Is Your Dental Practice a Cyber Target?
The answer, increasingly, is yes! Here’s what you need to know.
Healthcare is now the most attacked sector in the U.S. for cybercrime, and dental practices are a growing target.
Your patient files contain a uniquely valuable combination of personal, financial, and medical data while your IT
defenses are typically far leaner than a hospital’s. That’s a combination cybercriminals are actively exploiting.
Quick Stats

Why Dentists Are in the Crosshairs
Dental offices are attractive targets for several reasons most practitioners don’t realize:
- Patient records hold SSNs, insurance data, and financial info. This is worth far more than a stolen credit card on the dark web.
- Small practices rarely have dedicated IT security staff or active system monitoring after hours.
- Third-party vendors (billing software, imaging systems, IT providers) are common entry points and you’re still liable under HIPAA when they’re breached.
- Legacy dental equipment often runs on outdated operating systems that no longer receive security patches.
“I turn my computer off at night, I don’t need it”
- Small businesses can’t hide from cybercriminals by assuming they’re too small or irrelevant to be worth targeting. In fact, the opposite is true.
- Limited resources mean limited defenses, and that’s exactly what makes them attractive. Simply turning off your computer at night or keeping it in the office offers no real protection.
- Attackers don’t need physical access. Inboxes are constantly flooded with carefully crafted emails designed to confuse and pressure your team into opening just enough of a crack for criminals to slip through.
- When it comes to your cybersecurity, your people are often your most vulnerable point of entry.
The Exposure Is Real
- In 2024, the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center received 859,532 complaints, with financial losses exceeding $16.6 billion, a 33% increase from 2023.
- Globally, cybercrime costs were projected to reach $10.5 trillion annually by 2025, according to Cybersecurity Ventures.
- For a dental practice, that’s not an abstract statistic. A single breach can trigger HIPAA notification requirements, regulatory fines, patient lawsuits, and days or weeks of lost productivity.
- The question isn’t whether your practice could be targeted… it’s whether you’ll be prepared when it is.
This Is Exactly What Cyber Insurance Is For
Standard business insurance won’t cover a cyberattack. Cyber liability policies are specifically designed to cover:
- Forensic investigation and patient notification costs
- Business interruption losses while systems are down
- Ransomware response and system restoration
- Regulatory fines and legal defense
- Patient lawsuits and settlement costs
Don’t wait for an incident to find out you’re unprotected… Work with R.K. Tongue.
Please contact your WVDA cyber insurance expert, Elizabeth Holmen at eholmen@rktongue.com or 410.752.4012 to review your current coverage or learn more about the importance of cyber liability for your dental practice. If you’re ready for a conversation schedule a consultation by scanning the QR code and putting a time on the calendar.


