
Open Dental Version 25.3 has been released as Stable! Our latest blog post goes into some of the highlights from this version, including a few user feature requests!

COVID closures in the spring will compound the typical seasonal slowness. Learn the tools to start using today to mitigate severe revenue drops in the fall.

Master the Manage Module: Learn how to manage time cards, send batch claims, manage monthly patient billing, and make business-critical data backups.

You’re reopening with new protocols and a fair amount of uncertainty, This Reopening Toolkit has what you need to handle today, and the future.

Software Update: Version 20.2 has been released as Stable, implementing some great features for practices to use as they reopen.
Read content written by featured third-party guest writers.

Staff shortages, endless charting, patients who zone out mid-explanation. These are real problems. AI dental software is quietly solving them. Here’s what it does, what it doesn’t, and how to know if it’s right for your practice.

Patients tend to choose a brand they connect with over a generic alternative. Consider how you are portraying your practice vs. the competition, and see some great examples of dental branding.

Great small business owners are not only good at what they do, they excel at using their time in the best possible way. From being ruthless about distractions to eliminating busywork, here are our top productivity tips and life hacks for getting things done.

Why is HIPAA important to patients and healthcare organizations and what does your dental practice need to do to remain HIPAA compliant at all times?

“Contactless payment” has become the big buzzword across the payments landscape. But what does it actually mean, and how does it work? Learn the answers to these questions and more in our guide to contactless payments.

You’ve probably had many treatment plan presentations that ended with the patient saying “I’ll think about.” Learn the questions to ask to turn your patients’ “I’ll think about it” into “Let’s get that treatment scheduled.”