DDS Web Solutions
HIPAA & Compliance

Do I Need a BAA With My Website Provider?

8 min

A Business Associate Agreement, or BAA, is a legal contract between your practice and any vendor that touches patient health information. If you handle patient records, handle patient data, or use any marketing software that integrates with your practice management system, you likely need a BAA. This guide explains when a BAA is required, which vendors need one, and how to get them in place.

What Is a BAA and Why It Matters

A Business Associate Agreement is a contract required by the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA). It protects patient privacy by establishing who can access patient health information and how they must protect it. When you hire a vendor to manage websites, patient forms, email marketing, call tracking, or other services that may touch Protected Health Information (PHI), that vendor becomes a Business Associate.

The BAA isn't optional. If a vendor handles PHI without a signed BAA in place, your practice is liable for penalties. The vendor is also liable, but that doesn't protect you. HIPAA penalties range from $100 to $50,000 per violation, and violations can accumulate quickly. A single data breach affecting hundreds of patients could result in penalties exceeding $1 million.

Many practices don't realize they need BAAs because the connection to patient data isn't obvious. A website hosting provider might seem like pure infrastructure, but if your website collects patient emails or appointment requests, it touches PHI and requires a BAA.

Who Legally Needs a BAA

HIPAA applies to covered entities, which include all dental and medical practices. If you bill insurance, accept Medicare, or maintain patient health records, you're a covered entity. This is true even if you're a solo practice or small office.

The BAA requirement covers any vendor who creates, receives, maintains, or transmits PHI on your behalf. This includes:

  • Website hosting providers
  • Patient form builders and portals
  • Email marketing platforms (if patient names are in your lists)
  • Call tracking and phone systems
  • CRM platforms and marketing automation tools

Pro tip

When in doubt about whether a vendor needs a BAA, ask yourself: does this vendor ever store, see, or have access to patient email addresses, phone numbers, names, or health information? If yes, you need a BAA.

Which Vendors Require a BAA

Not every vendor you use requires a BAA. The distinction depends on whether they process PHI or just general business data.

Vendors that DO need a BAA:

  • Website hosting with patient contact forms
  • HIPAA-compliant web form platforms that store patient data
  • Call tracking systems that record patient interactions
  • Email marketing platforms if you're sending emails to patients

Vendors that DON'T need a BAA:

  • Office suppliers and vendors who don't handle patient data
  • Generic software that doesn't integrate with patient data
  • Marketing agencies that use aggregated, de-identified data only

When working with a website design or email marketing vendor, always ask: "Do you sign BAAs?" If they hesitate or say no, they may not be HIPAA-aware, and you should consider alternatives.

Enforcement, Penalties, and Risk

The Office for Civil Rights (OCR) enforces HIPAA. If your practice has a breach or audit and lacks BAAs for vendors handling PHI, you face significant penalties. OCR doesn't need proof of malice; missing a BAA is a strict liability violation.

Penalties breakdown:

  • Failure to have a BAA: $100 to $50,000 per violation
  • PHI breaches: up to $50,000 per record affected
  • Willful neglect: up to $1.5 million per category of violation per year

Beyond financial penalties, a breach can damage reputation, trigger notification obligations, and result in lawsuits from affected patients. The cost of managing a breach (legal, notification, credit monitoring) often exceeds the OCR penalties.

How to Request and Negotiate a BAA

Most reputable vendors have BAA templates ready. Here's how to request one:

  1. Contact the vendor's sales or support team and ask: "Do you offer a Business Associate Agreement under HIPAA?"
  2. Request a copy of their BAA template. Reputable vendors will provide one immediately.
  3. Review it with your legal counsel or compliance officer (if you have one). BAAs are fairly standardized, but terms vary.
  4. Ensure the BAA covers the specific services you're using. Some vendors have modular BAAs for different services.
  5. Both you and the vendor sign the BAA. This is a binding contract.

If a vendor refuses to sign a BAA, move to a different vendor. There are enough HIPAA-aware providers in every category (hosting, forms, email, etc.) that you don't need to use non-compliant vendors.

What to Look For in a BAA

Most BAAs contain the same core elements required by HIPAA. When reviewing, ensure the BAA includes:

  • Clear description of services and what data the vendor accesses
  • Restrictions on use of PHI (vendor can only use it for your services, not resale or marketing)
  • Security safeguards (encryption, access controls, audit logs)
  • Breach notification requirements (vendor must notify you within a set timeframe if data is exposed)
  • Data return or destruction clause (vendor must delete or return PHI when services end)
  • Subcontractor obligations (if vendor uses other vendors, they must have BAAs in place)

Keep all signed BAAs in a central file. You'll need to produce them in audits or if a breach investigation occurs. Maintain a vendor spreadsheet that tracks which vendors have BAAs and when they were signed. When switching analytics or reporting platforms, ensure the new vendor has a signed BAA before migrating any patient data.

Frequently Asked Questions

What exactly is a Business Associate Agreement?

A contract required by HIPAA between a covered entity (your practice) and any vendor that creates, receives, transmits, or maintains protected health information on your behalf. It legally binds the vendor to HIPAA's security and privacy rules and shifts some liability.

Do I need a BAA with my website hosting provider?

Yes, if the site collects any patient data through forms, chats, or patient portals. No, if the site is pure marketing content with no data capture and all forms redirect to a HIPAA-compliant intake platform off-site. Most practice sites need one.

Which common vendors refuse to sign a BAA?

Basic Squarespace and Wix plans will not. Neither will Google Analytics out of the box or most free form tools (Typeform free, Wufoo free, Mailchimp basic). If a vendor refuses, either upgrade to a plan that includes a BAA or change vendor.

What happens if I collect patient data without a BAA in place?

Each affected patient record counts as a separate HIPAA violation. Civil penalties run $100 to $50,000 per violation, capped at $1.5 million per year per category. The Office for Civil Rights has levied seven-figure settlements on practices for exactly this.

How do I verify a vendor's BAA is legitimate?

Read it. It must specifically reference HIPAA 45 CFR 164, describe how PHI is safeguarded, name the breach notification process, and survive termination. A one-page click-through with no technical detail is not a real BAA.

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