Practice

So far, we have built the economics of a £2 million practice from the chair upwards. We know that each surgery must generate approximately £500,000 annually. We know that specialist dentistry contributes disproportionately to revenue. We know that preventative care forms the foundation of the model.
The next question is: What patient population is required to sustain this activity?
Working Backwards from Preventative Care
In our model, each surgery allocates approximately 1,000 chair hours annually to preventative care.
This includes:
Examinations
Hygiene appointments
Routine maintenance
Assuming an average of two patients per hour, each surgery delivers: 2,000 preventative appointments annually. The critical question is whether those appointments come from:
2,000 patients attending once annually, or
1,000 patients attending twice annually.
The reality lies somewhere between the two. Most successful private practices aim for patients to attend regularly, often combining examinations and hygiene visits throughout the year.
For that reason, a realistic target is: 1,250–1,500 active patients per surgery.
Across four surgeries, this translates into a practice serving approximately: 5,000–6,000 active patients. Importantly, this number is neither unrealistic nor exceptional. It sits remarkably close to what many successful private practices already achieve.
Why Population Matters
The objective is not simply to have enough patients. The objective is to have enough patients to sustain the treatment mix. Remember our earlier model.
Each surgery requires approximately:
50 specialist cases annually
A steady flow of restorative treatment
A large base of preventative appointments
These treatments all come from the same population. The hygiene patient becomes the crown patient. The crown patient may later become the implant patient. The parent attending for a routine examination may later bring a child for orthodontic treatment. The economic engine of dentistry is not built on constantly finding new patients. It is built on serving the same patients across different stages of life.
The Ideal Population Mix
One of the most common mistakes in dentistry is to think only about income. Demographics often matter more. A successful private practice benefits from serving patients across multiple generations.
Families
Families create stability.
Children require:
Regular examinations
Preventative care
Orthodontic assessments
Parents require:
Hygiene
Restorative care
Cosmetic treatment
Invisalign
Families also tend to be highly loyal once established.
Adults Aged 25–45
This group drives much of the demand for:
Invisalign
Whitening
Composite bonding
Cosmetic improvements
These patients are often motivated by confidence, appearance and professional image.
Adults Aged 45+
This group increasingly drives demand for:
Crowns
Root canal treatment
Implants
Dentures
Advanced restorative care
Importantly, these treatments often represent some of the highest-value activity within the practice.
Why Both Invisalign and Implants Matter
Many practices lean heavily in one direction. Some become known for orthodontics. Others become known for implants. The economics suggest a more balanced approach. Invisalign primarily serves younger and middle-aged adults. Implants primarily serve older adults.
Together they allow the practice to capture demand across almost the entire adult population. This dramatically increases the likelihood that specialist revenue remains sustainable over many years. Rather than betting on a single demographic, the practice benefits from multiple sources of demand.
The Geography Question
The final question is whether enough patients exist around the practice. In most cases, they do. The United Kingdom has approximately: 68–70 million people and 12,000–14,000 dental practices. This equates to roughly: 5,000 patients per practice.
The challenge is therefore rarely population size. The challenge is attracting and retaining the right patients. Importantly, average income alone is often a poor predictor of success. Housing costs matter. Disposable income matters. Demographics matter.
A town with moderate incomes and affordable housing can often support private dentistry more effectively than an affluent area where housing costs absorb most household spending power.
The Real Insight
The population requirements for a £2 million practice are surprisingly modest.
The model does not require:
A referral centre
A celebrity clinician
A national brand
It requires approximately:
5,000–6,000 active patients
Strong retention
A balanced age profile
Consistent delivery of specialist and restorative care
The economics of a £2 million practice are therefore not driven by scale alone. They are driven by serving the right population with the right treatment mix over a long period of time.