Healthcare Businesses for Sale in Texas

The compliance infrastructure, clinical team, and patient relationships built over years are the real foundation of what you're buying, and they're also what competitors can't replicate quickly.

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$1.8M

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Featured Healthcare Businesses in Texas

Showing 10 of 10 listings

Calibration and Testing Laboratory

Accredited and certified calibration and testing laboratory offering commercial calibration, nondestructive testing for electronics and aerospace industries, and manufacturing of proprietary film thickness standards, serving clients across aerospace, defense, semiconductor, pharmaceutical, and other sectors with both in-lab and on-site services
Price-
Revenue$800K
EBITDA$328K

EHR Platform

Provides a bilingual english and spanish electronic health record, practice management, and enterprise resource planning saas platform serving hospitals, clinics, and outpatient facilities across all medical specialties with modules for pharmacy, lab, imaging, telehealth, payroll, accounting, and patient portals
Price-
Revenue$2.8M
EBITDA-$100K

Outpatient Orthopedic Healthcare Company

Operates ten musculoskeletal clinics across the Dallas and Austin metro areas offering orthopedic urgent care seven days a week, orthopedic surgery, physical therapy, and pain management as a cost-effective alternative to emergency room visits for orthopedic injuries
Price$84M
Revenue$33M
EBITDA$3.5M

General / Cosmetic Dental Practice

Specializes in high-ticket reconstructive and surgical dentistry across texas, including all-on-x implants, full mouth reconstructions, and cosmetic procedures, utilizing in-office 3d digital ct scans and an on-site lab for comprehensive fee-for-service restorative treatments
Price$1.8M
Revenue$2M
SDE$546.5K

Healthcare Staffing Business

Provides contract and on-demand nursing and light services staffing to healthcare facilities including hospitals, nursing homes, assisted living facilities, rehab centers, and hospice facilities across 48 states
Price$315K
Revenue$365.6K
SDE$105K

Medical Practice

Provides infectious disease specialty care, primary care, and hospitalist services across five local hospitals through patient diagnostics and treatments
Price-
Revenue$2.5M
SDE$1M

Medical Screw Manufacturer

Designs and sells patented spinal implants, including proprietary pedicle screw systems, cross-connectors, interbody cages, and cervical plates, with FDA 510(k) clearances, serving hospital systems and surgery centers primarily in Nevada through a direct billing model
Price$2.3M
Revenue$1M
EBITDA$100K

Rheumatology Practice

Provides diagnosis and treatment for musculoskeletal diseases and systemic autoimmune conditions, primarily serving the Dallas-Fort Worth region, while accommodating Spanish-speaking patients and offering services irrespective of insurance status.
Price$11M
Revenue$8M
SDE$1.1M

Residential and Habilitation Services

Provides residential and habilitation services for individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities through intermediate care facilities and group homes across 13 locations with 78-bed capacity, funded primarily by state medicaid reimbursement
Price-
Revenue$4M
EBITDA$221K

Applied Behavior Analysis Clinic

Provides applied behavior analysis therapy to children and young adults with autism spectrum disorder and developmental challenges, serving families in the Irving and Las Colinas area with insurance-reimbursed, session-based treatment plans including parent training and multidisciplinary services
Price-
Revenue$2.5M
SDE$165K
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Due diligence

What to Look For

Practical guidance from hundreds of real acquisition conversations.

Compliance and Regulatory Standing

  • Ask for the full compliance record: HIPAA documentation, license history, inspection reports, and any regulatory correspondence from the past three years.
  • A business with clean, organized compliance files has been run carefully. Gaps or missing documentation are worth understanding before you go deep in diligence.
  • FDA clearance, Joint Commission approval, or state facility licenses are genuinely hard to earn and create a competitive barrier that took years to build.
  • Ask specifically whether any compliance issues are currently open or under review, since these can affect licensing continuity after the sale.

Revenue Source and Predictability

  • Ask for revenue broken out by source over at least two years: Medicaid and Medicare reimbursements, commercial insurance, subscription fees, management fees, service contracts, and direct pay.
  • A healthy mix across multiple payers or channels is worth getting excited about because it reduces concentration risk.
  • Subscription-heavy health tech businesses and practices with well-documented retention rates tend to command premium multiples.
  • Look for any payer or contract that makes up more than 20 percent of revenue and ask how that relationship has held over time.

Licensing, Credentialing, and Transfer Plans

  • Every healthcare subcategory has its own licensing requirements. Understanding what transfers automatically and what needs a fresh application is worth doing early.
  • Insurance credentialing for clinicians can take 60 to 120 days, so getting clarity on who holds what is important before you're in late-stage diligence.
  • Medical device IP and FDA registrations have their own transfer procedures. Ask the seller whether these have been researched and whether there's a plan.
  • A seller who has thought through the transfer picture before going to market saves you significant time and keeps your timeline realistic.

Team Independence from the Founder

  • Ask whether clinicians carry their own full caseloads and whether there's a clinical director or practice administrator managing daily operations.
  • Find out whether patient or client relationships are distributed across the team or concentrated with the founder.
  • A team that manages clinical and client relationships without the owner is the single strongest signal that the business will hold through a transition.
  • Businesses where a founder departure would cause real disruption tend to trade at a discount. Businesses where the team already runs things independently are the ones worth moving on.

Valuation

What Should You Expect to Pay?

2x-5x

SDE

Owner-operated

4x-12x

EBITDA

With management team

The wide range reflects how much value depends on revenue predictability, licensing transferability, and whether clinical or operational independence from the founder is already built in.

What drives a premium

Recurring revenue from subscriptions, long-term contracts, or documented retention above 85%

Compliance infrastructure that is current, organized, and transferable: licenses, certifications, HIPAA documentation, or FDA clearance

Clinical or operational team that manages patient, client, or customer relationships without the founder

Revenue spread across multiple payers, health systems, or customer segments with no single source above 20% of total

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FAQ

Healthcare Businesses in Texas

What should I look for when buying a healthcare business?

Start with the compliance and licensing picture, then look at revenue predictability and who manages clinical or client relationships day to day. A business with current credentials, a team that operates independently, and revenue from multiple sources gives you a strong foundation. The more the operation runs on documented systems rather than the founder's presence, the more you have to work with. Browse healthcare businesses for sale on Rejigg to see what's available.

How much does a healthcare business cost?

Most healthcare businesses sell for 2 to 12 times annual profit, with the range reflecting how predictable the revenue is, how mature the compliance infrastructure is, and how independently the team operates. Owner-operated practices typically trade at 2 to 5x SDE. Health tech platforms with subscription revenue and strong compliance documentation, or care businesses with management teams in place, can reach 5 to 12x EBITDA. Use the SBA loan calculator to model financing at different deal sizes.

How do I evaluate a healthcare business before buying?

Ask for three years of financials with revenue broken out by payer or source. Then review the compliance documentation: licenses, certifications, inspection history, credentialing status, and any regulatory records. Talk to the team to understand who manages which relationships and what happens when the founder is out. For clinical businesses, ask how long key clinicians have been there and what their patient or caseload volumes look like. For health tech or device companies, ask about contract terms and integration depth with customer systems.

What due diligence questions should I ask about a healthcare business?

Good starting points: What licenses or certifications does the business hold, and what does the transfer process look like? How is revenue split by payer, customer, or service type, and what's the historical retention or renewal rate? Who manages clinical or customer relationships day to day, and how long have they been in those roles? Are there any open compliance issues, regulatory citations, or pending payer audits? What happens to insurance credentialing, FDA registrations, or state licenses at the time of an ownership change?

Where can I find healthcare businesses for sale?

Rejigg is built for small business acquisitions including dental practices, mental health groups, health tech companies, medical device businesses, and residential care facilities. You can browse healthcare businesses for sale on Rejigg and connect directly with sellers without a broker in the middle.

How do healthcare licenses and credentials transfer when you buy a business?

It depends on the business type. Insurance credentialing for individual clinicians typically needs to be re-initiated by the new owner and can take 60 to 120 days. State facility licenses usually require an ownership change application. FDA device registrations have a separate transfer procedure. Health tech contracts sometimes have ownership change provisions that need review. The common thread is that starting early prevents these processes from becoming deal-delay issues at the close.

Can a non-clinician buy a healthcare practice or business?

In most cases, yes. Many healthcare businesses are structured so a licensed clinical director oversees patient care while a non-clinical owner handles the business operations. This is common in mental health practices, dental groups, and residential care businesses. The rules vary by state and business type, so it's worth understanding your specific situation early. Businesses that already have a strong clinical director in place are often the most attractive to non-clinician buyers because the clinical infrastructure is already independent of ownership.