Every system in your dental practice runs on your network. Your practice management software, your imaging platform, your VoIP phones, your patient communication tools, and your payment terminals all depend on it. When the network works well, nobody notices. When it fails, everything stops.
Most dental practices end up with networks that were built quickly rather than built correctly. The result is slowdowns, dropped connections, and security gaps that accumulate over time. Here is how to set up a dental practice network that works reliably from day one.

Your router and firewall are the front door of your network. They control what traffic comes in, what goes out, and what is blocked. Consumer-grade routers sold at retail stores are not built for healthcare environments. They lack the configuration options needed to segment your network, enforce security policies, and comply with HIPAA requirements. A business-class firewall from a vendor like Cisco, Fortinet, or SonicWall gives your IT provider the control they need to protect your practice.
Switches connect the devices in your practice to each other and to the server. Managed switches allow your IT provider to control traffic flow, set priorities, and monitor performance. For dental practices, this matters because imaging data transfers are large. A managed switch can prioritize that traffic so image transfers do not slow down scheduling or billing operations happening simultaneously.
Operatory computers, the server, and imaging workstations should all connect to the network via wired Ethernet, not wireless. Wireless connections are subject to interference and signal fluctuation. Major dental software platforms, including Eaglesoft and DEXIS, specifically require wired connections for their servers and imaging workstations. Wireless works for tablets and patient-facing devices. Critical clinical and administrative workstations need wired connections.
Cat6 Ethernet cabling throughout the practice provides a Gigabit connection to every workstation. Cat5e works but Cat6 handles higher speeds with less interference and is the current standard for new installations. Cabling should run through walls and ceilings to each operatory, the front desk, the server room or closet, and any other location with a networked device.
Network segmentation divides your network into separate zones. The most important segmentation in a dental practice separates your clinical network from your guest or patient Wi-Fi. If a patient connects to your Wi-Fi and their device is infected with malware, segmentation prevents that malware from reaching your practice management software or patient data.
HIPAA requires that access to electronic protected health information be controlled and limited to authorized users. Network segmentation is one of the technical safeguards that demonstrates compliance with this requirement. A flat network with no segmentation where all devices share the same network is a HIPAA vulnerability.

Your internet service provider and plan matter for a dental practice. The minimum speed depends on your software. Cloud-based platforms like Dentrix Ascend and Curve Dental require reliable upload speeds in addition to download speeds. Most practices benefit from a fiber connection of at least 100 Mbps symmetrical for reliable cloud and VoIP performance.
For practices running on-premise software, internet speed is less critical for daily operations but still important for cloud backup, software updates, and remote IT support. A backup internet connection using LTE failover is worth considering for any practice running VoIP phones, as a primary internet outage takes down phones as well as cloud services.
The cost depends on the size of the practice, the number of operatories, whether cabling is already in place, and the equipment chosen. A new practice network including cabling, managed switches, a business-class firewall, and wireless access points typically ranges from several thousand to tens of thousands of dollars depending on scope. Your IT provider should provide a detailed quote before any work begins.
Not recommended for a dental practice. Consumer routers do not provide the network segmentation, access controls, or logging capabilities that HIPAA compliance requires. They also lack the remote management features your IT provider needs to monitor and maintain your network properly.
Firewalls and routers typically last five to seven years before replacement is recommended. Switches can last longer with proper maintenance. Wireless access points may need replacement when they no longer support current security standards or when coverage becomes inadequate as the practice grows.
Yes. Ekim IT Solutions designs and installs networks for dental practices across all 50 states. We provide on-site installation for practices in New England and New York and remote configuration support for practices nationwide. Every network we build is designed to meet HIPAA requirements and support the specific software your practice runs.
Ekim IT Solutions works exclusively with dental practices. We serve New England and New York with on-site support and dental practices nationwide with remote support. Security, compliance, and everything in between so you can focus on patients.
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