When private equity firms look at behavioral health acquisition markets, they typically start with the obvious: major metros, high population density, strong commercial payer mix. What the data actually shows is more counterintuitive.
We scored 27,818 behavioral health facilities across all US counties using three dimensions โ provider supply gap, commercial payer concentration, and PE platform penetration. The markets that score highest aren't the obvious ones.
What "Underserved" Actually Means for PE
In PE acquisition context, underserved doesn't simply mean rural or low-income. It means a market where three conditions converge: meaningful unmet demand, limited existing PE platform presence, and a commercial payer mix that can support the revenue multiples required for a viable roll-up.
A county with 40% Medicaid concentration and no PE platforms may look like whitespace on the surface. But entering a market where the majority of revenue is tied to state Medicaid rates โ which face significant pressure through 2027โ2028 โ creates a different risk profile than a market where commercial insurance is dominant.
The Scoring Methodology
Our Acquisition Score (0โ100) weights three factors: Demand (35%), reflecting population need and growth; Fragmentation (35%), reflecting solo operator ratios and HRSA shortage designations; and Market Quality (30%), reflecting payer mix, clinical quality signals, and multi-location density.
The Top 10 Markets
The highest-scoring behavioral health acquisition markets in our national dataset share a common profile: mid-sized metros (not megacities), growing populations in the 25โ44 demographic, commercial insurance rates above 55%, and zero or minimal existing PE platform presence.
| # | Market | State | Score | Solo Ratio | Commercial Mix |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Raleigh-Cary | NC | 94 | 81% | 67% |
| 2 | Austin-Round Rock | TX | 91 | 78% | 71% |
| 3 | Nashville-Davidson | TN | 89 | 76% | 64% |
| 4 | Salt Lake City | UT | 87 | 79% | 69% |
| 5 | Columbus | OH | 85 | 74% | 61% |
| 6 | Charlotte-Concord | NC | 83 | 73% | 63% |
| 7 | Indianapolis-Carmel | IN | 81 | 77% | 60% |
| 8 | Richmond | VA | 79 | 75% | 62% |
| 9 | Boise City | ID | 77 | 82% | 66% |
| 10 | Omaha-Council Bluffs | NE | 75 | 80% | 59% |
What These Markets Have in Common
Every market in the top 10 has a solo operator ratio above 73% โ meaning fewer than 1 in 4 behavioral health providers are affiliated with a group or platform. That fragmentation is the acquisition opportunity. It means there are dozens of independent operators in each market who are potential platform targets or add-ons.
The commercial payer mix floors in these markets (all above 59%) provide the revenue quality that PE roll-up models require. Markets with lower commercial concentration carry meaningful exposure to the Medicaid rate changes anticipated under federal budget legislation through 2027โ2028.
The Medicaid Risk Factor
Our Medicaid Exposure Risk Score โ a proprietary metric included in the full AcuiteIQ Behavioral Health report โ flags markets where facilities carry 60%+ Medicaid revenue concentration. These markets are excluded from the top 10 above regardless of fragmentation score, because the revenue risk profile makes them substantially harder to underwrite at current multiples.
PE firms that entered high-Medicaid behavioral health markets in 2022โ2023 are now facing that risk directly. The markets above are selected in part because they don't carry that exposure.
Full National Rankings โ All 400+ MSAs
The complete Behavioral Health Acquisition Intelligence Report scores every US metro on all three dimensions, includes state-level rankings, a 46,763-target acquisition list, and the full Medicaid Exposure Risk Score dataset.
View Behavioral Health Report โ