Market Intelligence Report:
OPA LOCKA, FL (33054)
A comprehensive analysis of the dental competitive landscape in ZIP code 33054, including provider density, specialty mix, growth trends, and strategic opportunities for practice owners.
This market shows a low level of competition with moderate underlying opportunity based on demographic and provider data.
In markets like this, practices that identify and lean into specific unmet pockets tend to pull ahead of generalist peers.
Higher than 14% of similar ZIPs nationally
Provider density sits below national norms, so positioning pressure is light and an incoming practice is not walking into a crowded field.
13% in-state
Higher than 66% of similar ZIPs nationally
Demographic and demand signals indicate viable room for the right operator, though not a greenfield.
64% in-state
Visibility data is not yet available for this ZIP.
Executive Summary
- Moderate opportunity (65/100) — competitive but viable for the right operator
- Low competition (19/100) — provider density sits below national norms
- Low competition (19/100) - favorable conditions for new practices
Market Health Score
Light competition with selective unmet demand — a clearly positioned operator faces fewer obstacles than the raw provider count suggests.
Want a custom market intelligence report?
We build deeper, practice-specific analyses — competitor benchmarking, patient-demand modeling, and site selection. Leave your email and we’ll share details.
Provider Breakdown
As of the latest data, there are 4 active dental providers registered under NPI in the 33054 ZIP code. This includes both individual practitioners and organizational NPIs. Of these, 3 are solo practitioners and 1 are group or organizational entities.
| Specialty | Providers | % of Market |
|---|---|---|
| General Dentistry | 4 | 100.0% |
4 specialty gaps detected in OPA LOCKA: pediatric dentistry, orthodontics, periodontics, prosthodontics. These represent underserved demand based on the local demographic profile.
The provider mix is broad on general dentistry but thin on pediatric dentistry and orthodontics — a structural gap where specialty-led positioning faces less direct competition than a generalist play.