Running a dental practice in Port St. Lucie means navigating a distinct set of employment law obligations that apply to healthcare employers in Florida. Unlike general small businesses, dental practices have additional layers of compliance: federal OSHA bloodborne pathogen standards, workers' compensation requirements that kick in at just four employees, and state wage laws that have been rising annually. This guide covers the core employment law framework that every dental practice owner and office manager in Port St. Lucie needs to understand.
Note: this guide provides general educational information. Employment law is complex and fact-specific. Consult a licensed employment attorney or HR professional for advice specific to your practice.
Florida's minimum wage is set by Amendment 2 to the Florida Constitution, which mandated $1.00 annual increases starting in 2021 until the rate reaches $15.00 per hour, after which future increases are tied to inflation. For 2026, the standard minimum wage is $14.00 per hour effective January 1, 2026, rising to $15.00 per hour on September 30, 2026.
For tipped employees — a category that rarely applies in dental offices, where service charges are uncommon — employers may pay a reduced base wage as long as tips bring total hourly compensation to at least the minimum wage. Dental receptionists, hygienists, and assistants are virtually never tipped employees and must be paid the full standard minimum wage.
Most dental office staff — hygienists, assistants, and coordinators — earn well above minimum wage due to licensure requirements and market competition. The minimum wage floor is most relevant for entry-level front-desk or sterilization technician roles. Dental practices in St. Lucie County should review compensation annually as the wage floor rises.
Florida requires employers in most industries, including healthcare, to carry workers' compensation insurance when they have four or more employees. A standard dental practice with a dentist, hygienist, dental assistant, and front-desk coordinator reaches this threshold immediately. Most practices in Port St. Lucie have more than four employees and must carry workers' comp coverage without exception.
Key requirements for dental practice workers' compensation in Florida:
| Requirement | Details |
|---|---|
| Coverage threshold | 4 or more employees (including part-time) |
| Owner inclusion | Corporate officers may elect to exclude themselves; sole proprietors and partners are automatically excluded but may elect to be covered |
| Enforcement | Florida Division of Workers' Compensation; stop-work orders for non-compliance |
| Classification codes | Dental offices typically classified under NCCI code 8010 (Dentist) or similar healthcare codes |
| Reportable injuries | All work-related injuries must be reported to carrier within 7 days of employer knowledge |
Dental practices face specific workers' compensation risks: needle-stick injuries, musculoskeletal strain from prolonged positioning, chemical exposures, and slip-and-fall incidents. Maintaining proper OSHA protocols reduces both incident rates and workers' comp costs, since experience modifications affect your premium over time.
Federal OSHA's Bloodborne Pathogens Standard (29 CFR 1910.1030) applies to all dental employers with employees who have occupational exposure to blood or other potentially infectious materials. In a dental practice, this includes dentists, hygienists, assistants, and any staff who handle instruments, waste, or patient materials. The standard is enforced by federal OSHA in Florida, as Florida does not operate a state OSHA plan.
Core compliance requirements include:
OSHA inspections can be triggered by employee complaints, referrals, or random targeting of high-risk industries. Dental practices in Port St. Lucie should conduct annual internal audits of their Exposure Control Plan and training records.
The federal Fair Labor Standards Act requires employers to pay non-exempt employees 1.5 times their regular rate of pay for all hours worked over 40 in a workweek. Florida does not have a separate state overtime law — the federal standard applies.
Most dental office staff — receptionists, dental assistants, and sterilization technicians — are non-exempt and must be paid overtime. Licensed dental hygienists employed as W-2 employees are typically also non-exempt unless they meet specific FLSA exemptions (the learned professional exemption may apply in limited circumstances based on duties and compensation). Dentist employees earning over $684 per week performing exempt duties may qualify as exempt professionals.
Common overtime compliance pitfalls in dental offices include: requiring staff to come in early for setup or stay late for cleanup without counting those minutes as compensable time, off-the-clock patient charting, and misclassifying hygienists as independent contractors to avoid overtime obligations.
Florida is an at-will employment state. Either the employer or employee may terminate the employment relationship at any time for any reason — or no reason at all — as long as the reason is not an illegal one. This gives dental practice owners in Port St. Lucie significant flexibility in staffing decisions.
At-will employment does not, however, permit termination for reasons that violate federal or state law. Illegal reasons include: termination based on race, color, national origin, sex, religion, disability, age (40+), or pregnancy under Title VII, the ADA, and the ADEA; retaliation for filing a workers' comp claim or whistleblower complaint; and retaliation for exercising FMLA rights (if FMLA applies to your practice size).
The ACA's employer mandate requires Applicable Large Employers — those averaging 50 or more FTEs — to offer affordable health coverage to full-time employees. Most dental practices in Port St. Lucie are single-location offices with 5 to 20 employees and have no federal mandate to provide health insurance.
However, the dental industry has historically high rates of employer-sponsored health coverage because the labor market demands it. Dental hygienists in St. Lucie County — where qualified hygienists are in demand — routinely factor health benefits into their employment decisions. Practices that do not offer coverage compete at a disadvantage against those that do, particularly for experienced hygienists and certified dental assistants.
Options for dental practices that want to offer benefits include: traditional group health plans (minimum 2 employees, participation requirements apply), the SHOP marketplace for firms with 1–50 FTEs, Individual Coverage HRAs (ICHRA, any size, no participation minimum), and Qualified Small Employer HRAs (QSEHRA, under 50 FTEs, no existing group plan). A licensed health insurance broker can compare these options based on your practice size and goals.
Looking to set up employee health benefits for your dental practice in Port St. Lucie? A licensed agent can compare group plans, ICHRA, and SHOP options at no charge.
Get a Free QuoteAlso see: HR Compliance Guide · Gulf Coast Health Guide · Florida County Health Insurance · GulfCoastPlans.com