Dermatologist email list

Skin clinics and Mohs surgeons in one file. The dermatologist email list, 14,072 US practices.

Most derm vendors pitch the same 200 multi-site groups. We map the long tail too: solo cosmetic clinics, surgical dermatology, pediatric skin, the names ZoomInfo never had.

Source: Orbital data, 2026-04 United States Verified emails & direct dials

Why the big databases miss them

These are working clinics that software can't see.

71%

are single-location clinics

The market is owner-run dermatologists, not the handful of national platforms. That is where the budget actually sits.

38%

run without a real website

Booking pages, scheduling widgets, sometimes just a Google Business listing. Invisible to scrapers, reachable by the people who built the list a different way.

62%

have no decision-maker on LinkedIn

Most lead dermatologists do not keep an active profile. A LinkedIn-only database stops here. We do not.

Source: Orbital data (curated company-grain pull), April 2026.

What's inside each record

The full picture of the clinic and the person, plus signals you define.

A list broker stops at a name and an email. We hand you the contact, the role, and the clinic itself, then let Orbital's agents enrich each record with the custom signals your team actually scores on.

Business identifiers

  • Clinic name and DBA
  • Website and primary domain
  • Sub-specialty mix
  • Location count
  • Years in operation

Location

  • Address, city, state, ZIP
  • Metro and DMA
  • NPI service area
  • Google rating and review count

Contact & role

  • Full name of the decision-maker
  • Verified email, direct and clinic-level
  • Direct dial, mobile, clinic line
  • LinkedIn profile, where present
  • Job title, seniority, function

Practice context

  • Independent vs group-owned
  • Accepts new patients
  • Practice software in use
  • Cosmetic injectable lines carried
  • Mohs surgery on premises

Custom agent signals

The part a static list can't give you.

Point Orbital's agents at your ICP and they research each clinic for the signals you care about, then attach them to the record. A few that derm vendors ask for:

Recently incorporated Opening a new location Hiring a dermatologist No website or weak online presence Independent vs PE-backed Adds aesthetic services Runs paid ads on skin treatments EMR / practice software in use Mohs surgery available Ownership change

If you can define the signal, an agent can go find it. That is what turns a list into a scored, ready-to-work account set, instead of a static row that bounces.

What we don't fake: no scraped NPI dumps, no stale license rolls, no padded counts. If we can't stand behind a field, it isn't in the record.

Coverage

Every sub-specialty, every US metro.

The list spans the full population of US dermatology clinics, weighted the way the market actually is. The largest markets carry the most depth.

By sub-specialty

General dermatology Cosmetic and aesthetic Mohs and surgical Pediatric dermatology Dermatopathology Skin cancer specialty Hair and scalp Multi-disciplinary skin centers

Leading markets

Californiatop
Texastop 5
Floridatop 5
New Yorktop 5
Illinoistop 10
Pennsylvaniatop 10

Selling adjacent into healthcare and aesthetics? The med spa email list covers the cosmetic side, and the dentist email list is built the same way. Browse the full /data directory for more verticals.

The difference

For the clinics ZoomInfo skips.

Most contact databases are built from the top down. They start with the names that are easy to find, the multi-state derm platforms and the cosmetic groups with a marketing director, and they thin out fast below that. The trouble is that dermatology is mostly the opposite shape. It is a long tail of independent clinics, a Mohs surgeon and a front desk, and that is exactly the part the big tools render as a blank row.

We build this list from the bottom up. We start with the full count of 14,072 US dermatology clinics in the company-grain pull, then attach contacts two ways: the decision-makers we match from professional profiles, and clinic-level emails we source directly from the clinics. That second path is the one that matters for the long tail, because a solo cosmetic dermatologist who never updates her LinkedIn still has a front desk you can reach.

The honest trade is this: we will not quote you a million dermatologist emails, because the clean, real number is smaller and worth more. You get contacts at clinics that actually pick up, including the small independents a LinkedIn-only database never surfaces, then enriched with the signals your team scores on. Not a spreadsheet that bounces a third of the way down.

How we build it

Mapped, matched, validated, enriched.

Mapped. We start from the full population of US dermatology clinics, the same 14,072 in our 2026-04 company-grain pull. That is the denominator, so coverage is measured against the real market rather than whatever was easy to scrape.

Matched. For each clinic we identify the people who run it, with their role and seniority, so you can tell a lead dermatologist from a junior associate before you send anything.

Validated. Email addresses are checked by our data source before they reach you, and anything that fails validation is dropped rather than counted. We would rather hand you a smaller list that lands than a bigger one that bounces.

Enriched. Then our agents attach the custom signals you score on, so the list arrives sorted by fit, not in the order we happened to find it.

Source: Orbital data (curated company-grain pull), April 2026.

Who uses it

One list, several plays.

Aesthetic device makers

Sell IPL, lasers, and energy-based platforms direct to lead dermatologists, past the distributor markup.

Injectable and topical reps

Reach the prescriber and the buyer in one record, with sub-specialty already tagged.

Practice software

Put dermatology-specific EMR, scheduling, and billing tools in front of the owner, not the IT vendor.

Dermatology recruiting

Reach owners and practice managers to place dermatologists, PAs, and aestheticians.

DSO / PE platforms

Source acquisition targets among independent clinics by sub-specialty and metro.

CME and certification

Reach practicing dermatologists with continuing education they need to renew, with current-role filtering applied.

Questions

Before you ask sales.

Can I get a free sample of the dermatologist list?

Yes. Tell us the sub-specialties or states you care about and we send a sample of around 100 records so you can check the data against your own before anything changes hands.

Is this a list of clinics or a list of individual dermatologists?

Clinics. The 14,072 number is dermatology practices in the US, the company-grain pull, not a roster of every MD on a licensure board. Each clinic record carries decision-maker contacts (typically the owner, lead dermatologist, or practice manager) plus a clinic-level email. If you need named individual dermatologists on a contact-grain pull, we can build that, just ask.

Does it include hospital-system dermatology departments?

Standalone clinics are the focus. Hospital dermatology departments are tagged separately and excluded from the 14,072 unless a buyer asks for them, because they buy through procurement, not the lead derm. If you want them included or excluded entirely, the segmentation is a toggle.

What fields come with each contact?

Each record carries contact details (verified email, direct dial, LinkedIn), the person's role and seniority, and the clinic itself: name, website, sub-specialty, location, group size, and Google review counts. On top of that, Orbital's agents can attach custom signals you define. We do not pad records with scraped NPI numbers or stale license rolls.

Can you add custom signals to the data?

Yes, and it is the main reason teams pick us over a static list. Point our agents at your ICP and they research each clinic for the signals you score on, such as recently incorporated, hiring, opening a location, the practice software in use, offers cosmetic injectables, or independent versus group-owned, then attach them to the record.

Where does the data come from?

We start from the full population of dermatology clinics in the US, 14,072 of them in the company-grain pull, then attach contacts two ways: decision-makers matched from professional profiles, and clinic-level emails sourced directly from the clinics. Both are validated by our data source. Source: Orbital data (curated company-grain pull), April 2026.

How current is the list?

Records are refreshed on a rolling schedule and emails are validated by our data source before they reach you. Anything that fails validation is dropped rather than padded into the count.

How is this different from ZoomInfo or a list broker?

Two reasons. First, we cover the small independent dermatology clinics that enterprise tools thin out on at the company level, and alongside professional-profile contacts we hold clinic-level emails that reach practices a LinkedIn-only database never surfaces. Second, our agents enrich each record with the custom signals you score on, so you get a scored account set, not a flat spreadsheet.

See the dermatologist list before you pay for it.

Tell us the sub-specialties and states you want. We will send a free sample of around 100 verified contacts you can check against your own records, no commitment.

Get a free sample