PIK debt (Payment-In-Kind debt) is a type of financing where the borrower doesn’t pay interest in cash. Instead, the interest is added to the loan balance , so the debt compounds over time . Simple example: Borrow $10M at 10% PIK interest Year 1 → you owe $11M Year 2 → you owe $12.1M No cash leaves the business… but the balance keeps growing Why DSOs use PIK debt DSOs (Dental Service Organizations) often use PIK debt to: Preserve cash flow during aggressive expansion Fund acquisitions without immediate cash strain Bridge gaps when traditional financing gets tight On paper, it can make growth look easier and faster. Why it’s a concern (especially right now) 1. It hides real cash performance PIK lets organizations avoid paying interest today, which can: Make EBITDA look stronger than reality Mask cash flow pressure from operations For DSOs that are already tight on margins (staffing, reimbursements, build-outs), this is a big red flag. 2. Com...
Dental office build-outs are tougher than ever to pencil right now—and it’s not just one factor, it’s the perfect storm. Construction costs remain elevated. What used to feel predictable—plumbing, electrical, cabinetry, equipment install—now comes with wide variability and frequent surprises. Add in longer lead times, and projects stretch further than planned, tying up capital. Interest rates have changed the game. Debt that once felt cheap now carries real weight, which means every dollar invested in a build-out has to work harder to generate a return. Labor is another challenge. Skilled contractors are in high demand, which not only drives up cost but can also impact timelines and quality if you’re not working with the right partners. And then there’s reimbursement pressure. While costs to build and operate dental offices continue to rise, insurance reimbursements haven’t kept pace—making it harder to justify large upfront investments purely on traditional models. All of this...