Selling your practice should end with a closing - not a surprise.
End-to-end legal counsel for healthcare practice sales, $500K–$5M. From LOI through closing, drafted to protect the seller — and to hold up afterward.Buying your first practice. Drafted to protect you, not slow you down.
We move at SBA speed — without skipping the personal guarantee, lease, and non-compete review that protects you for the next ten years.Your second acquisition shouldn't feel like your first.
Repeatable diligence, lease, and seller-transition workflows for owners scaling deliberately. Standardized where it should be, custom where it matters.Selling the practice. Holding the real estate. The deal has two heads — we draft for both.
Sale-leasebacks, ground leases, and tenant credit terms structured to protect rent stability and your future exit on the property.Built for healthcare operators, not boilerplate.
Strategic structuring for med spas, multi-service clinics, and MSO/PC arrangements. CPOM-aware, Stark-aware, exit-ready.Professional care
you can trust
Why Us
Newton’s Law is a healthcare-only M&A practice. The attorney working on your deal is the attorney who answered the phone — we do not hand the work to a generic associate. Our practice spans dental, veterinary, med spa, optometry, physician, and DSO transactions, and we handle the entire deal: LOI, due diligence, definitive agreements, lease and real estate, regulatory structuring, and closing. Specialized work, end to end.
Built for $500K–$5M practice deals — large enough to be complex, too small for big-firm economics.
One firm from LOI to closing — diligence, definitive agreements, lease, real estate, and financing.
Licensed in Florida and Illinois, with working depth in the rules that decide healthcare deals in both states.
Healthcare transactions are all we do — dental, veterinary, med spa, optometry, physician, and DSO deals.
Healthcare-Focused M&A Experience
Practical, End-to-End Deal Guidance
Newton's Law Legal Services
Newton’s Law provides comprehensive legal representation throughout the entire transaction lifecycle.
A Different Approach to Healthcare M&A
Clients value calm, decisive guidance — not academic legal theory or sales-heavy promises. The goal is a clean, defensible transaction that aligns with both legal and real-world business realities.
Buyer
For Dentists Navigating the Purchase Process
What does it mean to acquire a dental practice?
An acquisition involves purchasing an existing practice — patient base, equipment, goodwill, often the real estate or the lease. It’s a business transaction with legal, financial, and operational implications. The structure (asset purchase vs stock purchase, allocation of price, financing) materially affects your tax position and your exposure.
Who should be on my acquisition team?
What do banks look for when financing a dental acquisition?
Should the seller stay on after closing?
What happens to staff during a transition?
Do I need a dental-specific attorney?
Do you work with clients outside Florida?
Seller
For Dentists Considering a Sale
What’s the first step in selling my dental practice?
Start with a valuation. You’ll want to know what your practice is worth before listing. A broker, CPA, or valuation specialist can help. We also recommend reviewing your financials, lease, and employee information early — those are the items buyers will scrutinize in diligence.
How do I know if the offer is fair?
What if I want to stay on after the sale?
Many buyers want the seller to stay on for months — sometimes years. You’ll sign either an employment or independent-contractor agreement. We structure that document to protect your time, your income, and your post-employment exposure.
What if I own the building?
Expansion Buyers and Practice Groups
My deal structure worked the first time. Why would the second deal be different?
Can you reuse the documents from my first deal?
What's different about lender relationships for serial acquirers?
How long should integration of an acquired practice take?
Sellers Keeping the Real Estate
Can I sell my practice but keep the building?
What's a sale-leaseback?
A sale-leaseback is when you sell the building (often to a real-estate investor) at the same time you sell the practice (to an operator), and the new operator becomes the new tenant. This can unlock real-estate value while keeping the practice operating. The structure has tax implications and requires careful coordination between the practice sale and the real-estate sale closings.