Medical Practice Attorney • Covington, Louisiana

Medical Practice Attorney in Covington

By · Managing Partner
Last updated

Physician practice acquisitions carry a regulatory layer that standard business transactions do not. Corporate Practice of Medicine rules, Medicare and Medicaid provider number transfers, Stark Law compliance, and payor credentialing timelines all affect whether a deal closes cleanly and the practice keeps running. Our Covington medical practice attorneys guide physicians buying and selling practices across Healthcare, Finance, Professional Services and the healthcare sector, with Managing Partner Alex Lubyansky personally involved in every engagement.

Selective M&A Practice
Personal Attention
Senior Counsel on Every Deal

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What We Do

Alex Lubyansky handles medical practice acquisition law work for buyers and sellers in Covington and across the country. Here is what that looks like:

  • Purchase agreement drafting and negotiation for physician practice acquisitions
  • Corporate Practice of Medicine (CPOM) compliance and MSO structuring
  • Medicare and Medicaid provider number transfer and CHOW filing coordination
  • Payor contract assignment, credentialing, and insurance panel transfer
  • Stark Law and Anti-Kickback Statute (AKS) regulatory diligence
  • Physician employment agreement, partnership buy-in, and non-compete negotiation
  • Staged acquisition structuring (51% initial purchase with remainder option)
  • Psychiatry, behavioral health, and specialty practice acquisition counsel

Who We Serve

We work best with people who know what they want and are ready to move:

  • Physicians buying into or acquiring the practice where they currently work
  • Physicians doing a staged buy-in (initial percentage with option for remainder)
  • Medical practice owners selling to a physician group, PE platform, or hospital system
  • Psychiatrists or psychotherapists buying or selling a behavioral health practice
  • Physicians negotiating a partnership buy-in or co-ownership structure
  • Private equity healthcare platforms acquiring physician practices

See If Your Deal Is a Fit

Tell us what you are working on. We respond within one business day.

Your information is kept strictly confidential and will never be shared. Privacy Policy

Our Process

A structured, methodical approach to medical practice acquisition law

1

Regulatory Landscape Review

We assess the CPOM posture, Stark and AKS exposure, CON requirements, and Medicare and Medicaid provider number transfer mechanics for your specific transaction before any term sheet is signed.

2

Deal Structure and MSO Design

Managing Partner Alex Lubyansky structures the acquisition to respect CPOM limits, optimize risk and tax treatment, and where needed designs an MSO or friendly-PC arrangement that preserves clinical independence while delivering the economic deal.

3

Healthcare-Focused Due Diligence

We conduct diligence across payor contracts, Medicare and Medicaid enrollment, compliance program maturity, malpractice history, physician employment agreements, and patient volume concentrations to surface risks before closing.

4

Purchase Agreement and Ancillary Documents

We negotiate the purchase agreement, physician employment or non-compete terms, transition services arrangement, and earnout provisions tied to clinical performance metrics specific to the practice type.

5

Closing and Clinical Continuity

We coordinate CHOW filings, payor credentialing timelines, and post-closing integration to ensure patient care and reimbursement continue without interruption from day one of your ownership.

What Happens After You Submit

We don't take every matter. Here is what happens when you reach out.

1

Personal Review (Within 24 Hours)

Alex reviews your transaction details personally. No intake coordinators, no junior associates screening your submission.

2

Fit Assessment

We evaluate whether your deal aligns with our practice. Not every matter is a fit, and we will tell you directly if it is not.

3

Initial Conversation

If there is alignment, Alex schedules a direct call to discuss your transaction, timeline, and objectives.

4

Clear Engagement Terms

Before any work begins, you receive a written engagement letter with defined scope, timeline, and fee structure. No surprises.

Request Your Covington Engagement Assessment

Alex Lubyansky handles every medical practice acquisition law engagement personally.

15+ years of M&A experience. Nationwide. One attorney on every deal.

Request Engagement Assessment

We review every transaction inquiry within one business day.

Your information is kept strictly confidential and will never be shared. Privacy Policy

Questions to Ask Any M&A Attorney Before Hiring

Use these before you call any firm, including ours.

1. "Who will actually handle my transaction?"

At many firms, a partner sells the work and a junior associate does it. Ask for the name of the attorney who will draft and negotiate your documents.

2. "How many M&A transactions has the lead attorney closed in the past 12 months?"

Volume indicates current, active deal experience, not just credentials from years ago.

3. "What is your experience with my deal size and industry?"

A $500K SBA acquisition and a $50M PE deal require different skill sets. Make sure the attorney has handled transactions similar to yours.

4. "Will you coordinate with my CPA, financial advisor, and broker?"

M&A transactions require a team. Your attorney should work with your other advisors, not in a silo.

5. "How do you handle post-closing disputes?"

Reps, warranties, and indemnification claims surface months after closing. Ask whether the firm handles post-closing litigation or refers it out.

6. "What is your fee structure, and what drives cost?"

Ask how the engagement is scoped, what is included, and what factors drive cost increases. Defined scope with a retainer gives the clearest cost picture.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions from Covington clients

What does a medical practice attorney do?
A medical practice attorney handles the legal and regulatory side of buying or selling a physician practice. This includes structuring the deal to comply with Corporate Practice of Medicine rules, conducting diligence on payor contracts and Medicare enrollment, negotiating the purchase agreement and physician employment terms, and coordinating provider number transfers. At Acquisition Stars, Managing Partner Alex Lubyansky personally handles every physician practice transaction.
What is a staged acquisition of a medical practice?
A staged acquisition is a common structure where the buyer acquires an initial ownership percentage, often 51%, with a contractual right or obligation to purchase the remaining interest over time. This structure lets the buyer begin building equity while the seller transitions gradually, and it can align incentives around patient retention and practice performance. The legal documents must carefully address buy-in price, trigger conditions, and each party's rights during the interim period.
How does Corporate Practice of Medicine affect a physician practice acquisition?
Most states restrict ownership of medical practices to licensed physicians. When a non-physician buyer is involved, the deal typically requires a Management Services Organization structure that separates the clinical entity from the business operations. In strong CPOM states, the structure must hold up under state scrutiny while still delivering the economic deal the parties negotiated. We design structures that work in your specific state.
What happens to Medicare and Medicaid enrollment when a practice is sold?
Medicare and Medicaid provider numbers and enrollment do not automatically transfer to a new owner. Depending on the transaction structure, the buyer may need to file a Change of Ownership (CHOW) with CMS, apply for new enrollment, or reassign billing privileges. The timing of these filings directly affects cash flow after closing. We build the provider number transition into the deal timeline so reimbursement does not stall.
Can a physician buy the practice they currently work at?
Yes, and it is one of the most common physician practice transactions we handle. The physician already knows the patient base, the payor mix, and the operations, which simplifies due diligence but creates its own negotiating dynamics. Key issues include how the practice is valued relative to the physician's existing compensation, how a transition period is structured if the selling physician stays on, and how non-compete terms are written to reflect the physician's prior relationship with the practice.
What can I expect during an initial consultation in Covington?
During your confidential initial consultation in Covington, we'll discuss your medical practice acquisition law needs, review your current situation, assess potential challenges specific to Louisiana, and outline a clear path forward. We'll explain our process, answer your questions, and determine if we're the right fit for your needs.
Do you work with companies outside of Covington?
Yes, we represent clients nationwide while maintaining a strong presence in Covington. Our managing partner handles medical practice acquisition law matters across all 50 states, coordinating with local counsel where state-specific requirements apply.

Need Specific Guidance?

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M&A Market: Covington & the New Orleans Metro

New Orleans' M&A market is shaped by its unique position as a major energy services hub, a global port city, and the cultural capital of the Gulf South. The region's oil and gas services sector, though cyclical, generates substantial deal activity in marine services, oilfield equipment, and environmental remediation. The city's $10B+ hospitality and tourism industry drives acquisitions in restaurant groups, event services, and hotel management, while healthcare consolidation has accelerated as systems like Ochsner Health expand through acquisition.

Top M&A Sectors Near Covington

  • Energy & Offshore Services
  • Hospitality & Restaurant Groups
  • Maritime & Port Logistics
  • Healthcare Systems & Specialty Clinics
  • Environmental & Coastal Remediation

Deal Environment

New Orleans deal flow is influenced by energy commodity cycles, with marine and oilfield services businesses becoming available at attractive valuations during downturns. The hospitality sector offers steady M&A opportunities, though buyers must account for tourism seasonality and hurricane-related business interruption risk in their models.

Why Acquire in the New Orleans Area

Louisiana's Industrial Tax Exemption Program and Opportunity Zone designations in the metro create meaningful tax incentives for certain acquisitions, and the port of New Orleans (among the top 15 U.S. ports by tonnage) provides a logistics advantage for import/export-oriented businesses. The region's unique cultural identity also creates defensible consumer brands with strong local loyalty.

Louisiana Legal Considerations

Louisiana operates under a civil law legal system (derived from French law) rather than common law, which affects contract interpretation, corporate governance, and due diligence procedures in M&A transactions in ways that differ meaningfully from all other U.S. states; acquirers unfamiliar with Louisiana civil code should seek specialized local counsel.

Louisiana Legal Considerations for Medical Practice Acquisition Law

Non-Compete Laws

Enforceable under strict statutory requirements. Must specify parishes by name.

Filing Requirements

Entity mergers and changes of control require filing with the Louisiana Secretary of State. Bulk sales notifications must be filed per the Bulk Transfer Law. Louisiana law requires that foreign entities qualify before doing business in the state.

Key Louisiana Considerations

  • Louisiana is a civil law jurisdiction (not common law), meaning its contract and property law principles differ fundamentally from all other states. Acquisition agreements governed by Louisiana law require specific drafting considerations.
  • As a community property state, spousal consent ("concurrence") is required for the sale of community property, including business interests acquired during marriage
  • Louisiana's non-compete statute requires geographic restrictions to be identified by specific parish names, and failure to do so renders the entire covenant unenforceable

Louisiana Bar Authority

Louisiana State Bar Association (mandatory unified bar). Unified/integrated bar. Membership required to practice law in Louisiana.

Bar association website

Louisiana Federal and Business Courts

Federal districts: E.D. La., M.D. La., W.D. La.

Business court: No dedicated business court division. Commercial disputes proceed through general civil courts.

Louisiana M&A Market Context

Louisiana M&A is concentrated in energy (oil, gas, petrochemicals), maritime services, and healthcare, with the New Orleans and Baton Rouge corridors as the primary deal markets.

Recent Louisiana Legislative Changes (2024-2025)

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Watchpoints

Common Covington Medical Practice Acquisition Law Pitfalls

These are the items we see derail medical practice acquisition law transactions in the Covington market. Each one is rooted in current statutory law, recent legislative changes, or recurring patterns from the deals Alex has handled.

1

Recent Louisiana statutory change buyers and sellers miss

State statute

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2

Louisiana non-compete enforcement and earn-out exposure

State legal framework

Enforceable under strict statutory requirements. Must specify parishes by name.

"Sign a weak LOI, and you'll spend months watching your deal terms erode."
Alex Lubyansky · Alex LinkedIn Published (Notion library)
3

Louisiana regulatory framework attorneys flag at LOI

State statute

Securities regulated by Louisiana Office of Financial Institutions (ofi.louisiana.gov). Louisiana's civil law heritage means certain contract concepts (including non-competes) are interpreted under civil code principles. Blue Sky notice filings required for Reg D.

Attorney perspective on medical practice attorney matters in Covington

Alex Lubyansky, Managing Partner at Acquisition Stars
"A seller note with weak terms is a discount on your sale price dressed up as full consideration."
Alex Lubyansky, Senior Counsel On valuation (principle) (Alex LinkedIn Drafts (AJ-Work))

15+ years of M&A and securities transaction experience Senior counsel on every engagement Admitted in Michigan, practicing nationwide

Reviewed by Alex Lubyansky on . Read full bio

Ready to Talk About Your Covington Deal?

Alex Lubyansky handles every engagement personally. Tell us about your transaction and we will let you know if there is a fit.

Request Engagement Assessment

Tell us about your deal. We review every submission and respond within one business day.

Your information is kept strictly confidential and will never be shared. Privacy Policy

One attorney on every deal. Nationwide. 15+ years of M&A experience.