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| Source: California Department of Justice |
DentalGoodNews | Recently, California Attorney General Rob Bonta announced a settlement with Aspen Dental Management, Inc. (hereinafter referred to as "Aspen Dental"). Under the settlement, Aspen Dental will pay $2 million in civil penalties and establish a $300,000 patient compensation fund for allegedly violating California's prohibition on the corporate practice of dentistry and engaging in false or misleading advertising.
This penalty stems from an investigation by the California Department of Justice into Aspen Dental's alleged overstepping of the functional scope of a Dental Service Organization (DSO). Official investigations revealed that while the company publicly claimed to provide only business management and administrative support services, it was actually suspected of interfering in the practice, ownership, and operational management of dental practices: Aspen Dental selected locations, purchased properties, staffed facilities, and conducted marketing without clearly disclosing independent dentist owners. It also uniformly handled clinic design, renovation, furniture configuration, and the procurement and installation of medical equipment, even making decisions on details such as bathroom art decorations.
Regulators pointed out that Aspen Dental also interfered in clinical decisions through direct incentive mechanisms. For example, the company offered sales bonuses to dental hygienists for selling Clear Aligners: $50 for each new patient successfully sold and $100 for each existing patient sold. The California Department of Justice believed that such commercial practices limited the autonomous decision-making power of dentist owners, constrained the behavior of clinical staff, and could potentially mislead patients. Some advertisements claimed that clinics "accept all insurance" or "no insurance needed to visit," but in reality, they did not accept state or federally funded insurance plans and provided vague descriptions of the price composition of low-cost products. Based on these circumstances, regulators determined that the company was suspected of violating California's regulations prohibiting the corporate practice of dentistry and the Unfair Competition Law.
Under the settlement, Aspen Dental agreed to accept multiple restrictions with industry precedent significance, including: prohibiting the company from replacing clinic owners, prohibiting the requirement for owners to abandon their clinics after termination of cooperation, and prohibiting the company from owning clinic property rights. Additionally, Aspen Dental must not advise or incentivize non-owner clinical staff to increase sales of specific products, must not set service fees based on revenue, and must display a written fee schedule and prominently note the clinic owner's name in advertisements.
Notably, California's SB 351 bill, signed in 2025, officially took effect in January 2026. This bill further strengthens regulations prohibiting Private Equity (PE) funds and hedge funds from interfering in clinical dental judgments, explicitly authorizing the Attorney General to seek injunctions and pursue legal liability for violations.
Founded in 1998, Aspen Dental is one of the largest DSOs in the United States, currently operating over a thousand clinics nationwide and held by a Private Equity (PE) firm. It entered California in 2019 and currently has 19 clinics in the state. According to previous reports by DENTALGOODNEWS (Leading Dental Industry Media, DGN), the company settled with Massachusetts in 2024 for $3.5 million over allegations of telemarketing and false advertising.
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