Starting a medical practice in Georgia.
The 7-phase launch blueprint applies to every state. But credentialing timing, payer mix, entity rules, and scope-of-practice all shift state to state. Here's what changes when you're launching in Georgia.
Payer landscape.
Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield of Georgia, UnitedHealthcare, Aetna, Cigna, and Kaiser Permanente (Atlanta area) lead; Anthem is dominant.
Cost context.
Atlanta has high commercial rent and growing labor costs; the rest of Georgia is moderate to low cost.
On NPs and PAs.
Nurse Practitioners: Restricted practice.
Physician Assistants: Georgia PAs practice under a supervising physician with a written practice agreement; specific protocols apply.
Why local counsel matters.
Georgia non-compete rules and entity disclosure requirements warrant local counsel before you sign anything.
The 7 phases apply. The details shift.
Start with the phase that matches where you are, then layer the Georgia-specific watchouts above onto your build sequence.
The decision before the decision.
The numbers that decide whether you launch or stall.
The structure under everything you'll build.
The clock that decides when you actually get paid.
The systems that let your practice actually run.
Getting your first 100 patients without burning your runway.
From 'open and billing' to 'profitable and sustainable.'
Talk to the team before you pour the foundation wrong.
One free consultation. Real answers. We'll tell you whether you need us — and if you don't, we'll tell you what to do anyway.
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