Dental Practice Purchase Price Allocation Calculator — Nebraska (2026)

Get state-specific tax rates and insights

See how much you could save in taxes each year based on how you allocate your practice purchase price.

When you buy a dental practice, the IRS requires you to split the purchase price across asset categories like goodwill, equipment, and patient records. Each category depreciates on a different schedule — and how you allocate directly determines your annual write-offs. Adjust the sliders below to model different scenarios.

Nebraska's 5.84% top rate adds moderate state-level savings. Omaha and Lincoln drive most practice transaction activity, with rural practices often including real estate in the purchase.

Purchase Details

Purchase Price
$
Federal Tax Bracket (2026)
Federal 33%+Nebraska 5.8%=38.8% combined

Asset Allocation

Drag the sliders or click any value to type a custom amount.

Goodwill
Covenant Not-to-Compete
Equipment & Instruments
Leasehold Improvements
Patient Records & Charts
Supplies & Inventory
Real Estate (if included)

Depreciation Schedule

CategoryAllocatedDeduction/yrSavings/yr
Goodwill
$175,000$11,667$4,531
Covenant
$50,000$3,333$1,295
Equipment
$125,000$25,000$9,710
Leasehold
$50,000$3,333$1,295
Records
$50,000$3,333$1,295
Supplies
$25,000$25,000$9,710
Real Estate
$25,000$641$249
Total$500,000$72,307$28,084

Estimated Annual Tax Savings

$28,084/yr

Based on 33% federal + 5.8% Nebraska (38.8% combined) marginal rate.

Ready to go from numbers to negotiations?

Minty+ pairs you with an acquisition team that structures the deal, benchmarks the terms, and handles the business after closing — so you can focus on dentistry.

Learn more

Sources & References

Depreciation periods and allocation guidance are based on the following sources. Consult a tax professional for advice specific to your situation.

Disclaimer: This calculator is for educational purposes only and does not constitute tax, legal, or financial advice. Federal tax brackets reflect projected 2026 rates after TCJA expiration and may change if legislation extends current rates. Equipment depreciation uses the 5-year MACRS default; certain dental equipment may qualify for 7-year recovery. Section 179 expensing or bonus depreciation may allow accelerated write-offs. Always consult a qualified CPA or tax advisor before making purchase allocation decisions.