The Real Question Behind Custom EHR vs Commercial EHR
When a specialty clinic asks whether to build a custom EHR or license a commercial one, they’re usually asking something deeper: Is software a cost center or a strategic asset?
In cardiology, oncology, behavioral health, fertility, respiratory care, and multi-site specialty groups, workflow is not generic. Documentation patterns, device integrations, billing logic, intake flows, care pathways — they’re all highly specialized. Commercial EHRs are designed for breadth. Specialty clinics often need depth.
We’ve seen this firsthand. AST currently supports clinical software used across 160+ respiratory care facilities. The common theme isn’t “we hate our vendor.” It’s “our clinical model doesn’t fit inside a generalized system anymore.”
Option 1: Commercial Off-the-Shelf (COTS) EHR
This is the default path. License a known system, configure templates, train staff, go live.
What you get
- Regulatory features already implemented (clinical documentation standards, prescribing modules)
- Established vendor support structure
- Predictable implementation playbook
What you sacrifice
- Workflow flexibility
- Control over roadmap
- Contract leverage after you scale
Technically, you’re living inside their architecture. Their data model. Their release schedule. Their constraints. You can configure templates and add bolt-ons — but you don’t control core behavior.
Option 2: Customized Commercial EHR (Heavy Configuration + Extensions)
This is the hybrid path. You take a commercial base and build substantial overlays — custom modules, reporting layers, embedded specialty tools.
Architecturally, this often looks like:
- Commercial EHR as system of record
- Custom specialty web app for structured workflows
- Data replication layer into your own analytics warehouse
- Revenue cycle automation layered externally
This reduces risk compared to full custom build, but creates integration complexity and dual-system governance challenges.
Option 3: Fully Custom EHR Platform
This is not a “template builder.” This means designing:
- Clinical data model for your specialty
- Encounter lifecycle engine
- Documentation UI optimized for your workflows
- Billing and claim logic tied directly to structured clinical data
- Role-based permissions and audit infrastructure
Architecturally, modern builds typically include:
- Cloud-native backend (AWS or Azure HIPAA-aligned infrastructure)
- Modular services for scheduling, encounters, orders, billing
- Structured data schemas aligned to specialty-specific reporting needs
- Automated QA and regression testing pipelines
When our team built a specialty-focused clinical platform for a respiratory network, the biggest architectural decision wasn’t UI — it was modeling documentation so billing logic could be derived directly from structured clinical inputs. That cut downstream claim edits dramatically.
Architecture-Level Comparison
| Dimension | Commercial EHR | Custom EHR |
|---|---|---|
| Deployment Speed | ✓ Fast (6–12 months) | ✗ Slower (9–18 months) |
| Workflow Control | ✗ Limited | ✓ Full ownership |
| Upfront Cost | ✓ Lower | ✗ Higher |
| Long-Term Margin Impact | ✗ Ongoing license drag | ✓ Asset ownership |
| Roadmap Control | ✗ Vendor-driven | ✓ Internal strategy-driven |
| Engineering Burden | ✓ Vendor-managed | ✗ You own it |
What the Economics Actually Look Like
If you’re a 5-provider clinic, commercial usually wins. If you’re a 50-location specialty network with repeatable workflows, the math shifts.
We’ve run this analysis with founder-led specialty groups multiple times. Past a certain scale, licensing fees exceed the cost of maintaining an internalized engineering asset — especially when workflow optimization increases throughput.
How AST Approaches Custom EHR Platform Engineering
Most custom EHR projects fail because they’re treated like feature builds instead of regulated platforms.
At AST, we deploy integrated engineering pods — backend, frontend, QA, DevOps, product — that own delivery end to end. Not staff augmentation. Full accountability for architecture, compliance posture, release management, and uptime.
We design systems modularly: scheduling service separated from encounter service, billing logic abstracted from documentation UI, reporting pipeline designed from structured capture layers. That’s what makes long-term iteration sustainable.
After 8+ years in U.S. healthcare IT, one pattern is clear: clinics that win with custom platforms treat engineering as a core function, not a side project.
Decision Framework: Should You Build or Buy?
- Assess Workflow Uniqueness If 60%+ of your clinical workflow requires workarounds in a commercial system, that’s a signal.
- Model 5-Year Financial Impact Compare cumulative licensing to custom build + maintenance costs.
- Evaluate Strategic Intent Are you building a differentiated care model or just operating efficiently?
- Audit Internal Ownership Appetite Custom means you own uptime, compliance posture, and roadmap.
- Pressure-Test Talent Strategy Do you have (or can you access) a team capable of platform-grade engineering?
Custom vs Commercial Isn’t Ideological — It’s Strategic
Commercial EHRs are not bad. Many are mature, stable, and appropriate.
Custom platforms are not automatically superior. They are powerful if — and only if — your organization is ready to operate like a technology company.
The mistake is choosing based on frustration. The right approach is choosing based on economics, differentiation strategy, and long-term control.
EMR Platform Engineering HIPAA Infrastructure Specialty Clinics
Trying to Decide Between Building a Custom EHR or Buying One?
We’ve helped specialty networks model the real financial and architectural tradeoffs before they commit millions in licensing or engineering. If you want a straight technical assessment from engineers who’ve built and scaled these platforms, let’s talk.


