Group Practice vs. Solo Practice in Family Medicine

Family medicine physicians entering or restructuring a career face a foundational structural choice: operate as a solo practitioner or join a group practice. This page examines the operational, financial, regulatory, and clinical dimensions of both models, including how each is defined, how each functions day-to-day, the scenarios where each model fits best, and the decision thresholds that typically push physicians toward one path or the other. The distinction matters not only for physician satisfaction and income but also for patient access, care continuity, and compliance obligations under federal and state frameworks.


Definition and scope

A solo practice in family medicine is a model in which a single physician owns and operates an independent clinical entity — bearing full administrative, financial, and liability responsibilities without a physician partner. A group practice, as defined by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) under 42 CFR Part 425, consists of 2 or more physicians who share facilities, staff, expenses, and income under a unified legal structure. Group practices can be further classified as:

  1. Single-specialty groups — all physicians practice family medicine or a closely related specialty
  2. Multispecialty groups — family medicine physicians operate alongside specialists such as cardiologists, endocrinologists, or behavioral health providers
  3. Hospital-employed groups — physicians are employees of a health system rather than partners in an independent entity
  4. Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) — community-based group settings regulated under Section 330 of the Public Health Service Act and overseen by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA)

The American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP) tracks practice setting data and has reported that solo and small independent practices have declined as a percentage of family medicine settings, with hospital employment and large group structures absorbing a growing share of the workforce (AAFP, Family Medicine Facts, published periodically). This page sits within the broader landscape of practice models covered across familymedicineauthority.com.


How it works

Solo practice mechanics

In a solo practice, the physician is simultaneously the clinician, the employer, and the business owner. Core operational functions include:

  1. Credentialing and contracting — the physician negotiates payer contracts individually with commercial insurers and enrolls directly with Medicare and Medicaid
  2. Staffing — front desk, medical assistants, and billing personnel are hired, trained, and managed by the physician-owner
  3. Regulatory compliance — HIPAA Privacy and Security Rules (45 CFR Parts 160 and 164), OSHA Bloodborne Pathogen Standards (29 CFR 1910.1030), and state medical practice acts all apply with no compliance department to distribute the burden
  4. Electronic Health Records — EHR selection, implementation, and Promoting Interoperability attestation under the CMS Quality Payment Program fall on the solo physician

Overhead in solo practice typically runs between 55% and 65% of gross revenue, a range cited repeatedly in Medical Group Management Association (MGMA) cost surveys, leaving net income highly sensitive to payer mix and panel size.

Group practice mechanics

In a group, administrative overhead is distributed. Key structural mechanisms include:

  1. Shared billing infrastructure — a centralized revenue cycle team handles claim submission, denial management, and payer audits
  2. Call coverage rotation — after-hours and weekend call is divided among partners, reducing individual burden
  3. Negotiating leverage — groups can negotiate higher per-unit reimbursement rates with commercial payers due to volume and network desirability
  4. Compliance programs — larger groups operating under the Anti-Kickback Statute (42 U.S.C. § 1320a-7b) and Stark Law (42 U.S.C. § 1395nn) are required to maintain formal compliance programs, which CMS and the Office of Inspector General (OIG) have outlined in published compliance guidance

The regulatory context for family medicine covers how these federal statutes apply to physician compensation arrangements within group structures.


Common scenarios

Scenario 1: New residency graduate joining a group
A physician completing a 3-year family medicine residency — accredited by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) — typically enters employment with a hospital system or joins an established group. Startup capital, malpractice tail coverage, and immediate patient panels are provided, reducing financial exposure during the practice-building phase.

Scenario 2: Mid-career physician transitioning to solo
A physician who has built a loyal patient panel of 1,500–2,000 active patients over 10 years may exit a large group to form an independent solo practice, often under a direct primary care (DPC) membership model that eliminates fee-for-service billing overhead entirely.

Scenario 3: Rural community with limited physician supply
In a county with fewer than 1 physician per 3,500 residents — a threshold the Health Professional Shortage Area designation uses per HRSA guidelines — a solo practitioner may be the only viable structure due to insufficient patient volume to support group overhead.

Scenario 4: FQHC or community health center setting
Physicians practicing in an FQHC group setting receive malpractice coverage under the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA), a benefit unavailable to solo private practitioners.


Decision boundaries

No single structural model is superior in all conditions. The relevant decision variables are measurable:

Factor Solo Practice Group Practice
Startup capital required High (typically $100,000–$350,000) Low to none for employees
Administrative autonomy Complete Shared or delegated
Malpractice coverage type Individual commercial policy Group policy or FTCA (FQHCs)
Call burden Full unless covered by locum tenens Rotated among partners
Payer contract leverage Low Moderate to high
Value-based care participation Individually complex Enabled by shared data infrastructure

Regulatory threshold consideration: CMS Shared Savings Program (MSSP) Accountable Care Organizations require a minimum of 5,000 assigned Medicare beneficiaries to enter the program. Solo practitioners rarely meet this threshold independently, making group affiliation or independent practice association (IPA) membership a practical prerequisite for ACO participation.

Stark Law compliance boundary: Physician compensation arrangements within groups must satisfy one of the Stark Law exceptions enumerated in 42 CFR Part 411, Subpart J. Solo practices eliminate this compliance dimension entirely since there is no referral relationship between co-owners.

Workforce data compiled by AAFP and analyzed in the Graham Center One-Pager series (Robert Graham Center) consistently identifies practice structure as a predictor of burnout risk, with physicians in solo practice reporting higher rates of administrative stress but greater autonomy satisfaction than those in hospital-employed groups.


References


The law belongs to the people. Georgia v. Public.Resource.Org, 590 U.S. (2020)