PUBLISHER: Mordor Intelligence | PRODUCT CODE: 2072696
PUBLISHER: Mordor Intelligence | PRODUCT CODE: 2072696
According to Mordor Intelligence, the united states practice management system market size is projected to expand from USD 4.75 billion in 2025 and USD 5.08 billion in 2026 to USD 7.37 billion by 2031, registering a CAGR of 7.73% between 2026 to 2031.

This report is Segmented by Product (Integrated, Standalone), Component (Software, Services), Delivery Mode (Web-Based, Cloud-Based/SaaS, On-Premise), Functionality (Scheduling, Billing, Prior Auth, Records, Analytics, Patient Engagement, Telehealth, E-Prescribing), and End User (Physician Offices, Hospitals, Labs, Pharmacies, Ambulatory). Market Forecasts are Provided in Value (USD).
The United States practice management system market is being shaped by a billing environment that has become materially harder for providers to manage with fragmented tools. Kodiak Solutions reported that net revenue leakage from final denials and bad debt reached USD 48.4 billion across U.S. hospitals in 2025, up from USD 38.6 billion in 2024, while the median final denial rate rose from 2.5% to 2.7%. Premier also reported that claims adjudication costs providers USD 25.7 billion and that USD 18 billion of that spend is potentially unnecessary expense, which shows how much avoidable rework remains in the payment cycle. As a result, practices are giving higher priority to eligibility checks, pre-submission claim scrubbing, coding support, and denial prevention functions that can be tied directly to cash collection. This is why billing, coding, and claims management remain the largest functionality block in the United States practice management system market and why vendors are increasingly positioning measurable revenue recovery as the central value proposition.
The United States practice management system market is moving toward unified administrative and clinical platforms because providers now want fewer data handoffs and fewer reconciliation delays across scheduling, documentation, and revenue cycle activity. Integrated practice management systems controlled 61.9% of revenue in 2025, which confirms that buyers are already favoring broader suites over isolated point products. Epic showed the direction of travel at HIMSS 2026 with Penny for billing and denial avoidance, alongside agent-driven workflow tools that sit inside the main platform rather than outside it. athenahealth also expanded embedded revenue cycle improvements in its Spring 2026 athenaOne release, reinforcing the same shift toward connected workflows and regular platform-level upgrades. In practical terms, the integrated model reduces duplicate entry, keeps patient and billing data in one operating layer, and makes interoperability readiness easier to evaluate during procurement.
The main brake on faster replacement remains the time and disruption involved in moving live administrative operations from one system to another. Implementation now goes beyond software installation because practices often need data cleansing, workflow redesign, staff retraining, payer rule alignment, and a parallel operating period before a full switch can happen. That burden is especially difficult for independent practices and community operators that do not have internal project teams or spare billing capacity during go-live periods. The rapid expansion of services, which is projected to grow at 9.3% through 2031, shows that many buyers are paying for outside implementation, training, and managed revenue cycle support instead of relying only on internal teams. This slows purchasing in the short run, even as it supports recurring vendor revenue inside the United States practice management system market.
Other drivers and restraints analyzed in the detailed report include:
For complete list of drivers and restraints, kindly check the Table Of Contents.
Integrated practice management systems held 61.87% of revenue in 2025 and are projected to expand at 8.25% CAGR through 2031, which gives them both the largest base and the strongest momentum among product options. In product terms, this segment now represents the clearest center of gravity in the United States practice management system market because providers want one system to handle scheduling, documentation links, billing flow, and patient communication. EHR and EMR integrated systems remain the largest volume layer inside this group because health systems and larger physician organizations still favor single-vendor operating environments. Revenue-cycle integrated products are also gaining ground because providers want charge capture, edits, and denial management connected more tightly to front-end registration and back-end collections. Patient engagement integrated tools are becoming more relevant as digital intake, payment estimation, and self-service workflows move from optional features to normal administrative practice. E-prescribing integration is also shifting toward baseline functionality as broader interoperability expectations continue to rise across provider settings.
This direction supports the view that the United States practice management system industry is becoming less tolerant of disconnected software stacks. Epic, athenahealth, eClinicalWorks, and Veradigm are all leaning into broader workflow coverage because providers increasingly judge value by whether a platform reduces handoffs and missed revenue opportunities, not by how many separate modules can be purchased. Standalone systems still retain a meaningful share of demand, at near 38% of product revenue in 2025, because smaller physician offices and specialty clinics often want simpler scheduling and billing tools without the full complexity of a larger suite. Those buyers still value lower switching friction, easier configuration, and lower perceived operating burden, especially when clinical systems are already in place or when the office wants to avoid a full platform conversion. Over time, modular SaaS packaging is narrowing that gap, and that is gradually shifting more of the United States practice management system market toward integrated offers even in smaller practice settings.
Software accounted for 63.83% of component revenue in 2025, which reflects the central role of licensing, subscriptions, and core application access across provider organizations of every size. That installed software base remains the commercial foundation of the United States practice management system market because no practice can operate its scheduling, registration, billing, and reporting processes without a system of record and workflow control layer. Software revenue also stays elevated because buyers are adding AI-assisted coding, workflow orchestration, analytics, and patient communication capabilities inside the platform rather than through outside tools. As vendors bundle more functions into unified suites, software becomes harder to replace module by module, which supports retention and deeper account value. This is one reason the leading vendors continue to widen their product scope even when buyers say they want simpler technology estates.
Services are growing faster, at 9.34% CAGR through 2031, and that growth says more about implementation difficulty than about a reduced need for software. Managed revenue cycle services are expanding because many providers want direct support with claims workflows, denial management, collections, and operational change rather than a technology-only handoff. Training and support are also taking on a larger role because new AI and automation features alter work routines for front-desk staff, billers, and managers instead of merely adding another screen to the system. AdvancedMD, Veradigm, and CareCloud have all emphasized workflow-enhancing releases in 2026, which shows that successful deployment now depends on operating support as much as on technical availability. In effect, the United States practice management system industry is generating more service revenue because platform sophistication is rising faster than internal administrative capacity in many provider organizations.