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Salario de Dentista en Ohio (2026)

El salario promedio de un Dentista en Ohio es de $175,000/año. Después de impuestos, tu sueldo neto estimado es de $127,225/año ($10,602/mes).

Desglose del Sueldo Neto

CategoríaCantidad
Sueldo Neto Anual
$127,225
Sueldo Neto Mensual
$10,602
Sueldo Neto Quincenal
$4,893
Sueldo Neto por Hora

basado en 2,080 hrs/año

$61/hr
Impuesto Federal
$30,734
Impuesto Estatal
$3,653
Impuestos FICA
$13,388
Tasa Efectiva de Impuesto

impuestos totales ÷ salario bruto

27.3%
Estimaciones solamente — no es asesoría fiscal. · Aviso legal completo →

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Términos clave:···

Rangos de Salario de Dentista en Ohio

Nivel inicial (0–3 años)

$145,000

/año

Ver desglose fiscal →

Nivel medio (3–7 años)

$195,000

/año

Ver desglose fiscal →

Nivel senior (7+ años)

$275,000

/año

Ver desglose fiscal →

No todas las Dentistas ganan lo mismo — ni de cerca

Ohio State University College of Dentistry in Columbus — affiliated with the Wexner Medical Center and Nationwide Children's Hospital — anchors central Ohio specialty practice and feeds OhioHealth and Mount Carmel networks with oral and maxillofacial surgeons. Case Western Reserve University School of Dental Medicine in Cleveland feeds Cleveland Clinic and University Hospitals with specialty residents and runs one of the strongest periodontics and prosthodontics programs in the Midwest. Cincinnati lacks a dental school but draws OSU and Case alumni into UC Health and Christ Hospital practices.

Oral & Maxillofacial Surgeon

$330,000–$650,000+

Cleveland Clinic + Wexner + UC Health hospital privileges drive top end

Orthodontist

$220,000–$420,000

Suburban Mason + Dublin + Solon school district feeders strong

Endodontist

$220,000–$380,000

Referral-driven; strong in metro Columbus and Cleveland

Periodontist

$200,000–$360,000

Implant placement increasingly drives revenue; aging Ohio population

Prosthodontist

$190,000–$340,000

Case Western prosthodontics program produces strong specialty pipeline

Pediatric Dentist

$190,000–$340,000

Nationwide Children's Hospital affiliations strong in Columbus

General Dentist (Practice Owner)

$190,000–$420,000+

Wide range — Indian Hill / Hudson top end vs Toledo baseline

General Dentist (DSO Associate)

$135,000–$190,000

Heartland, Aspen, Pacific Dental in suburban Ohio

General Dentist (Independent Associate)

$125,000–$170,000

Pre-ownership track at suburban general practice

New Graduate Associate

$110,000–$150,000

First 1–2 years post-DDS/DMD; production ramps over time

Vale la pena saber: Ohio State University College of Dentistry in Columbus and Case Western Reserve University School of Dental Medicine in Cleveland are the state's two dental schools. OSU's affiliation with Wexner Medical Center and Nationwide Children's Hospital makes its OMS and pediatric residency programs particularly competitive nationally. Case Western's prosthodontics program is among the strongest in the Midwest. Ohio licensure runs an efficient process for relocators — the State Dental Board accepts most state-to-state credentialing without re-examination for dentists with five-plus years of clinical practice. Friction is meaningfully lower than Illinois or Michigan.

Ohio dentistry — practice ownership accessibility, the municipal-tax wrinkle, and DSO consolidation

$175k

Ohio average dentist salary

3.5%

Ohio effective flat state rate (cities +1.8% to +2.5%)

$300k–$600k

typical Ohio practice acquisition cost

Practice ownership economics in Ohio are among the most accessible in the Midwest. A general practice in suburban Dublin, Westlake, or Mason typically sells for $300,000–$600,000 — less than half what the same practice would cost in coastal markets. The associate-to-owner transition typically happens at year 5–7, with comp jumping from $150,000–$190,000 to $280,000–$450,000 within 2–3 years of ownership. Bank financing through Live Oak, US Bank Practice Solutions, Lendeavor, and Huntington (Ohio-headquartered in Columbus) is broadly available.

The municipal tax wrinkle matters more than the headline state rate. Ohio's 2024 tax reform consolidated brackets into an effectively flat 3.5% above $26,050 — modest by progressive-state standards. But Columbus residents pay 2.5% city income tax, Cleveland residents 2.5%, Cincinnati 1.8%, Dayton 2.5%, Toledo 2.25%. A Columbus practice owner pulling $350,000 hands over roughly $8,750 in city income tax on top of the $11,500 state bill — combined effective state-plus-local rate of about 5.8%. Most senior dentists work and live in the same suburb to avoid the work-and-resident jurisdiction split.

DSO consolidation has been particularly aggressive in Ohio over the past decade. Heartland Dental (headquartered in Effingham, Illinois — adjacent to Cincinnati's market) and Aspen Dental (HQ in Chicago, with a major Cincinnati operation) both treat Ohio as a core expansion market. Pacific Dental Services has expanded across Cleveland and Columbus suburbs. Mortenson Family Dental (Kentucky-based, deep Cincinnati footprint) is the regional player. Independent practice ownership remains the dominant career path, but DSO presence is genuinely visible in suburban Ohio.

Specialty practice — orthodontics, oral surgery, periodontics — concentrates around the three major academic medical centers. Wexner Medical Center, Nationwide Children's Hospital, Cleveland Clinic, University Hospitals, UC Health, and Cincinnati Children's all support deep specialty practice infrastructure. Specialty practice owners routinely clear $350,000–$700,000 in Ohio, with the practice acquisition cost gap relative to coastal markets making specialty ownership a genuinely viable path.

Ohio for dentists — three metros, three different markets

Columbus dentistry is the state's growth story. Population expansion has accelerated since 2020 (Intel Ohio One, Honda EV plant in Marysville, Amazon distribution centers, OSU enrollment growth), which has built a younger high-income patient base across Dublin, Powell, Upper Arlington, New Albany, and the Short North. Practice acquisitions in Dublin and Upper Arlington run $400,000–$700,000; secondary suburbs (Westerville, Hilliard, Pickerington) at $300,000–$500,000. Specialty practice in Columbus is dense — OSU College of Dentistry alumni networks dominate the metro.

Cleveland dentistry runs on the Cleveland Clinic and University Hospitals corporate adjacency. East Side suburbs (Solon, Beachwood, Hudson, Chagrin Falls, Pepper Pike) anchor the upscale residential market with Cleveland Clinic + University Hospitals + Progressive + KeyCorp corporate PPO base. West Side suburbs (Westlake, Bay Village, Rocky River, Avon Lake) are smaller but support strong general practice ownership. Northeast Ohio's slower population growth means practice acquisitions are particularly accessible — $250,000–$500,000 for established generals.

Cincinnati dentistry is anchored by UC Health, Cincinnati Children's Hospital, Christ Hospital, and TriHealth. Indian Hill, Hyde Park, Madeira, and Mariemont anchor the upscale residential market; Mason, West Chester, and Liberty Township are the growth-tier suburbs serving Procter & Gamble, Kroger HQ, and Fifth Third Bank corporate workforce. Mortenson Family Dental's deep Cincinnati footprint shapes the local DSO competitive dynamic.

Dayton, Toledo, Akron, and Youngstown support secondary markets. Slower or declining population, lower median household income, and Medicaid-heavier patient mix create tougher economics for specialty practice. Practice acquisitions $200,000–$400,000 — accessible, but the income trajectory ceiling is lower than the three major metros. Ohio Primary Care Loan Repayment and IHS alternatives offset student-debt friction for graduates willing to serve these communities.

Ohio's appeal for relocators is the practice-ownership accessibility combined with broad demographic stability. The state isn't growing fast outside Columbus, but it isn't shrinking either — and the lower commercial real estate costs, modest state tax burden (post-2024 reform), and dense academic medical center infrastructure make it a meaningfully better practice-ownership market per dollar of startup capital than coastal alternatives.

How Ohio taxes work for dentists (and the municipal-tax trap)

Ohio's 2024 tax reform consolidated brackets into an effectively flat 3.5% above $26,050. At $250,000 associate / staff dentist, state tax runs about $7,800; at $500,000 practice owner, about $16,600. The structure means there's limited marginal-bracket relief from retirement contributions at the state level, though the rate is modest enough that the friction is manageable. Ohio offers a small state -equivalent business income deduction up to $250,000 of business income for practice owners (Ohio's Section 5747.011), which is meaningful for practice owners.

Municipal income tax is where Ohio gets expensive. Columbus residents pay 2.5%, Cleveland 2.5%, Cincinnati 1.8%, Dayton 2.5%, Toledo 2.25%. Most municipalities use RITA (Regional Income Tax Agency) for collection. A Columbus practice owner pulling $350,000 hands over roughly $8,750 in city income tax on top of the $11,500 state tax — combined effective state-plus-local rate of 5.8%. Living in one Ohio city and working in another can trigger a credit but rarely fully offsets the resident jurisdiction tax.

Most Ohio dentists are 1099 independent contractors (associate, locum) or practice owners. Schedule C and S-corp Form 1120-S are the default filing structures. Self-employment tax (15.3% on first $184,500 net SE income, 2.9% above, plus 0.9% Additional Medicare above $200,000 single) is the real overhead vs employment.

Ohio Section 5747.011 Business Income Deduction — Ohio allows a state-level business income deduction of up to $250,000 of business income for practice owners and shareholders. Income above $250,000 is taxed at a flat 3.0% (slightly below the 3.5% individual rate). This is meaningful for $300K-$500K practice owners — saves roughly $1,500-$3,500 per year vs straight individual rate.

election at $200,000-plus net SE income is standard. Reasonable salary $80,000–$140,000 (subject to ) plus balance as profit distribution avoids 15.3% self-employment tax on the distribution portion. Saves $9,000–$15,000 per year for a $250,000–$400,000 dentist. The Ohio Business Income Deduction stacks favorably with S-corp election.

Section 199A 20% deduction — dentistry is classified as a Specified Service Trade or Business (), so the deduction phases out at $201,775 single / $403,500 taxable income (2026). Above $276,775 single / $553,500 MFJ, QBI deduction is zero. Tax planning to stay below threshold via 401(k), HSA, defined benefit plan preserves a $40,000-plus federal deduction. Solo 401(k) at $200K+ net SE income — $72K total contribution — combined with Defined Benefit / Cash Balance plan at $400K+ income shelters $250K-$300K annually.

  • election at $200K+ net SE income — saves $9K-$15K/year SE tax for $250K-$400K dentist.
  • Ohio Business Income Deduction (Section 5747.011) — first $250K of practice income excluded; balance taxed at 3.0% flat. Stacks with election.
  • Live and work in same Ohio municipality — avoids work-jurisdiction tax not fully credited against resident-jurisdiction tax.
  • Solo at $200K+ net SE income — $72K total contribution at 32% federal + 3.5% Ohio marginal saves $25K+/year.
  • Defined Benefit plan at $400K+ — adds $100K-$200K/year of pre-tax shelter. Total combined shelter $250K-$300K/year for senior Ohio practice owners.
  • Plan around 20% phase-out at $201K/$403K — strategic / DB plan / charitable contributions preserve $40K+ federal deduction.
  • Backdoor Roth IRA $7K/year — bypasses phase-out at associate dentist+ comp.
  • $4,150 single / $8,300 family — most underutilized tactic for high-comp healthcare professionals. Triple-tax-advantaged.
  • Practice acquisition Section 197 goodwill amortization — 15-year ongoing tax deduction reducing taxable income.
  • DSO at Heartland / Aspen / Pacific Dental / Mortenson — $47.5K/year after-tax → Roth conversion above the regular limit.

Three Ohio dental submarkets — Columbus growth, Cleveland east-suburb, Cincinnati Indian Hill

Columbus growth-driven, Cleveland Cleveland Clinic-anchored, and Cincinnati Procter & Gamble corporate are three different Ohio dental career paths.

Columbus + Dublin / Upper Arlington / New Albany

Associate $145K-$200K · practice owner $300K-$550K · top specialty $450K-$800K

Dublin, Powell, Upper Arlington, New Albany, Westerville, Hilliard, Bexley. Population growth driven by Intel Ohio One, Honda EV Marysville, Amazon distribution, OSU expansion. Corporate PPO base — JPMorgan Chase, Nationwide, Cardinal Health, L Brands. OSU College of Dentistry alumni networks dominant. Practice acquisitions $400K-$700K (Dublin / Upper Arlington) or $300K-$500K (secondary suburbs).

Columbus is Ohio's growth story — meaningful demographic tailwind from Intel + Honda EV expansion combined with OSU enrollment growth + OSU College of Dentistry alumni networks. The strongest Ohio dental market for new practice startups in 2026.

Cleveland East Side + West Side (Solon / Beachwood / Westlake)

Associate $135K-$185K · practice owner $260K-$500K · top specialty $400K-$750K

East Side: Solon, Beachwood, Hudson, Chagrin Falls, Pepper Pike. West Side: Westlake, Bay Village, Rocky River, Avon Lake. Cleveland Clinic + University Hospitals + Progressive + KeyCorp corporate PPO base. Case Western Reserve University School of Dental Medicine alumni networks dominant. Practice acquisitions $250K-$500K — among the most accessible in major US metros.

Cleveland practice acquisition economics are unusually favorable — $250K-$500K for established generals on a Cleveland Clinic + University Hospitals corporate PPO base. The slower population growth limits new-practice startup demand but supports stable multigenerational patient relationships.

Cincinnati + Indian Hill / Hyde Park / Mason

Associate $135K-$185K · practice owner $260K-$500K · top specialty $400K-$700K

Indian Hill, Hyde Park, Madeira, Mariemont anchor the upscale residential market; Mason, West Chester, Liberty Township are growth-tier suburbs. Procter & Gamble + Kroger HQ + Fifth Third Bank + Western & Southern corporate PPO base. UC Health + Cincinnati Children's Hospital + Christ Hospital + TriHealth specialty infrastructure. Mortenson Family Dental DSO presence shapes competitive dynamics.

Cincinnati's upscale Indian Hill / Hyde Park dental market is a quietly strong Midwest practice ownership opportunity. P&G + Kroger HQ corporate PPO base supports premium fees, and acquisitions $300K-$600K make ownership genuinely accessible.

The career arc — DDS new grad to Columbus growth-suburb owner / Cleveland east-suburb specialist

Year 1-3 (DDS / DMD New Grad): $110K-$155K. Ohio State College of Dentistry, Case Western Reserve School of Dental Medicine, or out-of-state graduate. DSO associate at Heartland / Aspen / Pacific Dental / Mortenson Family Dental, or independent associate at suburban general practice. Some pursue 1-2 year residency (GPR, AEGD, OMS, Pediatric Dentistry, Endodontics, Periodontics, Prosthodontics, Orthodontics) — Wexner Medical Center, Nationwide Children's, Cleveland Clinic, University Hospitals all run competitive programs.

Year 3-7 (Senior Associate / Specialty / Pre-Practice-Ownership): $155K-$240K. Senior associate at suburban general practice, DSO senior associate, or specialty practice associate. Specialty practice income typically tracks orthodontics $230K-$370K, endodontics $230K-$370K, oral surgery $330K-$650K, periodontics $220K-$350K, pediatric $220K-$350K. Most associates evaluate practice acquisition financing in this window — Ohio's lower acquisition costs make this transition financially accessible at year 5-7.

Year 7-15 (Practice Owner / Senior Associate): $280K-$650K. Practice acquisition typical at year 5-7 — Ohio practice acquisition $300K-$700K (suburban) or $250K-$500K (secondary metro). Bank financing through Live Oak, US Bank Practice Solutions, Lendeavor, Huntington (Columbus-headquartered), Fifth Third (Cincinnati-headquartered), KeyCorp (Cleveland-headquartered). + Solo + Defined Benefit shelter $200K-$300K per year. Specialty practice owner $400K-$700K income.

Year 15-25 (Senior Practice Owner / Multi-Practice / DSO Acquisition): $450K-$1M. Multi-practice ownership or DSO acquisition (Heartland, Aspen, Pacific Dental, Mortenson Family Dental actively acquiring across Ohio). Practice exit valuation typically 6-9x EBITDA for general practices, 8-12x for specialty. Some Ohio dentists target multi-practice partnerships with regional groups.

Year 25+ (Practice Sale / Retirement / Relocation): Practice sale to DSO or independent buyer at $300K-$1.5M+ goodwill multiple. Ohio's modest 3.5% state tax + Business Income Deduction on the first $250K makes pre-sale relocation strategy minimally compelling — most Ohio dentists retire in-state or relocate to FL coastal communities for retirement-cost optimization. Some continue as DSO consultant / clinical director / part-time associate post-retirement.

Where Ohio dentists actually live

Ohio practice owners cluster in established suburbs around their practice — the lower commercial rents and shorter commutes (compared to coastal metros) mean dentists usually live within 15 minutes of their practice. Specialty practice owners and DSO regional medical directors have more flexibility geographically; staff associates often live closer to their practice for commute reasons.

Dublin / New Albany (Columbus)

Strongest growth suburb · Intel + Honda EV adjacent · top schools · OSU 25 min

Upper Arlington / Bexley (Columbus)

Classic Columbus dentist suburb · top schools · 10 min to Wexner Medical Center

Solon / Hudson / Chagrin Falls (CLE)

Cleveland East Side upscale · top schools · 25 min to Cleveland Clinic

Westlake / Rocky River (Cleveland)

West Side upscale · meaningful affordability · 20 min to downtown Cleveland

Indian Hill / Hyde Park (Cincinnati)

Most affluent Cincinnati suburbs · top schools · 15 min to UC + Christ Hospital

Mason / West Chester (Cincinnati)

Growth suburb · P&G + Kroger feeders · top public schools · accessible practice startup

Beachwood / Pepper Pike (Cleveland)

Old-money Cleveland East · 15 min to Cleveland Clinic main campus

Columbus growth suburbs (Dublin, New Albany, Powell, Westerville) offer the strongest combination of practice ownership demand growth and family-suburb infrastructure. Cleveland East Side (Solon, Hudson, Chagrin Falls) and Cincinnati Hyde Park / Indian Hill match for upscale residential dentistry but on slower growth.

¿Es la decisión correcta?

Ohio for dentists — when the math really works

A tu favor

  • +Practice acquisition costs ($300K-$700K) among the most accessible in major US metros
  • +Effective 3.5% flat state rate post-2024 reform; Business Income Deduction adds further relief
  • +Two strong dental schools (OSU, Case Western) with deep alumni networks across the state
  • +Cleveland Clinic, Wexner Medical Center, UC Health support deep specialty practice infrastructure
  • +Columbus growth (Intel, Honda EV, OSU expansion) creating new high-income patient base

Vale la pena saber antes de firmar

  • Columbus 2.5% / Cleveland 2.5% / Cincinnati 1.8% city income taxes layer on headline state rate
  • Cleveland and Dayton population growth flat to slightly declining limits new-patient pipeline
  • Heartland / Mortenson DSO presence makes independent startup competitive in suburban metros
  • Ohio dental market is winter-weather-dependent — patient cancellation seasonality real
  • OSU + Case Western tuition routinely $300K-$400K cost-of-attendance over 4 years

Mercado Laboral en Ohio

Ohio tiene demanda activa de Dentistas.

Perspectivas de crecimiento: 4% growth through 2032 (about as fast as average)

Puestos relacionados:

Dentista GeneralOrtodoncistaCirujano OralPeriodoncista

Costo de Vida en Ohio

Ohio tiene un costo de vida variado según la región.

💰 Sueldo neto mensual: $10,602

🏠 Renta típica: $1,600/mo

📊 Después de renta: $9,002/mo

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