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The Entrepreneur’s Guide to Wealth Management
Protecting Your Wealth and Practice: Risk Management Strategies for Dentists
A successful dental practice can create high income and meaningful long-term wealth. It can also create concentration. When your livelihood, your clinic, and your future plans are all connected, one disruption can affect more than one part of your financial life. That is why risk management matters. It helps protect what you have built and preserves your ability to make good decisions when circumstances change.
The Main Risks Dentists Need to Plan Around
Dentists face a mix of risks that can affect both the practice and personal finances at the same time. The most important ones include:
- Professional liability
- Disability or illness
- Business interruption
- Concentration risk
Professional Liability
In Quebec, liability insurance is mandatory and essential. However, insurance does not remove every consequence of a complaint, claim, or dispute. Even when coverage is in place, the process can consume time, attention, and energy. For a practice owner, that can affect operations and cash flow more than expected.
Disability or Illness
For many dentists, income depends directly on their ability to work. Even a temporary interruption can put pressure on both business and personal finances. Loan payments, payroll, lease obligations, and family expenses do not pause simply because clinical work does.
Business Interruption
Equipment issues, staffing problems, personal leave, or unexpected slowdowns can all affect clinic revenue. Because most dental clinics in Quebec are mainly SMEs, they may have limited capacity to absorb disruption.
Concentration Risk
Many dentists build a large share of their net worth inside the practice and the corporation. When too much depends on the same business environment, you may have less room to adapt, especially as retirement approaches.
Incorporation Helps, But It Does Not Solve Everything
Incorporation is an important step, but it should not be confused with a complete protection strategy. As discussed in our previous segment on corporate and ownership structure for dentists, it can create a legal and financial boundary between the practice and the individual, and that matters. It can also support more deliberate tax planning and wealth accumulation over time.
Incorporation can reduce risk, but it does not replace insurance, liquidity, or diversification. Personal guarantees, concentrated assets, limited liquidity, and poorly coordinated planning can still leave you exposed. If most of your retained earnings, investments, and retirement expectations remain tied to the same corporate structure, the separation between professional and personal wealth may be weaker than it appears. This is why structure works best when it is supported by insurance, liquidity, diversification, and regular review.
Separating Personal Wealth from Practice Risk
One of the most important long-term goals is to avoid leaving too much of your personal wealth exposed to the same risks that affect your clinic.
That does not mean removing everything from the business environment at once. It means being deliberate over time. As income grows and retained earnings accumulate, you may gradually build assets that are less dependent on clinic operations. You may also create more liquidity outside the immediate business environment, so personal decisions do not depend entirely on what the clinic can support at that moment.
This matters for several reasons. It can reduce pressure during slower periods. It can make a future sale or transition less urgent. It can also protect your family’s financial stability if something unexpected happens. The more your financial life depends on a single outcome, such as your continued ability to practise or the future sale of the clinic, the less room you have to adapt.
“For dentists, protecting wealth means creating enough separation between your practice, your income, and your long-term assets so one issue does not affect everything at once.”
— Valérie Forget, Wealth Management Advisor at The St-Georges Group of CI Assante Wealth Management Ltd.
Insurance as a Strategic Planning Tool
For dentists, insurance should be part of a broader wealth planning strategy, not a separate planning exercise.
Disability insurance is one of the most important examples. Because your earning power is closely tied to your clinical work, the loss of that income can have immediate consequences. Disability coverage helps protect cash flow if you are unable to practise, whether temporarily or permanently.
Life insurance also plays a broader role than many people assume. It can protect your family, provide liquidity, support estate planning, and help maintain stability if your death creates business or personal financial obligations. In some situations, it can also support buy-sell planning or equalization between family members.
Critical illness coverage can serve a different purpose. Rather than replacing ongoing income, it may provide access to capital during a serious health event, when business and personal decisions may need to be made quickly.
For dentists practising with partners or in a shared-ownership structure, key person insurance and properly funded buy-sell agreements can also be important. If one owner dies or becomes disabled, the financial impact extends beyond that individual. Without planning, the remaining owners, the family, and the business can all face uncertainty at the same time.
Emergency Liquidity Matters
Insurance planning is important, but it does not solve every short-term problem. A strong risk management plan should include access to funds that can help cover fixed business costs, temporary income gaps, or unexpected personal expenses. Without liquidity, even a manageable disruption can force rushed decisions. You may feel pressure to borrow, delay action, or draw funds in a way that does not fit your broader plan.
Liquidity gives you the flexibility you need to react calmly and effectively without disrupting everything.
Risk Planning in a Partnership or Associate Context
When ownership is shared, risk management becomes more complex. A partnership or associate arrangement can work well, but only if expectations and contingencies are set out properly.
The following questions need to be addressed:
- What happens if one partner becomes disabled?
- What happens if one wants out unexpectedly?
- How is the practice valued if a buyout is needed?
- Where does the liquidity come from to support that transition?
This is where shareholder agreements and financial planning need to work together. Over time, these same issues also connect to succession planning, especially when ownership changes, buyouts, or associate transitions become part of the long-term picture. Legal language alone is not enough if the business does not have a realistic way to fund the outcome. The goal is to reduce conflict, preserve continuity, and avoid turning a difficult event into a financial crisis.
Common Mistakes Related to Risk Management
There are several common mistakes that tend to come up in risk management for dentists:
- Assuming incorporation alone is enough
- Carrying mandatory liability insurance, but maintaining little emergency liquidity
- Leaving too much wealth tied to clinic operations
- Failing to review disability or life insurance as income and obligations grow
- Delaying contingency planning because the practice is doing well
These issues rarely come from a single mistake. More often, they happen when a practice grows, but the risk management strategy does not evolve with it.
If you are unsure whether any of these apply to your situation, that uncertainty is often the first sign that your current risk management strategy may need a closer look.
Example: Two Dentists, Two Levels of Protection
Consider two dentists with similar income and similar practice value. Dr. Boucher has incorporated, built retained earnings, and carries the required professional liability coverage. On paper, things look strong. But most wealth remains tied to the practice and the corporation, and little attention has been given to disability protection or liquidity outside the business.
Dr. Patel has also incorporated and built a successful practice. The difference is that she has reviewed her disability coverage, built accessible reserves, and gradually reduced the extent to which all long-term wealth depends on the clinic alone.
If both dentists face an unexpected interruption, the event is serious in either case. But Dr. Patel is more likely to have room to respond without immediate pressure on every part of her financial life. The difference is not income. It is preparation.
Example: Two Dentists, Two Levels of Protection
Consider two dentists with similar income and similar practice value. Dr. Boucher has incorporated, built retained earnings, and carries the required professional liability coverage. On paper, things look strong. But most wealth remains tied to the practice and the corporation, and little attention has been given to disability protection or liquidity outside the business.
Dr. Patel has also incorporated and built a successful practice. The difference is that she has reviewed her disability coverage, built accessible reserves, and gradually reduced the extent to which all long-term wealth depends on the clinic alone.
If both dentists face an unexpected interruption, the event is serious in either case. But Dr. Patel is more likely to have room to respond without immediate pressure on every part of her financial life. The difference is not income. It is preparation.
Protecting What You Have Built
Protecting your wealth and your practice means making sure one setback does not affect everything at once. Illness, liability, interruption, or a change in plans can all create pressure, but good planning helps contain the impact.
If you would like a second look at your current protection planning, contact The St-Georges Group. Based in Montreal, our wealth advisors work alongside your existing team of experts, as well as our network of tax, accounting, and investment specialists, to help assess your risk management approach and identify areas that may need attention.
Once your structure, tax planning, and protection strategies are aligned, the next question becomes how that wealth will support you when you begin to slow down or step away from practice.