DPC Myth #16: You Have to Spend a Ton of Money Marketing Your New Practice

“So, what do you do for marketing?”
My answer? “Take good care of patients”
A recurring myth is the belief that you need to spend thousands of dollars on marketing your Direct Primary Care Practice. From someone who converted their practice to the DPC model in 2014…and who lost about 95% of the established patients as a result…I’ve never had a marketing budget. Not a real one, anyway.
How I Actually Built My Practice
I tried a radio ad once—got exactly one membership from it, so technically it paid for itself, but I had to live with the pain of knowing my voice bellowed on a Country radio station. That alone has been a difficult trauma to get past.
But, that experiment taught me everything I needed to know about expensive marketing strategies. They aren’t needed.
What has actually worked? A $150 sign on my front lawn and patient referrals. That’s it.
Facebook ads? Nope.
SEO specialist? Nope.
Community outreach programs? Nope.
Randomly sticking business cards and pamphlets on windshields at the local Wal-Mart? Nope.
Glossy brochures with stock photos of impossibly attractive people laughing at salads? Nope.
Why Traditional Marketing Misses the Point
The marketing myth assumes that DPC is like any other commodity. you need to “sell” to people who don’t want it.
What patients (desperately) want is accessible, affordable primary care.
They’re tired of fighting with insurance companies, waiting weeks for appointments, and spending ten minutes with a doctor who’s typing into a computer the whole time. When you offer something that actually solves their problems, you don’t need to convince them with slick marketing—you simply need to let them know you exist.
What Actually Works
When you’re practicing real medicine—spending adequate time with patients, being accessible, actually solving their problems—those patients become your marketing department.
Over 80% of my patients are uninsured, and they found me because someone they trust told them about us.
Word of mouth: the original social media, still undefeated.
Yes, you need a basic website that explains what you offer and how to contact you. But you don’t need a $10,000 custom design with parallax scrolling. A simple, clear site that answers basic questions is enough.
What You Actually Need
Instead of a marketing budget, invest in:
Your Time: Building relationships takes precedence. Return phone calls. Answer emails. Be accessible. Revolutionary concepts, I know.
Clear Communication: Learn to explain things in simple terms rather than medicalese. Healthcare is confusing enough without you making it worse with jargon.
Perseverance and Patience: After losing close to 2,500 patients overnight when I converted my practice to DPC, it took about 6-9 months to break even. Around 12 months in, the practice became truly, consistently self-sustaining. Then again, I was doing it when “DPC” as a term didn’t even exist. Keep the course. Keep the faith. Trust the process.
The Real Barrier
When physicians tell me they’re worried about marketing costs, I often wonder if that’s the real concern or a convenient proxy for deeper fears about leaving traditional practice.
Marketing becomes the respectable excuse because it sounds practical and business-savvy, unlike admitting you’re terrified of financial uncertainty.
The actual barriers—fear of financial instability, uncertainty about making it work, concerns about isolation from colleagues—won’t be solved by a marketing budget, and they won’t be created by the lack of one.
The Bottom Line
You don’t need thousands of dollars in marketing to start a DPC practice. If you’re a (reasonably) good doctor, keep a tic-tac in your mouth, wear clean clothes, brush your hair, look patients in the eye, talk to them in their own language, meet them where the are at, stay honest and offer real value at a fair price, patients will find you….and they will tell everyone else.
Your job isn’t to convince people they need accessible primary care. Your job is simply to let them know you’re offering it and actually offer it.
Save your money for the lean months while you’re building your panel. Invest in making your practice excellent. The marketing will take care of itself.
And if someone tries to sell you a $5,000 social media marketing package for your DPC startup, save your money and buy a better lawn sign instead.






Exactly! You nailed it.
– An inexpensive A-frame sign near the road in front of the office,
– A free article in our local small-town newspaper,
– A basic website,
– And a friendly voice on the phone or when patients walked in our office asking for information was our LOW-budget marketing plan in 2019 and it worked like a charm. Five months and our practice was self-sustaining. Since then, we gained traction and grew organically through word of mouth: “the original social media”. As patients periodically move away or cancel a membership, there are always others waiting to join, without us spending a single cent on marketing.
I agree with Jack and Jill (ha! that was a coincidence!), but the three of us (myself included) transitioned from a FFS practice into DPC. That automatically gets you closer to the “word of mouth” tipping point. Some docs struggle to get patients because they’re starting in a completely new area with no name recognition, or people in their region are super attached to their insurance policies, or people have never heard about DPC so they have to do a lot of education, or it’s all of those things. Then there are docs who aren’t properly nurturing relationships with referral sources and potential patients. Plus post COVID, people are just different–there’s a general “trust recession”. People don’t trust physicians like they did in the past and they’re flocking to naturopaths and functional med.
Marketing requires putting yourself out there, even if it makes you uncomfortable. Don’t just take a business card from an employer and do nothing with it. You need to get your face in front of as many people as possible and then you have to continue talking with them. I think you have to do some paid advertising as well, just not $5000 worth. Learn how to run ads yourself, so you can spend $5/day on social media ads and get a decent return on your investment. Word of mouth referrals generally take off around 100 patients. Make that your initial goal, and then after that, maybe reduce or even stop the paid advertising.
TLDR: Practice good medicine, be kind to your patients, and also tell everyone and anyone and then even more people about your practice and how awesome it is. And maybe get a lawn sign like Jack suggested.