4.3.5.2Vertical

Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery

Oral surgeons performing extractions, implants, and jaw procedures.

Market snapshot

These figures describe Oral Surgery & Specialty Dentistry (4.3.5), the segment that Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery sits within — not Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery on its own.

FragmentationConsolidatingEstimate

Within dentist offices (NAICS 621210); the Census Bureau does not split dentistry by specialty, so oral surgery and specialty dentistry are not separately sized.

Business model & economics

Revenue model

High-value surgical and specialty procedure fees; cash-pay

Key economics

Recurring revenue
Low–Moderate

referral and procedure-driven

EBITDA margin
20–30%
Capex intensity
High

Characteristics

  • High-value surgical and specialty side of dentistry.
  • OMS driven by implants and complex procedures.
  • One of the hottest specialty dental roll-ups.

M&A deal context

Deal activityHigh

Who’s acquiring

  • PE-backed specialty dental platforms
  • OMS consolidators
  • Specialty DSOs

What’s driving deals

  • Roll-up of high-value OMS and specialty practices.
  • Implant and complex-procedure demand.
  • Cash-pay and referral economics.

Find Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery acquisition targets

Search Acquisera’s index for companies classified under Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery (4.3.5.2) and build a targeted deal pipeline.

Search companies