Why med spas need a good faith exam comes down to three things: valid malpractice coverage, defensible treatment orders, and a valuation that survives due diligence. A missing or weak exam shows up later as a denied claim, a board complaint, or a lower buyer offer. To fix this, a qualified provider must document every exam before treatment begins.
Key takeaways
- A missing or weak exam can void malpractice coverage that depends on a documented patient-provider relationship. (Jump to Section)
- Regulatory investigations almost always start by reviewing exam documentation first. (Jump to Section)
- Buyers and investors treat inconsistent good faith exam practices as a red flag during due diligence. (Jump to Section)
A Missing Exam Can Void Malpractice Coverage
Malpractice policies require proof that a licensed provider reviewed the patient first. The good faith exam is that proof. Without it, many malpractice carriers deny the claim outright, regardless of how the treatment went.
- Claim denials: Malpractice carriers can deny a claim if the chart does not show a licensed provider reviewed the patient’s history and signed off on the treatment plan before it happened.
- Policy limits: Standard policies commonly carry per-claim limits near one million dollars and aggregate caps around three million, but those limits pay out only if the exam meets the standard the policy assumes.
- Third-party exam platforms: Many outsourced exam platforms state in their own terms that the evaluation does not create a patient-provider relationship, which shifts the liability back to the medical director.
A malpractice carrier only cares about what the chart says, not what the exam platform advertises. If the chart doesn’t name the provider who reviewed that patient before that treatment, the carrier has no proof to point to when a claim comes in.
State Boards Review Exam Documentation First
State medical and nursing boards do not open an investigation by interviewing staff. They open the chart first. Good faith exam documentation shows whether a qualified provider evaluated the patient before treatment began.
- California: SB 351, effective January 1, 2026, bars registered nurses from performing the exam and requires a physician, nurse practitioner, or physician assistant to issue a patient-specific order.
- Texas: The board requires the same tier of licensed prescriber and flags vague or templated exams as a compliance failure.
- Florida: A telehealth exam is allowed, but the clinical decision must still come from a licensed prescriber, not an RN or unlicensed staff.
- Arizona, Kentucky, and Louisiana: Each state’s nursing board has issued its own advisory guidance on who may perform the exam and under what supervision.
- Arkansas: The Nursing Board clarified in 2025 that the term “good faith exam” does not appear anywhere in the state’s Nurse Practice Act.
A provider authorized to perform the exam in one state may not meet the standard in another. Multi-location med spas need a state-by-state good faith exam protocol, not one corporate template, and should confirm current authorization against the American Med Spa Association’s overview before assigning the exam to staff.
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Weak Exam Records Lower Valuation and Stall Deals
A buyer’s diligence team requests good faith exam documentation right alongside the P&L. Acquirers treat inconsistent good faith exams as a licensing and liability issue that follows the business after the sale. Gaps in that record can change the outcome of the sale.
- Lower offers: Buyers cut the offer price to account for the compliance risk.
- Delayed closing: The timeline stretches while the seller fixes incomplete records.
- Failed deals: Some buyers walk away entirely once the gaps surface.
This applies to any size med spa. A single-location med spa with a documented, consistent good faith exam process closes faster and at a stronger multiple than a multi-location group with a folder of incomplete intake forms.
How Medical Director Co. Protects All Three at Once
Medical Director Co. assigns a licensed medical director to your practice who performs or oversees every good faith exam. That medical director holds the license type required by your state, whether that’s a physician, nurse practitioner, or physician assistant. Every good faith exam follows the same chart format, so the record looks the same to a carrier, a board, or a buyer. The medical director also reviews good faith exams on a set schedule, not only after a complaint or an audit forces one.
FAQ
Can a weak good faith exam void my malpractice insurance?
A weak good faith exam can void your coverage. Many carriers require documentation showing a valid patient-provider relationship before they will honor a claim. Without that record, the carrier can argue the underlying care fell outside what the policy was written to cover.
Do regulators really start here during an investigation?
Regulators typically review good faith exam documentation first, because it establishes whether the provider-patient relationship and the standard of care were met. A weak or missing exam record shapes the rest of the investigation before a reviewer looks at anything else.
Does this affect the value of my med spa if I want to sell it?
Inconsistent good faith exam practices directly affect valuation. They are a common finding during buyer due diligence, and they can reduce offers, extend closing timelines, or end negotiations. Buyers treat this record as a proxy for how the entire practice is run.
Is this only a risk for high-volume med spas?
Volume is not the deciding factor. A single bad outcome at a low-volume practice can trigger the same board investigation and liability exposure as one at a high-volume clinic, since the exposure comes from the exam itself, not the patient count.
What is the fastest way to reduce this risk?
Put a written good faith exam policy in place, and confirm that every provider performing or delegating exams is properly licensed for that role in your state. Consistency, not volume, is what carriers, boards, and buyers are actually evaluating.
Making Good Faith Exams Non-Negotiable
A documented good faith exam is the one record that satisfies a malpractice carrier, a state board, and a buyer’s due diligence team at the same time. Most practices only discover the gap during a claim, an audit, or a sale, when the fix costs far more than the exam itself ever would have. Put a written good faith exam policy in place now, and confirm every provider performing or delegating exams holds the right license for your state.
Don't Wait for an Audit to Find the Gap
Close it before a carrier, a board, or a buyer does.

Bolton M. Harris, J.D., is a seasoned attorney with a formidable background in criminal law and a focus on healthcare law and compliance. As the in-house legal counsel at Medical Director Co., Harris brings a unique blend of prosecutorial experience and regulatory expertise to support healthcare professionals across Texas. Her career spans roles as a prosecutor in multiple counties and now as a trusted advisor on the legal intricacies of medical practice operations.
Education & Early Career
Bolton Harris completed her undergraduate studies at Southern Methodist University (SMU) in 2013. During her time at SMU, she was not only a dedicated student but also a competitive athlete on the university’s women’s swimming team. She went on to earn her Juris Doctor from Texas A&M University School of Law in 2016 and became a member of the Texas Bar that same year. Armed with a strong academic foundation and discipline honed as a student-athlete, Harris embarked on a career in criminal law immediately after law school.
Prosecutorial Experience in Texas
Bolton Harris began her legal career in public service as a criminal prosecutor. She served as an Assistant District Attorney in multiple jurisdictions, where she quickly rose through the ranks and handled a broad spectrum of cases. Some highlights of her prosecutorial career include:
- Assistant District Attorney, Dallas County, Texas: Prosecuted a high volume of criminal cases in one of the state’s busiest DA offices, gaining extensive trial experience in both misdemeanor and felony courts.
- Assistant District Attorney, Ellis County, Texas: Continued to hone her courtroom advocacy skills, known for meticulous case preparation and a tenacious pursuit of justice on behalf of the community.
- Assistant District Attorney, Navarro County, Texas: Broadened her legal expertise by handling diverse criminal matters in a smaller county, working closely with law enforcement and community leaders to uphold the law.
Through these roles, Harris built a reputation for being a tough but fair advocate. She brought numerous cases to trial and developed an in-depth understanding of the criminal justice system. This distinguished prosecutorial background laid a strong foundation for the next phase of her career in the private sector.
Healthcare Law & Compliance at Medical Director Co.
After her tenure as a prosecutor, Harris shifted her focus to healthcare law, applying her legal acumen to the medical field. She recognized that the same attention to detail and tenacity that served her in criminal law could benefit healthcare providers navigating complex regulations. Embracing this new direction, Harris became well-versed in the intricate laws governing medical practices – from licensing requirements to patient safety and privacy standards – and is passionate about helping practitioners stay compliant.
In her current role as the in-house attorney for Medical Director Co., Bolton Harris oversees all legal and compliance matters for the organization and its clients. Medical Director Co. is a nurse-owned firm that connects nurse practitioners (NPs), physician assistants (PAs), and registered nurses with qualified medical directors and collaborating physicians, offering fast placements and comprehensive compliance support for healthcare practices. Harris ensures that each of these partnerships and clinical ventures adheres to all applicable state and federal laws. She is responsible for drafting and reviewing collaborative practice agreements, advising on regulatory requirements, and providing ongoing legal counsel as clients establish and grow their clinics. Drawing on her prosecutorial eye for risk management, Harris proactively identifies potential legal issues and addresses them before they escalate, giving healthcare professionals peace of mind.
Bolton M. Harris’s multifaceted expertise – spanning high-stakes courtroom litigation to detailed healthcare compliance – makes her a formidable legal ally. Whether advocating in front of a jury or guiding a medical practice through regulatory hurdles, she remains committed to the highest standards of the legal profession. Her blend of courtroom-tested skill and healthcare law knowledge ensures that clients of Medical Director Co. receive elite-level counsel and steadfast protection in an ever-evolving legal landscape.