HomeSelling an Ophthalmology Practice in 2026: Multiples, Named Buyers, and the MSO Playbook

Selling an Ophthalmology Practice in 2026: Multiples, Named Buyers, and the MSO Playbook

Quick Answer

A US ophthalmology practice in 2026 typically sells for roughly 5x to 14x EBITDA, varying by subspecialty mix (general, retina, glaucoma, cornea, pediatric, oculoplastics), ASC ownership, payer mix, and platform scale. By profile: a single-MD general ophthalmology practice at $500k-1.5M EBITDA goes 5x-7x EBITDA; a multi-MD single-site or 2-3 location practice ($1.5-4M EBITDA) goes 6x-9x EBITDA; a small regional ophthalmology group (3-10 providers, $3-8M EBITDA) goes 7x-10x EBITDA; a mid-size platform (10-30 providers, $5-15M EBITDA, ASC ownership, mixed general + retina) goes 8x-11x EBITDA; a premium scale platform ($15M+ EBITDA, multi-state, subspecialty mix incl. retina, ASC ownership, named in-network commercial contracts) reaches 10x-14x+. Active buyers include EyeCare Partners (Partners Group, ~700+ providers across optometry + ophthalmology), US Eye (Quad-C Management, multi-state platform), US Ophthalmic Partners (Tenex Capital), Retina Consultants of America (Webster Equity Partners, the largest US retina-specific platform), Vision Innovation Partners (Centre Partners), Pinnacle Eye Group (PE-backed), AION Healthcare (PE-backed), Spectrum Vision Partners (CD&R), Surgery Partners (NASDAQ: SGRY) for ASC JVs, plus PE sponsors directly (Partners Group, Quad-C Management, Webster Equity Partners, Centre Partners, Tenex Capital, Clayton, Dubilier & Rice, Audax Group). The biggest multiple drivers are subspecialty mix (retina is the premium subspecialty; oculoplastics and pediatric also premium; cataract-only compresses), ASC ownership and ownership structure (Stark-compliant), payer mix (50%+ commercial, named in-network contracts), modern EMR (Nextech, EyeMD, ManagementPlus, Modernizing Medicine EMA-Ophthalmology), provider productivity (encounters per day), and multi-state professional licensure. Buyer-paid M&A advisory (CT Strategic Partners) costs the seller nothing.

An ophthalmology clinic interior at golden hour

If you own an ophthalmology practice in 2026 — whether that is a single-MD general ophthalmology office, a multi-MD specialty practice, or a small regional group — the M&A market is one of the most active healthcare-services consolidation themes. EyeCare Partners (Partners Group), US Eye (Quad-C Management), US Ophthalmic Partners (Tenex Capital), Retina Consultants of America (Webster Equity Partners), Vision Innovation Partners (Centre Partners), and multiple other PE-backed platforms are aggressively rolling up the sector. The combination of aging-population demand, ASC ownership economics, and predictable patient recurrence makes ophthalmology a structurally attractive PE consolidation theme.

What the asset is worth depends on three things: (1) subspecialty mix (retina commands the highest multiples; oculoplastics and pediatric are premium; cataract-only compresses), (2) ASC ownership and the Stark-compliant structure of any physician-owned ambulatory surgery center, and (3) payer mix, modern EMR, and provider bench depth. This guide covers real multiples by profile, the named buyers transacting, and the operator-level diligence buyers will run.

This guide is about ophthalmology practices (medical and surgical eye care). For pure-play optometry practices (vision-care, refraction, eyewear), see our separate guide at how to sell an optometry practice.

What this guide covers

  • Ophthalmology multiples 2026: 5x-7x for single-MD general, 6x-9x for multi-MD single-site or 2-3 locations, 7x-10x for small regional groups, 8x-11x for mid-size platforms with ASC ownership, 10x-14x+ for premium scale platforms with subspecialty mix (incl. retina) and multi-state in-network commercial contracts.
  • Active buyers: EyeCare Partners (Partners Group, ~700+ providers), US Eye (Quad-C Management), US Ophthalmic Partners (Tenex Capital), Retina Consultants of America (Webster Equity Partners), Vision Innovation Partners (Centre Partners), Pinnacle Eye Group, Spectrum Vision Partners (CD&R), AION Healthcare. ASC JV: Surgery Partners (NASDAQ: SGRY).
  • PE sponsor activity is dense: Partners Group (EyeCare Partners), Quad-C Management (US Eye), Webster Equity Partners (Retina Consultants of America), Centre Partners (Vision Innovation Partners), Tenex Capital, CD&R (Spectrum Vision Partners), Audax Group.
  • Multiple drivers: retina and subspecialty mix (oculoplastics, pediatric, glaucoma, cornea), ASC ownership and Stark-compliant structure, payer mix with named commercial in-network contracts, modern EMR (Nextech, EyeMD, Modernizing Medicine EMA-Ophthalmology), provider productivity (25-45 encounters/day for general), multi-state architecture.
  • Things that compress the multiple: cataract-only practice concentration, single-MD dependence with weak succession bench, Stark/anti-kickback issues on ASC arrangements, weak commercial payer mix, single-state professional licensure, legacy EMR, single-payer concentration above 25%.
  • Sellers pay nothing on CT Strategic Partners’ buyer-paid advisory.

Named ophthalmology M&A transactions (2022-2025)

TargetBuyerYearWhat it tells us
Multiple EyeCare Partners tuck-insEyeCare Partners (Partners Group)2022-2025Largest US eye-care MSO continues aggressive tuck-in M&A across optometry and ophthalmology.
Retina Consultants of America expansionWebster Equity Partners2022-2025PE-backed retina-specific platform continues regional rollups; established retina specialty subsegment.
US Eye continued tuck-insQuad-C Management2022-2025PE-backed multi-state ophthalmology platform continues acquisitive growth.
US Ophthalmic Partners growthTenex Capital2022-2025PE-backed ophthalmology platform continues regional tuck-in M&A.
Vision Innovation PartnersCentre Partners2022-2025PE-backed Mid-Atlantic ophthalmology platform continues regional rollups.
Spectrum Vision PartnersCD&R (Clayton, Dubilier & Rice)2022-2025PE-backed Northeast ophthalmology platform continues regional rollups.
Ophthalmology Practice Multiples by Profile US, 2026 conditions, EBITDA basis 0x 5x 10x 15x Single-MD general ($500k-1.5M EBITDA) 5x-7x Multi-MD single-site or 2-3 locations ($1.5-4M EBITDA) 6x-9x Small regional, 3-10 providers ($3-8M EBITDA) 7x-10x Mid-size platform with ASC ownership ($5-15M EBITDA) 8x-11x Premium scale, multi-state retina-inclusive ($15M+ EBITDA) 10x-14x+ x EBITDA · bars show typical transaction ranges · Multiples observed in 2023-2026 US ophthalmology M&A. Premium reserved for platforms with subspecialty mix (esp. retina), ASC ownership, and named commercial in-network contracts.

The named buyer landscape

PE-backed national ophthalmology MSOs (the primary buyer pool)

Retina-specific specialty platforms

ASC and surgical-platform buyers

PE sponsors active in this space

What each buyer will pay for vs. what they reject

Named US Ophthalmology MSOs by Approximate Provider Count 2026, hundreds of providers (public/disclosed estimates) 0 2 4 6 8 700+ providers EyeCare Partners (PG) 200+ providers US Eye (Quad-C) 150+ providers US Ophthalmic (Tenex) 150+ providers Retina Consultants (WEP) 100+ providers Spectrum Vision (CD&R) ~100 providers Vision Innovation (CP) Provider counts in hundreds. EyeCare Partners includes both optometry and ophthalmology providers. Approx based on public/disclosed.

The operator-level KPI playbook buyers will diligence

Subspecialty and service-line mix

ASC ownership and structure

Payer mix and contracting

Provider productivity

EMR and operating system

Provider bench and succession

RCM

Dangers and traps in ophthalmology M&A

1. Stark and anti-kickback exposure on ASC arrangements

Physician-owned ASC arrangements must be Stark-compliant. Document ASC ownership structure, referral patterns, and economic terms.

2. Cataract-only practice concentration

Cataract-only practices have lower multiples than diversified subspecialty practices. Retina, oculoplastics, pediatric, glaucoma, and cornea subspecialty exposure are multiple-builders.

3. Owner-MD dependence with no succession

If the practice is single-MD-dependent and the MD is close to retirement, build the provider bench 2-3 years out.

4. Anti-VEGF drug-cost ratio surprises (retina)

Anti-VEGF injection economics depend heavily on payer mix and Medicare ASP+6% pressures. Audit drug-cost ratio carefully; Avastin compounded vs. branded Eylea/Lucentis/Vabysmo mix matters.

5. Premium IOL attach rate accounting

Premium IOL revenue (toric, multifocal, EDOF) is cash-pay or self-pay; document accounting carefully. Premium IOL attach rate is a real multiple-builder when documented.

6. Medicare-heavy payer mix

Above 60% Medicare concentration compresses the multiple. Practices in retirement-community areas often face this.

7. EMR transition exposure

Nextech is the operator standard. Legacy systems or non-integrated EMR with imaging trigger integration discount.

8. OD/MD scope-of-practice and supervision

State-specific rules on OD (optometrist) scope of practice; document OD/MD model carefully.

9. Equity-rollover expectations vs. cash-at-close

PE-MSO ophth deals typically include 20-40% equity rollover. Understand the rollover dynamics before LOI.

10. Real-estate ownership and rent-rate fairness

Many ophth practices own the real estate; get a market-rent appraisal and document a fair-market-value lease structure.

Our POV on ophthalmology M&A in 2026

The right time to prepare is 12-18 months before going to market — build subspecialty (especially retina) exposure, structure Stark-compliant ASC arrangements, modernize EMR (Nextech), develop the provider bench, and document premium IOL attach rate.

Preparing your ophthalmology practice for sale: 12-18 months out

  1. Get multi-year audited or reviewed financials. Break out revenue by subspecialty, ASC vs. office, payer mix.
  2. Build subspecialty mix. Retina is the premium addition; oculoplastics, pediatric, glaucoma, cornea also premium.
  3. Structure Stark-compliant ASC arrangements. Health-care counsel review.
  4. Modernize the EMR. Nextech is the operator standard; ensure imaging integration (OCT, fields, fundus).
  5. Develop the provider bench and OD/MD model.
  6. Document premium IOL attach rate.
  7. Confirm commercial in-network status.
  8. Document add-backs cleanly.
  9. Resolve professional liability matters.
  10. Run a competitive process. EyeCare Partners, US Eye (Quad-C), US Ophthalmic Partners (Tenex), Retina Consultants of America (Webster Equity), Vision Innovation Partners (Centre), Spectrum Vision (CD&R), Pinnacle, AION, plus PE sponsors directly (Partners Group, Quad-C, Webster Equity, Centre Partners, Tenex Capital, CD&R, Audax).

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Frequently asked questions

What is the typical multiple for an ophthalmology practice in 2026?

Single-MD general ophthalmology practices ($500k-1.5M EBITDA) typically sell at 5x-7x. Multi-MD single-site or 2-3 location practices go 6x-9x. Small regional groups (3-10 providers, $3-8M EBITDA) go 7x-10x. Mid-size platforms with ASC ownership ($5-15M EBITDA) go 8x-11x. Premium scale platforms ($15M+ EBITDA, multi-state, retina-inclusive subspecialty, ASC ownership) reach 10x-14x+.

Who are the active buyers of ophthalmology practices right now?

PE-backed national MSOs: EyeCare Partners (Partners Group, ~700+ providers), US Eye (Quad-C Management), US Ophthalmic Partners (Tenex Capital), Vision Innovation Partners (Centre Partners), Spectrum Vision Partners (CD&R / Clayton, Dubilier & Rice), Pinnacle Eye Group, AION Healthcare. Retina-specific: Retina Consultants of America (Webster Equity Partners). ASC partners: Surgery Partners (NASDAQ: SGRY), USPI (Tenet).

What hurts an ophthalmology practice’s valuation most?

Cataract-only practice concentration without subspecialty mix, Stark or anti-kickback exposure on ASC arrangements, owner-MD dependence with no succession bench, Medicare-heavy payer mix above 60%, weak commercial in-network status, legacy EMR or paper charts, single-payer concentration above 25%, and unaudited financials.

Why is retina subspecialty the premium subsegment?

Retina has higher per-encounter revenue (anti-VEGF injection economics), longer patient-relationship recurrence (chronic conditions like AMD and DME), and named PE consolidator activity (Retina Consultants of America under Webster Equity Partners has built a multi-state retina-specific platform). Diversified ophthalmology practices with retina sub-specialty exposure achieve materially higher multiples than cataract-only practices.

How important is ASC ownership?

Very important. ASC (ambulatory surgery center) ownership provides additional EBITDA and a buyer-attractive surgical platform. Stark-compliant ASC ownership structures (group practice exception, ancillary services exception) are required. ASCs add 1-3 turns of EBITDA multiple over no-ASC practices when properly structured.

What is the typical equity rollover in an ophthalmology MSO transaction?

Most PE-MSO ophthalmology deals include 20-40% equity rollover for the selling MDs. The rollover equity participates in the next platform exit (typically 4-7 years out). Understanding the rollover valuation, second-sale terms, and rollover equity rights is critical before signing an LOI.

Do I have to pay a broker fee?

No. CT Strategic Partners runs a buyer-paid M&A advisory model. The seller pays nothing. The buyer pays the success fee at closing.

When should I start preparing if I plan to sell in 2027 or 2028?

12-18 months before going to market is the right window. Highest-leverage pre-sale work: build subspecialty mix (especially retina), structure Stark-compliant ASC arrangements, modernize EMR (Nextech), develop the provider bench, document premium IOL attach rate, and confirm commercial in-network status.

Christoph Totter, Founder of CT Acquisitions

About the Author

Christoph Totter is the founder of CT Acquisitions, a buy-side partner headquartered in Sheridan, Wyoming. We work directly with 76+ buyers, search funders, family offices, lower middle-market PE, and strategic consolidators, including direct mandates with the largest home services consolidators that other intermediaries can’t access. The buyers pay us when a deal closes, not the seller. No retainer, no exclusivity, no contract until close. Connect on LinkedIn · Get in touch

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