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Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery · Dallas, TX

Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery
in Dallas.

Oral surgery is the widest CAC and case-value range in dental. The two segments (third-molar extraction volume vs. full-arch fixed implant cases) require entirely different acquisition systems. Healthcare-only since 2007, with a dental client roster that goes back to 2008.

Metro
Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex
7.9M population
Affluence tier
Upper-Mid
Market maturity: mature
Typical CAC
$400 to $1,500
Referring GD and orthodontists for extractions; direct-to-patient for full-arch implant
Portrait of Dr. Connie Shim-Middleton, DDS, co-owner of Middleton Family Dentistry in Fort Wayne, Indiana, dental clinical reviewer for Macbach.
Clinically reviewed by
Dr. Connie Shim-Middleton, DDS. Co-Owner, Middleton Family Dentistry · Fort Wayne, IN.
Disclosure: Macbach Architect (fractional CMO) client.
The Dallas dental field

How oral surgery demand
actually concentrates here.

Dental specialty marketing for Dallas-Fort Worth, where orthodontic and cosmetic dental demand is especially strong in the Park Cities, Plano, and Southlake submarkets. The DFW dental specialty market is mature and moderately competitive.

Dallas dental specialty practices compete in a crowded field where the differentiator is increasingly operational: case acceptance workflow, treatment plan clarity, and the digital experience between referral and first visit. Marketing needs to hand off cleanly to operations; both sides fail together.

Market note, Dallas. Second-largest healthcare market in Texas. High-density specialty medicine corridor along Dallas North Tollway plus a fast-growing DPC movement in the northern suburbs (Plano, Frisco, McKinney).

Healthcare anchors
Who defines the Dallas field
  • ·UT Southwestern Medical Center
  • ·Baylor Scott & White
  • ·Texas Health Resources
  • ·Methodist Health System
Recommended tier (dental)
Growth
How oral surgery practices grow

The operating reality.

Oral and maxillofacial surgery has the widest spread of any dental specialty when you measure case value, marketing channel, and operating dynamics. Third-molar extraction volume is referral-driven (orthodontists, general dentists, pediatric dentists) and low-cost-per-case at $800 to $1,500 per case. Full-arch fixed implant cases (All-on-4, All-on-X, full-mouth fixed implant restoration) are direct-to-patient driven, marketed with case-study sites and consultation flows, with case values in the $25,000 to $45,000 range and effective marketing spend in the $2,500 to $8,000 per case range. The two segments share an OR but they are different businesses, and most oral surgery practices that struggle on growth are running them under one undifferentiated marketing budget. The right posture is two parallel systems. For the referral-driven extraction volume: a referring-dentist program (case communication, scheduling access, clean clinical handoffs to the orthodontist or referring GD) that produces predictable extraction volume from a small number of high-trust referring offices. For the full-arch implant book: a dedicated marketing surface that treats full-arch implant as a flagship procedure with its own consultation flow, financing-aware patient education, and case-study library. Smile-in-a-Day and All-on-4 marketing in 2026 is intensely competitive because the case value is high and the consideration period is long; practices that compete on real before-and-after galleries, transparent case complexity discussion, and DDS-reviewed clinical content outperform practices running generic implant-marketing playbooks. Local search depth on full-arch queries is substantially deeper than on third-molar queries because patients self-research full-arch options aggressively. The CAC range reflects both: $400 entry-level for extraction-mix practices, $1,500+ for practices building the full-arch implant book direct-to-patient.

Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery questions, Dallas

Three answers.

How does a Dallas oral surgery practice market to both orthodontists and direct full-arch patients?
By running two distinct acquisition systems in parallel. The referring-orthodontist channel for third-molar and surgical extraction volume operates on case-communication and scheduling access; the website carries a referrer portal, decision guidance, and provider credentials. The direct-to-patient channel for full-arch implant cases operates on dedicated procedure marketing, real case studies, and structured consultation flow. Different audiences, different surfaces, different budgets.
What is the effective marketing spend per full-arch implant case in Dallas?
Full-arch implant marketing in Dallas typically runs $2,500 to $8,000 per case acquired direct-to-patient, depending on metro density and the practice’s organic foundation. Practices with strong organic content and named clinical reviewers can run effective CAC at the low end of that range; practices relying primarily on paid search run at the high end. Case values of $25,000 to $45,000 typically support those CAC levels at healthy ratios.
Should a Dallas oral surgery practice invest in same-day-implant or All-on-4 marketing?
Only if the practice has built the operational infrastructure to deliver the procedure to standard. Marketing for All-on-4 or same-day implant cases without the surgical, restorative, and follow-up workflow to support the case acceptance produces high-acquisition-cost dissatisfaction. The practices that grow on full-arch are the ones that built operational excellence first, then invested in marketing the case, not the reverse.
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