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How to Choose a Medical Records Custodian When Closing or Selling a Practice

how to choose a medical records custodian

Closing, merging, or selling a medical practice is a complex process filled with operational, legal, and emotional decisions. One of the most important and often most overlooked steps is choosing the right medical records custodian to safeguard patient records after the transition.

Whether you are a solo practitioner retiring, part of a group practice being acquired, or a healthcare organization consolidating locations, federal and state laws require that patient medical records remain accessible, secure, and properly managed for years after the practice closes. Choosing the wrong custodian can expose you to liability, frustrate former patients, and create compliance risks long after the last patient visit.

This guide breaks down what a medical records custodian does, why choosing the right partner matters, and what criteria to look for when selecting a custodian during closure or sale.


A medical records custodian is a professional third-party service responsible for:

  • Securely storing patient medical records
  • Managing retention and compliance
  • Handling patient requests and authorizations
  • Providing copies to patients, providers, or legal entities
  • Maintaining HIPAA-compliant processes
  • Ensuring records are destroyed according to legal timelines

In many states, when a practice closes or changes ownership, the provider must designate a custodian to maintain patient access for 7–10 years and often longer for minors.

This makes your custodian not just a vendor, but a long-term legal safeguard.


Many providers underestimate how much liability remains after a practice closes. Even if you retire or your practice is acquired, you are still responsible for what happens to patient records unless they are handled by a compliant custodian.

Choosing the wrong custodian can result in:

Improper storage, lost records, or unauthorized access can trigger federal investigations.

Retention requirements vary widely. A custodian must know your state’s rules for:

  • Retention length
  • Patient notification
  • Transfer-of-custody requirements
  • Destruction protocols

Patients must be able to request and receive their records easily. Poor service reflects on the former provider.

Subpoenas, insurance audits, or follow-up care requests can occur years later. Mishandled records put former practitioners at risk.

Without a custodian, you may be forced to handle requests yourself, even after retirement.

The right custodian prevents these issues and ensures a clean, compliant transition.


You need a custodian if:

  • You are closing a medical practice
  • You are retiring or relocating out of state
  • Your practice is being sold or acquired
  • You are moving to hospital employment and closing a private office
  • You are merging multiple practices and eliminating physical locations
  • You are dissolving a partnership

In each scenario, the custodian becomes the designated entity responsible for storage, access, and compliance.


Understanding what a custodian actually does will help you evaluate potential partners.

A qualified medical records custodian should:

Paper or digital records must be stored in a HIPAA-compliant environment.

This ensures accountability from the moment records leave your practice.

Patients should have easy access via phone, email, or online portal.

To prevent unauthorized release.

Depending on patient preference.

Including state-specific timelines for adult and minor records.

Custodians often work with lawyers, insurers, and government entities.

Audit trails protect you from liability.

Choosing a custodian is essentially choosing who will manage years of compliance tasks after your practice closes.


Selecting a custodian requires evaluating compliance, technology, reputation, cost structure, and long-term reliability. Below are the most important criteria.


At minimum, the custodian must:

  • Sign a Business Associate Agreement (BAA)
  • Maintain encrypted digital records
  • Provide secure physical storage
  • Restrict facility access
  • Ensure staff training
  • Use secure portals for the release of information (ROI)

Ask for documentation of their compliance protocols, not just verbal assurances.


Every state has different rules. Some require:

  • 7 years
  • 10 years
  • 21+ years for minors
  • Special requirements for behavioral health, imaging, or specialty practices

A qualified custodian should clearly explain:

  • How long they will retain your records
  • When they will notify you before destruction
  • How they destroy records at end of life

If they don’t mention state-specific laws, it’s a red flag.


A custodian must provide convenient access for former patients. Look for:

Patients should not have to mail in paper forms.

Not just an email inbox.

Industry standard is 7–10 days.

Important for diverse patient populations.

Many patients prefer encrypted digital copies.

Poor patient service will reflect back on you, even after retirement.


Most custodians charge based on:

  • Number of records or boxes
  • Length of retention
  • Storage format (paper vs. digital)
  • Retrieval frequency

Avoid custodians who charge:

  • Hidden fees
  • Unclear retrieval costs
  • Open-ended storage plans

Ask for a written pricing agreement that outlines:

  • Storage fees
  • Retrieval fees
  • Record release costs
  • Administrative fees
  • Destruction costs after retention period

You should know exactly what you’re paying.


Not all custodians specialize in closing or selling practices. Look for experience with:

  • Solo physicians
  • Group practices
  • Behavioral health providers
  • Dental offices
  • Multisite healthcare organizations

They should be able to describe:

  • Their transition process
  • How they inventory and log records
  • How they notify patients (if required by your state)
  • How they handle long-term ROI (release of information)

Digitizing records before custody often reduces storage fees and improves patient access. Many modern custodians offer:

  • High-volume scanning
  • OCR text recognition
  • Secure digital portals
  • EMR migration support

If your goal is to move to a fully digital archive, choose a custodian who can scan, store, and manage everything seamlessly.


A custodian must protect records from:

  • Fire
  • Flood
  • Mold
  • Theft
  • Cyberattacks

Request information about:

  • Facility security systems
  • Environmental controls
  • Data backups
  • Redundant storage locations

If a custodian does not have documented disaster recovery plans, move on.


A proper custodian will use:

  • Barcodes
  • Serialized tracking
  • Access logs
  • Audit trails

This ensures every record is accounted for at all times, which is critical during lawsuits, subpoenas, and insurance claims.


What happens when retention periods end?

A responsible custodian should:

  • Notify you before destruction
  • Destroy records securely
  • Provide certificates of destruction
  • Allow transfer if custody needs to change

The final stage is just as important as the initial transition.


A strong custodian will handle the entire process, including:

Cataloging records, formats, dates, and retention requirements.

Chain-of-custody starts the moment records leave your practice.

Paper, digital, or hybrid formats, depending on your needs.

If required by your state, the custodian may assist with sending closure notices.

Processing patient requests for years after closure.

Secure destruction at the end of retention periods.

This process allows you to close or transition your practice without lingering administrative responsibilities.


Avoid these costly errors:

  • Choosing the cheapest option instead of a compliant one
  • Failing to verify retention law expertise
  • Not confirming patient access procedures
  • Forgetting to sign a BAA
  • Leaving records with office staff after closure
  • Selecting a vendor without healthcare experience

Even well-meaning providers have unintentionally exposed patient data by choosing custodians who lacked proper security or compliance processes.


Choosing a medical records custodian is one of the most important decisions you will make when closing, selling, or transitioning out of a medical practice. A reliable custodian will:

  • Protect your patients
  • Shield you from liability
  • Ensure long-term compliance
  • Handle requests so you don’t have to
  • Provide peace of mind long after your final patient visit

For retiring physicians, relocating providers, or practices changing ownership, partnering with a trusted custodian ensures that your legacy and your patients’ privacy remain intact.

Emerald Document Imaging supports healthcare providers in all 50 states with HIPAA-compliant medical records custodial services, record transitions, and secure long-term storage.

Contact us today to get started →

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