How to Align UCR Fees with Profit Goals, Reduce PPO Losses, and Build Negotiation Leverage
Running a profitable dental practice doesn’t start with more new patients or fancier marketing—
it starts with a smart fee schedule.
If your UCR (Usual, Customary, and Reasonable) fees haven’t been reviewed in the last 18–24
months, you’re likely leaving tens of thousands of dollars on the table—and severely limiting
your PPO reimbursement potential.
The truth is, your UCR fee schedule is the foundation of your practice’s financial health. It
directly impacts:
• Your PPO reimbursement rates
• Your out-of-network collections
• Your membership plan strategy
• Your perceived value and case acceptance
In this guide, we’ll walk you through a 5-step framework to optimize your dental fee
schedule—so you can align pricing with profitability, build leverage in PPO negotiations, and
make your revenue match your chair-time effort.
🧱Why Optimizing UCR Fees Is a Non-Negotiable
Before we get tactical, let’s look at the bigger picture.
An optimized dental fee schedule helps you:
• Negotiate higher PPO rates
• Reduce excessive write-offs
• Build accurate production forecasts
• Strategically grow profit without seeing more patients
• Train your team to present fees with confidence
Without it, your practice is operating with one hand tied behind its back.
Now let’s get to work.
✅Step 1: Benchmark Your Current UCR Fees
Start by identifying where you stand today.
🔍 Action:
• Pull your most recent full fee schedule from your practice management software
• Focus on your top 30 procedures by volume and revenue—this is where fee changes
will make the biggest impact
• Compare your fees against UCR benchmarks for your ZIP code (tools include ADA
Survey of Dental Fees, NDAS, or private databases)
💡 What to Look For:
• Are your fees in the 70th–80th percentile for your region?
• Are some codes far below others in the same category?
• Are your UCR fees lower than your contracted PPO rates (this happens more often
than you’d think)?
If your fees fall below regional benchmarks, you’ve just uncovered lost revenue potential.
✅Step 2: Audit Your Top 30 Procedures
Now that you’ve benchmarked, zero in on the codes that drive the most value.
🔍 Action:
Pull a production report for the past 12 months and identify:
• The top 30 most frequently used CDT codes
• Their corresponding UCR fee
• Total production and write-off amounts per code
💡 Why This Matters:
• Some codes may be underpriced relative to the time and materials they require
• Others may have low UCRs because they were never reviewed or updated
• A $10 undervaluation on a code used 600 times per year = $6,000 in missed revenue
Focus your updates where they’ll have the biggest return.
✅Step 3: Align UCR Fees with Overhead & Profit Goals
This is the step most practices skip—but it’s the one that ensures long-term financial health.
🔍 Action:
• Calculate the average cost per hour to operate your practice (include staff wages,
materials, lab fees, rent, etc.)
• Determine your desired profit margin per service (typically 30–40%)
• Use this data to ensure your updated UCR fees support your profitability goals
📘 Example:
If a crown costs you $250 in lab and staffing, and your fee is $700, your gross profit is $450. But
what if regional UCR allows for $900? That’s an additional $200 in profit with no added time
or effort.
💡 Tip:
Work with a dental fee schedule consulting firm if calculating these numbers seems
overwhelming. The ROI is worth it.
✅Step 4: Adjust Gradually with a Communication Plan
Raising fees can create anxiety—for you, your staff, and your patients. But with the right
approach, you can increase fees without disrupting your schedule or brand reputation.
🔍 Action:
• Phase in changes gradually—start with 10–15% of your codes
• Give your team scripts for explaining fee updates:
“We review our fees annually to stay aligned with current treatment standards and ensure
we continue to offer the best care possible.”
• Update your treatment plans, consent forms, and website as needed
💡 Tip:
Emphasize value over price when communicating with patients. Most don’t remember what
they paid last time—but they do remember how they were treated.
✅Step 5: Integrate UCR Updates Into PPO Negotiations
Here’s where everything comes together: Your UCR fee schedule gives you negotiation
leverage.
🔍 Action:
When renegotiating PPO contracts:
• Present your updated UCR schedule alongside requests for fee increases
• Highlight where current reimbursements fall below market value
• Justify adjustments with regional data, practice overhead trends, and procedure-
specific costs
💡 Tip:
Never enter PPO negotiations with outdated UCRs. You’re essentially asking for more money
while claiming you’re worth less.
If you’re not confident handling this yourself, consider using a dental PPO negotiation
service that also offers UCR strategy support—like PPO Negotiation Solutions.
🧠Bonus: Warning Signs Your UCR Fee Schedule Needs Work
• You haven’t updated fees in 2+ years
• Write-offs consistently exceed 35%
• Your highest-volume codes are priced below ADA national averages
• PPO reimbursements are flat—or getting worse
• You feel like you’re working harder without seeing more in collections
If any of the above apply to you, it’s time to revisit your fee structure.
💬Real Practice Results
One of our clients—a growing two-doctor practice—implemented this exact 5-step framework:
• Raised UCR fees to 80th percentile
• Strategically renegotiated 5 PPO contracts
• Reduced write-offs from 44% to 28%
• Increased average reimbursement per visit by 18%
• Hired a third hygienist and expanded office hours—all funded by revenue gains
📣Your Next Step: Put Your Numbers to Work
You don’t need to overhaul your practice to boost profitability.
You just need a smarter fee strategy.
Let us help you build it.
PPO Negotiation Solutions offers:
• 📊 Custom UCR Fee Schedule Reviews
• 🧩 Code-Level Strategy and Tiering
• 📆 PPO Contract Negotiation Support
• 🧑 🏫 Staff Training for Financial Conversations
👉 Book Your Free Fee Schedule Discovery Call and find out how much revenue you could
recover with a smarter pricing structure.
