What Are the Best EHR Vendors to Consider in 2025?

TL;DR

  • EHR buyers today prioritize flexibility, virtual care, and API-driven customization.
  • This article breaks down leading EHR platforms, including Epic, Athenahealth, Cerner, Healthie, Canvas, and others, by category and use case.
  • You’ll find comparisons based on virtual care readiness, AI maturity, cost predictability, and integration capabilities.

What Does the 2025 EHR Vendor Landscape Look Like?

The EHR market in 2025 isn’t just about features—it’s about fit. While the “big three” (Epic, Oracle Cerner, and Athenahealth) continue to dominate large hospital networks, an entire class of EHRs now caters to independent practices, specialty clinics, and virtual care startups with very different needs.

Here’s how today’s vendor landscape breaks down:

Enterprise-Level Systems

  • Epic: Still the most widely adopted EHR for integrated delivery networks (IDNs), academic medical centers, and health systems with thousands of users. Epic’s Care Everywhere network facilitates over 20 million record exchanges daily.
  • Oracle Cerner: A strong contender for mid-sized hospitals and federal integrations, especially after its acquisition by Oracle. Cerner remains a cost-accessible option for systems that need scale and standards-based interoperability.

Mid-Market and Large Outpatient Groups

  • Athenahealth: Popular among mid-sized, multi-specialty practices for its fully cloud-based system, solid billing tools, and newly embedded ambient documentation features.
  • eClinicalWorks: Known for its predictable pricing and a rich feature set, including the widely used Healow ecosystem for telehealth, wearable integration, and multilingual patient apps.
  • NextGen: Strong in behavioral health, pediatrics, and FQHCs (Federally Qualified Health Centers). It’s a newer Ambient Assist AI that aims to reduce clinician documentation time without relying on third-party scribes.

Modern Platforms for Virtual Care and Innovation

  • Canvas Medical: A “build-your-own” EHR for health tech companies and VC-backed startups. Comes with a complete SDK, unlimited API usage, and supports SMART on FHIR plug-ins.
  • Healthie: Designed for wellness and multidisciplinary care. Offers telehealth, charting, billing, and even diet tracking in one system. Healthie stands out with developer-friendly tools and a modern GraphQL API.
  • Akute Health: A newer platform that prioritizes automation, affordability, and direct care, models. Offers usage-based pricing starting at $0.50 per patient/month.

Independent Primary Care and DPC Clinics

  • Elation Health: Known for its user-friendly interface and strong support for longitudinal care. It’s a go-to for direct primary care (DPC), concierge models, and solo primary care providers.
  • Cerbo: Specifically built for functional medicine and cash-pay clinics. Features like reusable “Chart Parts,” lab and supplement integrations, and native membership billing make it highly attractive for subscription-based care.

Key Trends Driving EHR Evaluation:

  • Providers are moving away from “one-size-fits-all” systems toward composable, customizable EHRs.
  • Virtual-first models require native support for video visits, remote monitoring, and secure chat.
  • Buyers want modern APIs that support custom app development, automation, and AI integration—not just data entry screens.

Coming up next: We’ll break down how to evaluate these systems using a practical 12-point scorecard—and share which EHRs score highest by feature.

How Do You Evaluate EHR Vendors in 2025?

Choosing an EHR isn’t about picking the biggest name—it’s about deciding what works for your care model, your tech stack, and your growth plans. In 2025, providers and healthtech leaders are asking sharper questions before making a decision. It’s not just about “can it chart,” but “can it scale with us,” “can it integrate with our tools,” and “will it support AI-based workflows tomorrow?”

Choosing the wrong EHR isn’t just a technical inconvenience—it can be an expensive detour. As David D. Bennett, President & CEO of pCare, noted in our podcast, hospitals have “spent dollars after dollars” cycling through systems that didn’t stick. The stakes are too high for trial and error. You need to get it right the first time—with a system that actually fits.

Here’s a 12-point framework to evaluate any EHR platform. It’s designed for practices ranging from solo clinics to multi-site organizations, and it reflects what matters most in today’s healthcare environment.

Looking to Build Your Own Custom Integrated EHR?

A. API & Integration Readiness

EHRs need to talk to other systems. Whether it’s your telehealth stack, your AI tools, or custom patient apps, integration should be painless.

1. Top Performers:

  • Canvas Medical: Comes with a full developer SDK, FHIR and RESTful APIs, and a plugin model that lets you build apps inside the EHR.
  • Healthie: Offers a GraphQL-first API, supports webhooks, and provides access to the same backend its team uses.
  • Epic: Through its App Orchard and Care Everywhere network, Epic supports a wide range of APIs and data exchange options. That said, it can be more complex to work with—especially for smaller engineering teams navigating interface approvals or integration layers. Still, when done right, the results are meaningful. As an approved Epic Vendor Services partner, Mindbowser has worked with teams to streamline complex integrations. In one case, we implemented Epic connectivity using HL7 triggers and FHIR APIs, cutting manual data entry by 90% and simplifying provider workflows across departments.

2. What to Ask:

  • Can our dev team build on this without vendor roadblocks?
  • Does the platform support FHIR R4, SMART apps, and OAuth2?

B. Virtual Care Readiness

Telehealth is no longer an add-on; it’s now foundational. Look for platforms where virtual care tools are built-in, not bolted on.

1. Top Performers:

  • Healthie: Integrated telehealth, secure messaging, mobile apps, and patient engagement tools, all designed for recurring care.
  • Elation: Zoom-powered visits, built directly into the clinical workflow.
  • DrChrono: Optimized for mobile care, with HIPAA-compliant video visits via iPhone or iPad.
  • Akute Health: Providers can launch visits from the scheduler in one click.

2. What to Ask:

  • Is telehealth native or third-party?
  • Does it support both desktop and mobile experiences for providers and patients?

We helped a mobile-first platform integrate wearable data with patient records, cutting review time by 60% and boosting engagement—showing the impact of connected health data on clinical efficiency.

C. Scalability (Users + Data Volume)

Can the EHR handle your growth—from five users to fifty? From a few hundred patients to hundreds of thousands?

1. Top Performers:

  • Epic and Oracle Cerner: Built to scale across massive health systems and IDNs.
  • Athenahealth supports over 160,000 providers, demonstrating its capacity to serve large ambulatory networks.
  • eClinicalWorks offers flat-rate pricing with cloud hosting, making it a predictable option for multi-location practices.

2. What to Ask:

  • Will our system slow down as we add users or new services?
  • Are hosting and backups included?

D. AI Integration & Automation Readiness

In 2025, automation isn’t optional—it’s expected. Whether it’s documentation, coding, or triaging, EHRs should support intelligent workflows.

1. Top Performers:

  • Epic: Offers AI-powered note drafting, ambient scribe tools, and predictive analytics through MyChart AI.
  • Athenahealth: Embedded Athena Ambient Notes automatically generate visit notes.
  • Healthie and Canvas: Both are developer-focused platforms that offer tools like AI Dev Assist (Healthie) or SDK-based plugin models (Canvas), making it easier to integrate AI agents into care delivery.

2. What to Ask:

  • Does the EHR already support any AI features?
  • Can our AI tools hook into it without hitting a wall?

In one of our podcasts, Herman Lintvelt, CEO and Founder of Augmental Technologies, put it plainly: “The medical knowledge base in the world doubles every 72 days… we need tools that enable clinicians to keep up.”

That pace makes it nearly impossible to rely solely on manual workflows. An EHR that supports built-in AI assistance or allows integration with AI-based tools is no longer just helpful. It’s essential for keeping care teams focused on what matters most: patients.

E. Customizability

You should be able to shape your EHR—not fight it.

1. Top Performers:

  • Canvas Medical: Nearly everything is customizable—data models, workflows, UI components.
  • Akute Health: Focuses on workflow automation and lightweight configuration for modern direct care practices.
  • Cerbo: Offers reusable note templates, custom forms, and integrations with functional labs.

2. What to Ask:

  • Can we adapt the EHR to fit our workflows, rather than changing our care model to accommodate the EHR?

F. Data Ownership & Portability

When you’re ready to switch systems or add new tools, will your data go with you—or stay locked behind?

  • Look for platforms that offer export tools, structured data output (such as FHIR or CCD), and support for third-party migration.
  • Ask about data licensing terms—some vendors make you pay for access to your historical records.

G. Pricing Model & Cost Predictability

Hidden fees and licensing traps are still standard in the EHR market.

1. What to Look For:

  • All-in-one monthly pricing that includes hosting, support, and updates (e.g., eClinicalWorks, Cerbo).
  • Usage-based pricing that scales slowly (e.g., Akute Health).
  • Watch for the percent of collections pricing (Athenahealth, for billing).

2. What to Ask:

  • Are setup, support, and integrations extra?
  • Will our costs spike if we grow?

H. Support & Implementation Timeline

A great system with poor support can still fail. Consider responsiveness, onboarding time, and training availability.

Fast Movers:

  • Akute: Clinics can go live in a matter of days.
  • Healthie and Elation: Known for helpful support and self-guided setup options.
  • Athenahealth: Offers 24/7 live support and a guided onboarding model.
Infographic of Best EHR Vendors to Consider in 2025
Fig 1: Best EHR Vendors to Consider in 2025

I. Specialty Fit

Behavioral health? Functional medicine? DPC? Pediatrics? Ensure the EHR aligns with your core clinical workflows.

  • Cerbo is built for functional medicine.
  • Elation fits primary care well, including membership-based and DPC models.
  • NextGen has deep specialty content, particularly in behavioral health and FQHCs.

J. Patient Experience Tools

The EHR isn’t just for doctors anymore—patients are logging in too.

Look for platforms that include:

  • Mobile-ready patient portals
  • Appointment reminders and self-check-in
  • Secure messaging
  • Remote monitoring (Healthie, eClinicalWorks)

K. Compliance & Certification

HIPAA compliance is baseline—but check for HITRUST, SOC 2, and support for TEFCA or 21st Century Cures Act rules.

  • Healthie, Canvas, Epic, and Cerner have high-level certifications for large enterprise needs.
  • Ensure support for data sharing under ONC and information-blocking rules.

L. Interoperability

Can your EHR exchange data with hospitals, laboratories, or national health networks?

  • Epic’s Care Everywhere and Oracle Cerner’s Millennium architecture are well-established for interoperability at scale.
  • Modern startups like Canvas and Healthie also support FHIR and OAuth2 for data exchange with third-party tools.
  • We helped integrate a patient logistics platform with Epic using HL7 and FHIR APIs, cutting form-filling time by 75% and improving staff efficiency through real-time data synchronization.

What Are the Key Trends Redefining EHR Selection?

The EHR buying decision used to be about picking a vendor and living with it for a decade. That’s no longer the case. In 2025, healthcare organizations are prioritizing systems that offer flexibility, faster implementation, and alignment with their clinical workflows—not just compliance checkboxes.

Let’s break down the trends shaping how practices now evaluate and choose EHRs:

1. Composable EHRs Are Replacing All-in-One Monoliths

Traditional EHRs were built as massive systems covering every department, workflow, and feature under one roof. That model still works for large hospital systems, but it’s far less practical for newer care models.

What we’re seeing now is a shift toward composable systems—platforms that allow practices to assemble the specific tools they need and then connect them via modern APIs.

  • Canvas Medical is a clear leader in this area. It treats the EHR like a foundation rather than a finished product. Customers can plug in their scheduling logic, clinical models, or data visualization tools using Canvas’s SDK and plugin system.
  • Healthie also follows this model, offering robust integrations through GraphQL, and exposing the same backend its product team uses to customers.

This shift matters because it allows clinics to evolve their workflows as they grow—without needing to rip and replace core systems.

Related read: Integration with EHR Systems: A Complete Guide for Healthcare Providers

2. API-First Architectures Are Now Table Stakes

Today’s care models often require coordination between EHRs, billing systems, telehealth tools, labs, and engagement platforms. That means APIs aren’t a nice-to-have anymore—they’re essential infrastructure.

  • Developers building new healthtech products (or even just internal tools) expect systems that can connect cleanly and reliably.
  • Platforms like Healthie, Canvas, and Akute go beyond just FHIR—they offer complete documentation, sandbox environments, and practical examples.

Compare that with older systems that may support FHIR on paper but require long approval processes, expensive interface fees, or outdated protocols that slow innovation.

3. AI-Ready Systems Are Leading Buyer Conversations

Buyers are no longer asking whether AI is in the roadmap—they want to know what’s already live.

  • Epic has rolled out tools like MyChart AI Scribe and predictive risk models, which are used across hundreds of hospital systems.
  • Athenahealth’s Ambient Notes uses real-time audio capture to auto-generate SOAP notes inside the provider’s existing workflow.
  • Healthie and Canvas take a different approach, giving developers tools like AI Dev Assist or custom SDKs to build their automation.

Rather than waiting for vendors to catch up, buyers want platforms that let them deploy their own AI models—or plug in trusted third-party tools with minimal overhead.

This matters because AI is now touching everything from triage to note-taking to patient engagement. EHRs that can’t support that will fall behind quickly.

4. Data Ownership and Portability Have Become Non-Negotiables

More clinics today are asking: “What happens to our data if we leave?” In the past, data migration was painful—sometimes even used as a vendor lock-in tactic.

Now, with federal rules enforcing interoperability and data access under the 21st Century Cures Act, buyers expect:

  • Structured exports (FHIR, CCD, JSON)
  • Clear data dictionaries
  • Access to patient-level logs and clinical records without fees

Vendors like Canvas, Healthie, and Cerbo stand out for offering transparent access policies and developer documentation that support real-time data portability.

5. Workflow-Focused Design Is Beating Feature Count

Too many EHRs have been sold on having “all the features”—but not all features are useful. What clinics care about now is whether the software aligns with their workflow.

  • Elation Health is a favorite among primary care doctors not because it has every module, but because its layout supports longitudinal care and clean visit documentation.
  • Akute Health is gaining traction with DPC practices due to its task-based design and smart automation—not because it offers the largest menu of options.

There’s a growing realization that most practices don’t need 200 features—they need 5 features that work in sync.

6. EHR Marketplaces and Add-On Ecosystems Are Maturing

Following the model of app stores, some EHRs now support third-party plugins, allowing providers to add functionality without waiting on the vendor.

  • Epic offers this via its App Orchard, mostly for enterprise partners.
  • DrChrono and Cerbo support various add-ons and lab/supplement integrations via lightweight APIs.
  • Healthie supports white-label widgets and client-side integration kits.

These ecosystems allow practices to extend the platform as their care models mature.

The EHR is no longer the whole solution. It’s the anchor. Practices expect their EHR to be interoperable, customizable, and aligned with their team’s way of working—not just the vendor’s way of building software.

What Should You Expect From EHR Vendors by 2030?

Looking ahead, the EHRs that survive and grow will be the ones that move with care delivery, not the ones that try to freeze it in place. Many of the changes we’re seeing now are just the early signs of a much larger shift.

By 2030, healthcare organizations, whether small independent practices or large multisite groups, should expect far more from their EHR vendors than they do today.

Here’s what that future is shaping up to look like:

1. FHIR and TEFCA Compliance Won’t Be a Bonus; It’ll Be the Baseline

By the end of the decade, national interoperability standards like TEFCA (Trusted Exchange Framework and Common Agreement) will no longer be optional. Vendors who aren’t fully compliant will be seen as out of step with modern regulations and risky for long-term use.

  • FHIR R4 support across patient data categories (including encounters, medications, and labs) will become the standard.
  • Vendors such as Canvas Medical, Healthie, and Epic already support SMART on FHIR applications and OAuth 2.0 access for third-party tools.
  • Expect better patient access tools, too, including apps that allow patients to download and instantly share their data, even across different systems.

2. AI Will Become a Built-In Co-Pilot, Not Just an Add-On

We’re moving toward a future where AI isn’t just a tool; it’s a teammate. That means every step of the provider workflow will start to include automation:

  • Pre-visit intake: AI gathers symptoms, history, and care goals
  • During visit: Ambient scribing captures the conversation and suggests documentation
  • Post-visit: Follow-up tasks are created, referrals are sent, and labs are ordered; all based on context from the visit

Epic, Athenahealth, and NextGen have already begun rolling out these features. Startups like Canvas and Healthie are betting on modular tools that enable clinics to develop or integrate their models.

AI won’t replace clinical judgment, but it will handle repetitive documentation and task routing in a way that saves providers real time.

3. Pricing Models Will Move Toward Subscription and Usage-Based Tiers

The old model of per-provider licensing doesn’t always fit modern clinics—especially those with hybrid or virtual-first models, where visit volumes fluctuate from month to month.

Vendors are responding:

  • Akute Health has introduced pricing based on active patients, rather than seats, with no cost for unused licenses.
  • Healthie offers group-based and enterprise plans with API access tied to usage tiers.
  • We’re seeing more flexibility around add-ons, such as lab integrations, remote monitoring, and even AI features.

Expect a shift toward transparent, flexible pricing—especially for startups and small practices that need predictable costs without overpaying.

4. EHR Marketplaces Will Mimic the App Economy

Just as smartphones gave us app stores, EHRs are moving toward ecosystems. That means you won’t be stuck with whatever tools the vendor built—you’ll be able to pick what works for you.

  • Epic’s App Orchard is already home to hundreds of third-party apps.
  • DrChrono and Cerbo offer open APIs and marketplaces that allow you to add features such as faxing, payments, or automated reminders.
  • Healthie is now supporting embedded tools and white-labeled add-ons for enterprise users.

These ecosystems will create more agility for clinics—especially those that need to offer new services or adopt new tools without overhauling their core system.

5. Composable Interfaces Will Replace Fixed Layouts

Most current EHRs force you to follow a single layout and workflow. However, as care delivery becomes increasingly personalized—across in-person, virtual, asynchronous, and group formats—EHRs will need to follow suit.

  • Canvas Medical already allows clinics to build their interfaces using SDKs and plugins.
  • Akute offers a lightweight UI configuration for teams that want minimal clicks and no clutter.
  • Expect a future where your dermatology clinic has one layout and your behavioral health provider uses another, all on the same backend.

This is about usability. The fewer screens and tabs providers have to toggle through, the more time they get back for actual care.

6. Workflows, Not Modules, Will Define EHR Success

Traditional EHRs were organized around modules, including medications, labs, and scheduling. But real care delivery doesn’t happen in those silos.

By 2030, the leading EHRs will shift to workflow-based logic. Think:

  • “Intake > Charting > Decision Support > Billing” as one flow
  • Not 10 separate clicks and dropdowns

Healthie is already built around the concept of care journeys. Canvas enables custom workflows for startups developing innovative care models—such as longitudinal behavioral health or subscription-based primary care.

This change is fundamental. It moves the EHR from a record-keeping system to a workflow engine.

In short: The next generation of EHRs won’t just store patient data; they’ll organize, automate, and act on it. Practices that choose platforms ready for that shift will stay ahead of both regulatory change and patient expectations.

Which EHR Vendors Are Best for Your Use Case?

Not every practice needs the same system. A large academic hospital doesn’t face the same challenges as a direct primary care clinic. A telehealth startup focused on women’s health will look for different things than a multi-specialty group with ten locations. 

So instead of ranking EHRs in general, here’s a practical breakdown by use case—based on vendor strengths, implementation patterns, and real-world fit.

A. Large IDNs, Health Systems, and Academic Hospitals

1. Best Fit:

  • Epic
  • Oracle Cerner

2. Why:

Epic and Cerner remain the go-to solutions for organizations managing complex, large-scale operations. Epic is widely adopted across IDNs, offering stability, thousands of specialty-specific workflows, and unmatched data-sharing capabilities via Care Everywhere. Cerner—now backed by Oracle—delivers broad interoperability and federal system alignment, with slightly lower base costs for similar capabilities.

3. Key Differentiators:

  • Scalable across thousands of users
  • Proven uptime and support infrastructure
  • Built-in AI tools for clinical notes and population health

B. Mid-Size Multi-Specialty Clinics and Ambulatory Groups

1. Best Fit:

  • Athenahealth
  • eClinicalWorks
  • NextGen Healthcare

2. Why:

These platforms strike a balance between affordability and function. Athena provides excellent RCM support, a robust patient portal, and reliable uptime across large ambulatory networks. eClinicalWorks appeals to clinics that want a fixed monthly price that includes cloud hosting, disaster recovery, and full EHR plus PM functionality. NextGen stands out in behavioral health and community clinic environments with specialty-specific content.

3. Ideal For:

  • Practices looking for integrated billing and scheduling
  • Clinics with dedicated admin teams but limited dev resources
  • Multi-location groups need standardized workflows
Desktop Image of EHR Vendor Match Summary Table
Fig 2: EHR Vendor Summary
Mobile Image of EHR Vendor Match Summary Table
Fig 2: EHR Vendor Summary

C. Virtual-First and Tech-Enabled Startups

1. Best Fit:

  • Canvas Medical
  • Healthie
  • Akute Health

2. Why:

These are developer-friendly platforms designed to enable healthtech startups to move quickly. Canvas is the most customizable—it offers a complete SDK, supports building apps on top of the EHR, and is already trusted by companies delivering novel care models. Healthie combines scheduling, messaging, billing, telehealth, and tracking tools into a single UI—ideal for wellness, behavioral health, and coaching-focused organizations. Akute, backed by Y Combinator, is a lightweight, flexible, and cost-effective solution—perfect for early-stage teams.

3. Good To Know:

  • Healthie and Canvas support native API access at scale
  • Akute’s pricing starts at $0.50 per active patient/month
  • These systems support rapid iteration and automation

D. Direct Primary Care (DPC), Concierge, and Functional Medicine

1. Best Fit:

  • Elation Health
  • Cerbo
  • Akute Health

2. Why:

For practices that thrive on patient relationships, administrative simplicity is crucial. Elation has an intuitive layout that primary care doctors often say “just works.” Cerbo is purpose-built for functional and concierge practices—it supports membership billing, reusable note templates, supplement tracking, and integrations with specialty labs. Akute also fits here, especially for lean DPC clinics that want automation without large upfront costs.

3. Strengths:

  • Built-in support for membership/subscription models
  • Strong telehealth and messaging tools
  • Minimal learning curve for clinical staff

E. Specialized Care Models (Women’s Health, Nutrition, Behavioral Health, etc.)

1. Best Fit:

  • Healthie
  • DrChrono
  • NextGen Behavioral Health Suite

2. Why:

Healthie is designed for longitudinal, multidisciplinary care—combining engagement tools like goal tracking, diet logs, and wearable integration with scheduling and billing. DrChrono is a top pick for mobile-first practices using iPads and iPhones in-clinic or on the go. NextGen’s behavioral health suite (ranked Best in KLAS) supports integrated workflows for both physical and mental health.

3. Real-World Application:

  • Nutrition clinics managing chronic care plans
  • Mobile practices doing home visits or concierge services
  • Practices offering integrated therapy and primary care

For example, we helped a women’s health platform build HIPAA-compliant fertility workflows that included scheduling, intake questionnaires, and multi-role portals—streamlining both patient experience and clinical coordination.

What Mistakes Should You Avoid When Choosing an EHR?

Switching or adopting a new EHR is not just an IT project—it’s a business decision that affects clinical workflow, staffing, billing, and ultimately patient care. And while most providers enter the selection process with good intentions, a few avoidable missteps keep arising.

If you’re in the market for an EHR in 2025, here are four common mistakes that cost clinics time, money, and morale.

1. Skipping Developer Involvement

It might seem tempting to let only the clinical or admin team drive EHR selection, especially in smaller practices. However, today’s EHRs are more technologically advanced than ever.

Many platforms now rely heavily on APIs, webhooks, and integration layers. Without input from your developer or tech partner, you may select a system that appears good on the surface but becomes a bottleneck when it’s time to integrate with your app, lab, or CRM.

Real Example:
Several healthtech startups report struggling with Athena’s development onboarding delays, not because the system lacks functionality, but because API keys and sandbox environments can take weeks to be unlocked.

Avoid This:
Incorporate technical stakeholders from the outset. Ask vendors to provide dev documentation, access to sandboxes, and a clear integration roadmap during the evaluation phase.

2. Chasing Price Without Understanding Total Cost

A low sticker price doesn’t always mean a low cost. Some platforms charge extra for features like telehealth, API access, support, or backup services. Others may advertise per-user pricing but lack the necessary billing tools—forcing you to purchase a third-party solution later.

Good Example:
eClinicalWorks offers flat-rate pricing that includes cloud hosting, disaster recovery, and support—removing surprises later. Cerbo’s month-to-month pricing is predictable, and Akute offers usage-based tiers with no charge for inactive patients.

Avoid This:
Ask vendors:

  • What’s included in the monthly fee?
  • Are there charges for training, interfaces, or extra support?
  • What happens to pricing if we grow?

Ready to Build an EHR From Scratch?

3. Underestimating the Importance of AI and Automation

EHRs that don’t support automation now will slow you down in the future. Whether you’re looking to eliminate double entry, reduce time on notes, or automate follow-ups, the EHR needs to be built to connect with AI tools—or better yet, offer them out of the box.

Emerging Leaders:

  • Athenahealth has embedded ambient note-taking using AI
  • Healthie and Canvas are letting customers bring their automation via APIs
  • NextGen’s Ambient Assist saves up to two hours a day in note-writing time

Avoid This:

Ask yourself whether your EHR can grow with your automation strategy. If you’re planning to introduce agents for triage, coding, or scribing in the next 12–18 months, your EHR has to be compatible now—not later.

4. Partnering Without Thinking About Compliance

Many platforms claim to be HIPAA compliant. But if you’re planning on building something serious—especially with federal grants, large contracts, or payers involved—you’ll need deeper proof.

Watch For:

  • SOC 2 Type II certification
  • HITRUST certification (especially for enterprise partners)
  • ONC 2015 Edition compliance for certified EHRs

Good Example:

Canvas, Healthie, and Cerner all hold advanced certifications. Epic’s long-standing compliance infrastructure makes it a reliable choice for systems with stringent IT governance requirements.

Avoid This:

Ensure your vendor’s compliance posture aligns with your current needs and future objectives.

In summary:

Choosing an EHR isn’t just about features—it’s about the full picture: your workflow, your tech stack, your billing model, and your regulatory environment. Avoiding these four mistakes will save you from buying the wrong system for the right reasons.

How Mindbowser Can Help With EHR Integration or Custom Build?

Whether you’re a digital health founder building your first MVP, a provider group scaling across multiple locations, or a health system trying to integrate multiple tools into a single workflow, getting the EHR right is foundational.

At Mindbowser, we’ve worked with startups, clinics, and enterprise healthcare organizations across the U.S. to build, integrate, and scale compliant healthcare systems that fit the way teams work.

Here’s how we can help.

Fast-Track EHR Integrations with HealthConnect CoPilot

Integrating with Epic, Cerner, Athena, or other major EHRs can be a time-consuming task if you’re doing it solo. Our HealthConnect CoPilot significantly reduces that timeline.

  • Prebuilt connectors for Epic EHR, Oracle Cerner EHR, Athenahealth EHR, eClinicalWorks EHR, and more
  • Support for FHIR, HL7, CCDA, and OAuth2 standards
  • Integration experience with SMART on FHIR apps and custom API workflows
  • Real-world projects include remote patient monitoring, AI-powered intake, and automated documentation agents.

Whether you’re building a new digital health product or syncing with an existing hospital EHR, HealthConnect CoPilot helps you go live faster with fewer integration headaches.

Build Custom, HIPAA-Compliant Applications

Sometimes, an off-the-shelf EHR just doesn’t match how you deliver care. We help clients build EHR-adjacent applications that solve specific workflow gaps without compromising security or compliance.

All are built to meet HIPAA, SOC 2, and 21st Century Cures Act requirements.

We’ve done this for clients launching behavioral health platforms, home rehab systems, and AI-based clinical tools used in live patient care.

 AI-Ready Infrastructure Without the Wait

AI is only as good as the system it works with. If your EHR or platform isn’t ready to ingest, route, and act on AI output, you’ll end up doing manual rework anyway.

We build the backend and automation layer to:

  • Connect your AI agents to EHR data
  • Enable secure documentation, note drafting, and smart triage
  • Comply with information-blocking rules and privacy frameworks

From agent-based care workflows to ambient documentation tools, we help healthcare teams operationalize AI—without waiting on vendors to catch up.

Trusted by Teams Building the Future of Healthcare

We’ve supported customers across the spectrum:

  • 5M+ study tasks handled by a HIPAA and CFR Part 11–compliant research platform
  • 90% reduction in manual entry through Epic integration for a maternal health company
  • Bluetooth-connected vitals powering remote rehab through a custom patient dashboard
  • AI-optimized scheduling for a pediatric group, improving appointment flow across locations

We don’t just build apps—we make what your care delivery model needs next.

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Conclusion

In 2025, there’s no single “best EHR.” What matters is what fits your model—your size, your care approach, your tech needs, and your budget.

For some, that means sticking with proven platforms like Epic or Cerner. For others, especially fast-moving startups and growing practices, it’s about flexibility, automation, and readiness for integration. Systems like Canvas, Healthie, Elation, or Akute are increasingly part of the conversation—not as alternatives, but as right-sized options built for the modern care environment.

The stakes are high. The wrong choice creates friction that slows growth and burns out staff. The right one helps you scale, automate, and deliver better care without workarounds or technical debt.

If you’re ready to move away from outdated workflows—or if you’re starting fresh and want to avoid costly mistakes—our team can help guide the way.

Talk to our experts!

What are the best EHR vendors in 2025?

It depends on your use case. Epic EHR and Cerner EHR are best for large systems. Canvas, Healthie EHR, and Akute are strong picks for startups and digital care models. Athenahealth and eClinicalWorks effectively serve mid-sized clinics.

Which EHR is best for telehealth-first or hybrid care models?

Healthie EHR and Canvas are built for virtual care from day one. They include telehealth, client engagement, and API access—all in one place. Akute is also a solid choice for lean, remote-first teams.

Is it worth switching EHRs for better automation or AI features?

Yes, if your current system can’t support API integrations or AI workflows. Many practices move because their EHRs limit innovation or make automation too difficult.

How much does it cost to build a custom EHR or connect to Epic/Cerner?

Costs vary depending on complexity and compliance requirements. Mindbowser has helped clients go live with Epic-integrated tools, FHIR-based platforms, and custom HIPAA-compliant apps within predictable budgets and timelines.

What certifications should my EHR vendor have?

Look for ONC 2015 Edition certification, HIPAA compliance, and—if you work with payers or enterprise clients—SOC 2 Type II and HITRUST.

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