Sonrava Health Deploys Overjet AI Across 450+ Dental Practices

Sonrava Health, the Orange, California-based dental support organization operating more than 450 practices nationwide, announced on April 7, 2026 that it is deploying Overjet’s FDA-cleared clinical AI platform across its entire network. The rollout, which affects more than 1,200 doctors and team members, represents a full enterprise deployment — not a pilot — and makes Sonrava the latest mega-DSO to commit to clinical AI at scale.

What Sonrava Is Deploying

Overjet’s clinical AI platform provides real-time radiograph analysis, using machine learning to detect and quantify oral health findings directly within the clinical workflow. The technology overlays AI-generated annotations onto dental X-rays, giving clinicians a second set of eyes during diagnosis and treatment planning.

For Sonrava, the appeal centers on two objectives: clinical consistency across a geographically dispersed network and administrative efficiency in radiographic analysis.

“Implementing Overjet’s clinical AI allows us to empower our more than 1,200 doctors and team members with a sophisticated tool for clinical detection and consistency,” said Greg Michelini, Chief Information Officer at Sonrava Health. He added that the platform is “streamlining administrative workflows and providing a standardized framework for radiographic analysis across our 450 locations.”

The decision to bypass a limited pilot and proceed directly to enterprise-wide deployment signals confidence in the technology’s maturity — and urgency to keep pace with competitors who have already moved on clinical AI.

Overjet’s Growing DSO Footprint

Sonrava’s announcement caps a period of aggressive expansion for Overjet. The company secured $35 million in funding from Lightspeed Venture Partners in early 2026, adding to a funding base that has positioned it as one of the most well-capitalized clinical AI vendors in dentistry.

Overjet’s enterprise client roster now includes several of the largest DSOs in the country:

  • Dental Care Alliance — deployed Overjet across 400+ practices beginning in July 2024
  • North American Dental Group (NADG) — rolled out Overjet Voice across 216 locations in January 2026
  • Sonrava Health — 450+ practices as of April 2026

Combined, these three deployments alone represent more than 1,000 practice locations running on Overjet’s platform — a scale that few dental AI vendors have achieved.

A Broader Industry Shift: Q1 2026 and the Clinical AI Tipping Point

Sonrava’s move did not happen in isolation. The first quarter of 2026 marked what may be remembered as the tipping point for clinical AI adoption among large dental organizations. Virtually every top-10 DSO in the United States has now committed to some form of AI-assisted diagnostics.

The competitive landscape has sorted into clear camps:

  • Overjet — Sonrava Health, Dental Care Alliance, NADG, and others
  • VideaHealth — selected by Aspen Dental for deployment across 1,100+ offices
  • Pearl — chosen by PDS Health for its network of 1,100+ practices

Each vendor brings a slightly different approach to the same core problem: using computer vision and machine learning to standardize radiographic interpretation across large, multi-site dental organizations. The clinical AI market in dentistry is no longer a question of whether DSOs will adopt — it is now a question of which platform and how quickly.

Beyond Clinical AI: The Front-Office Automation Wave

While clinical AI captures headlines, a parallel transformation is underway in front-office operations. Patient communication platforms powered by artificial intelligence are gaining traction among DSOs seeking to reduce call volume, automate scheduling, and improve patient retention.

Vendors in this space include Weave (which acquired AI scheduling startup TrueLark in 2025), NexHealth, Viva AI, and several others pursuing AI-driven front-office automation for multi-location dental groups. The convergence of clinical AI and patient communication AI suggests that DSOs are building technology stacks where intelligence is embedded at every patient touchpoint — from the initial phone call to the diagnostic image on the operatory screen.

For organizations like Sonrava, clinical AI deployment is likely just one layer of a broader digital transformation strategy.

What This Means for DSOs

Sonrava’s full-network deployment of Overjet carries several implications for the broader DSO market:

  • The pilot phase is ending. Multi-year evaluation cycles are giving way to enterprise-wide commitments. DSOs that are still running small-scale pilots risk falling behind competitors who are already operating with AI-augmented clinical workflows across hundreds of locations.
  • Standardization is the value proposition. For organizations managing hundreds of clinicians across dozens of states, the primary draw of clinical AI is not novelty — it is consistency. A standardized framework for radiographic analysis, as Sonrava’s CIO described, reduces variation in diagnostic quality and helps organizations maintain clinical standards at scale.
  • Vendor consolidation is accelerating. With Overjet, VideaHealth, and Pearl each securing major DSO contracts, the clinical AI market is consolidating around a small number of proven platforms. Smaller vendors may find it increasingly difficult to compete for enterprise accounts.
  • Integration matters more than algorithms. As deployments scale from pilot to production, the ability to integrate seamlessly with existing practice management systems, imaging software, and clinical workflows becomes as important as the underlying AI technology itself.

Looking Ahead

Sonrava Health’s deployment of Overjet across 450+ locations is among the largest single clinical AI rollouts in dental history. Combined with recent moves by Aspen Dental, PDS Health, Dental Care Alliance, and NADG, it signals that clinical AI has crossed from early adoption into mainstream infrastructure for large dental organizations.

The question facing mid-market DSOs and large group practices is no longer whether to adopt clinical AI, but how to select, implement, and scale it effectively. As the technology matures and the vendor landscape stabilizes, the competitive advantage will shift from simply having AI to how well organizations integrate it into their clinical and operational workflows.

Sonrava Health operates more than 450 dental practices across the United States under multiple brand names. Overjet, founded in 2018, is headquartered in Boston, Massachusetts and has received FDA clearance for its dental AI products.