DPC vs Concierge Whats the Difference?

If you're a physician exploring practice models outside of traditional fee-for-service medicine, you've probably come across both of these terms. And you've probably noticed that people use them interchangeably, which doesn't help at all.
Direct Primary Care and concierge medicine share some DNA. Both offer smaller patient panels, longer appointments, and more personal relationships with patients. Both charge a membership or retainer fee. From a distance, they look like the same thing.
They're not. The differences matter, especially when it comes to how you run your business, how you get paid, and how you market your practice to patients.
The Core Difference: Insurance
This is the dividing line, and everything else flows from it.
Concierge medicine charges patients a membership fee (often called a retainer) for enhanced access and longer visits. But the practice also bills insurance for clinical services. The retainer covers the "extras": guaranteed same-day appointments, direct phone access, longer visits, sometimes wellness planning. The actual medical care still runs through insurance.
Direct Primary Care eliminates insurance from the equation entirely for primary care services. Patients pay a monthly membership fee, and that fee covers everything: office visits, basic labs, procedures, phone and text access, sometimes even medications at cost. No insurance billing. No copays. No claims.
That single distinction creates two very different business models, patient experiences, and marketing challenges.
How They Compare Side by Side
Patient panel size
Concierge practices typically carry 200 to 600 patients. DPC practices run 400 to 800, though many cap at 600. Both are significantly smaller than a traditional primary care panel of 2,000 to 2,500, which is where the longer appointment times and better access come from.
Cost to the patient
Concierge retainers tend to run higher: $1,500 to $5,000+ per year, sometimes much more for "VIP" concierge practices. The patient also still pays insurance premiums and may have copays or deductibles for the clinical services billed through insurance.
DPC memberships typically run $50 to $150 per month ($600 to $1,800 per year). That fee covers primary care with no additional billing. Many DPC patients pair their membership with a high-deductible health plan or health share for catastrophic and specialist coverage.
Who the patient is
Concierge medicine tends to attract higher-income patients who can afford both the retainer and full insurance coverage. The value proposition is access and convenience on top of traditional insurance.
DPC attracts a broader range of patients: young adults without employer insurance, self-employed professionals, small business employees, families looking for a better primary care experience, and people frustrated with the insurance system. The value proposition is better care at a lower total cost.
Administrative burden
Concierge practices still deal with insurance: coding, billing, prior authorizations, claim denials, compliance. The retainer adds revenue but doesn't remove the paperwork.
DPC practices eliminate insurance administration almost entirely. No billing department. No coding headaches. No prior auth calls. This is one of the biggest operational advantages of the DPC model and a major reason physicians choose it.
Revenue model
Concierge revenue comes from two streams: the retainer fee plus insurance reimbursement. This can be lucrative but creates dependency on two separate systems.
DPC revenue comes from one stream: membership fees. It's simpler, more predictable, and easier to forecast. But it also means every dollar comes directly from patient acquisition and retention. There's no insurance network sending patients your way.
Why This Matters for Marketing
This is where the conversation gets relevant for your practice growth.
Concierge practices can lean on their insurance network participation to drive some baseline patient volume. The retainer model layers on top of an existing referral and discovery infrastructure.
DPC practices have to build that infrastructure from scratch. You need to educate patients on what DPC even is, because most people have never heard of it. You need to explain why paying a monthly fee for a doctor makes sense when they already have insurance through work. You need to show up in local search results when patients look for affordable, accessible care.
The marketing playbook for a concierge practice and a DPC practice are not the same. A marketing agency that treats them as interchangeable will waste your money. The messaging is different. The target audience is different. The objections you need to overcome are different.
This is exactly why JumpStart focuses exclusively on DPC. We understand that your marketing challenges are specific to this model, and we build strategies around that reality.
Which Model Is Right for You?
That's a decision only you can make, and it depends on your financial goals, your tolerance for insurance administration, the demographics of your area, and what kind of practice you want to run day to day.
But if you've already chosen DPC, or you're leaning that way, the most important thing to understand is that your marketing can't be generic. The patients you need to reach don't know what DPC is. The employers you should be pitching are actively looking for alternatives to traditional insurance. And the message that resonates with your audience is fundamentally different from what works for a concierge practice.
Thinking about how to position and grow your DPC practice? Schedule a free consultation and let's figure out the right approach for your market.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is DPC the same as concierge medicine? No. Both offer smaller panels and more personal care, but concierge medicine charges a retainer fee on top of insurance billing, while DPC charges a monthly membership that covers all primary care services without involving insurance. The business models, patient demographics, and marketing strategies are different.
Is DPC cheaper than concierge medicine? For patients, yes. DPC memberships typically run $50 to $150 per month. Concierge retainers often range from $1,500 to $5,000+ per year, and the patient still pays insurance premiums and potential copays. DPC tends to attract a broader income range as a result.
Can I bill insurance and run a DPC practice? By definition, DPC does not bill insurance for primary care services. Some practices operate a hybrid model where they bill insurance for certain services, but this is not standard DPC and introduces the administrative complexity that most DPC physicians specifically want to avoid.
Why does the DPC vs. concierge distinction matter for marketing? Because the target audiences are different. Concierge patients already have insurance and are paying extra for premium access. DPC patients are often looking for an alternative to insurance-based care entirely. The messaging, the objections, and the channels that work are different for each model.
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