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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Can anyone else not afford the dentist anymore?

134 replies

ithinkiveseenthisfilm · 20/01/2026 07:50

Just looked into my dentists pricing as I’m well overdue a check up.

A check up is £250, with 4 x-rays once a year charged at £60 each. That makes it £490 for a check up.

A hygienist appointment (which you must book together) is a further £120 for half an hour.

I think I need a filling, I was told that would be a minimum of £600. So one visit could end up costing me well over £1,000.

All of the NHS dentists within a 100 mile radius are closed to new patients. I check regularly but what the NHS website says is very different to the actual reality.

It’s an absolute travesty. When did something as basic as dental care become a sheer luxury?

OP posts:
Daisywhatsyouranswer · 20/01/2026 08:13

Swampthing55 · 20/01/2026 08:10

Same in my small town. I need a filling and it's £1209

1209 for a filling, is that a typo?

ithinkiveseenthisfilm · 20/01/2026 08:15

Mukey · 20/01/2026 08:13

It’s the type of xray is more what I’m questioning. “Bitewings” are usually used in check ups. They take an image of both upper and lower back teeth to check in between them for decay. So only 2 are needed. One for each side. Periapical xrays (PAs) are usually taken to assess a problem more in depth.

Obviously this isn’t always the case and without knowing your history there could well be a reason they take the xrays they do. It’s just very unusual to be done as “standard”. Do you have gum disease/issues? PAs can be better to assess bone levels around teeth. So it could be that. As I said I’m only giving the “standard” answer.

Starting to suspect this practice isn’t normal! They always do both sides, upper and lower, separate as they say it gives better images. Same for my mum.

OP posts:
MiddleAgedDread · 20/01/2026 08:16

Echoing others saying those prices are insane! I used to go to swanky practice in the posh part of a major city (left to go somewhere cheaper) and I think they peaked at £85 or £90 for a check up.

Nomedshere · 20/01/2026 08:18

I go to a BUPA dentist and pay £28 for a month for 2 dentist and 4 hygienist appointments a year. Well worth it.

Mukey · 20/01/2026 08:20

ithinkiveseenthisfilm · 20/01/2026 08:15

Starting to suspect this practice isn’t normal! They always do both sides, upper and lower, separate as they say it gives better images. Same for my mum.

This is true in theory. But if you are low risk bitewings are enough as a rule. If you need to see an area better you would do a PA. It’s just unusual to do them as standard every single visit. Possibly as a new patient yes or after a long time. But as I said, without knowing your teeth I wouldn’t want to definitely say they are doing it wrong. Just unusual.

Musicaltheatremum · 20/01/2026 08:24

I pay £25 a month so £300 a year. That covers 2 check ups, 2 hygienist appointments and one x-ray every 2 years. 10% off anything you pay for extra and out of hours care. It's a Scottish based scheme that private dentists use.

pinkblueyelloworange · 20/01/2026 08:33

Also a small town
£50 check up
£27.50 2 bite wing x rays (once a year)
White filing £150

Mukey · 20/01/2026 08:42

Daisywhatsyouranswer · 20/01/2026 08:13

1209 for a filling, is that a typo?

I imagine it’s £120. I’ve worked in Harley street in London and a filling there wouldn’t even cost 1k. Unless it’s a root filling.

Bundleflower · 20/01/2026 08:45

I’ve not been in about 8 years. I could afford private if I had an emergency but I feel indulgent using that much money for maintenance care when there’s all sorts of other expenses to pay for with the house and children etc. The ones around me are just so expensive.

Ginmonkeyagain · 20/01/2026 08:45

Have you got particulary problemtic teeth or gum as those prices are mad. I go to a private dentist in outer London and I pay £80 per appointment for the hygienist and have two a year and have one check up a year wirh x rays which is £50.

Last year I had to have an in depth consult with a specialist to look at a possibly infected implant where he x rayed it, deep cleaned it and gave me advice and that was £100.

APatternGrammar · 20/01/2026 08:47

ithinkiveseenthisfilm · 20/01/2026 08:08

To make money, I’m guessing. They always say it’s all fully optional, but then when you get there they get very convincing and start talking about the worst case scenario if you don’t get them.

There's a lot of rules and regulation about when you can use radiation on someone and it needs more justification than your dentist currently has for what they are doing, in case you want a relevant question to ask when they start pushing the x rays. (It's not dangerous at all to get them, but the idea is that you shouldn't be using radiation without a good reason.)
https://www.iaea.org/resources/rpop/health-professionals/dentistry/justification

Justification in dental radiology - FAQs for health professionals | IAEA

https://www.iaea.org/resources/rpop/health-professionals/dentistry/justification

MojoMoon · 20/01/2026 08:52

Central London (right by Euston if you want to travel in from your small town) and it's £55 for a check up. X rays are a further £50 if required for two.

Deep clean is £79.

JennieTheZebra · 20/01/2026 08:52

Your dentist is extortionate! This is an example of a price list for a dentist near me in the usually very expensive South East. https://www.shirleyavenuedental.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/Shirley-Avenue-Dental-Prices-2025-v2.pdf Note the cheapness of the check ups and fillings.

CandidLurker · 20/01/2026 08:54

As a country I think we need to stop pretending we can support all adults with dentistry via the NHS. if your teeth are in reasonable condition then an insurance scheme is not too expensive and I think will be a cost that I think most adults are just going to have to accept they will have to pay. I’ve always had to accept that I have to pay for contact lenses and glasses. Unfortunately My dental scheme is very expensive but this was due to correcting some of the issues caused by the awful NHS dentistry that we were subject to as children in the 1970’s.

ThankyouBakedP0tato · 20/01/2026 08:57

I've just had to leave denplan and luckily I've found a local dentist during a tooth pain nightmare and they took me on as a patient after the extraction.

What do I do about my son seeing a dentist now though? The denplan one won't see him if I'm not a client. Do NHS have to take on children no matter what?

He's just turned 16 and due a check up . . .

blackberryhill · 20/01/2026 09:01

CandidLurker · 20/01/2026 08:54

As a country I think we need to stop pretending we can support all adults with dentistry via the NHS. if your teeth are in reasonable condition then an insurance scheme is not too expensive and I think will be a cost that I think most adults are just going to have to accept they will have to pay. I’ve always had to accept that I have to pay for contact lenses and glasses. Unfortunately My dental scheme is very expensive but this was due to correcting some of the issues caused by the awful NHS dentistry that we were subject to as children in the 1970’s.

I don't think anyone's pretending that is the case any more, I don't know anyone who has access to an NHS dentist. I don't even know anyone who can get access for their children. We have to pay privately for our 4 year old.

ScholesPanda · 20/01/2026 09:33

YANBU to think that dentistry has become a luxury when it should be an essential. Write to your MP so they know this is an issue that matters to you.

However, that is extortionate. My private dentist is £50 for a check-up, and £65 to see the hygienist, between £150 and £300 for a filling. They offer Denplan and 0% payment plans for treatment.

I would say that the cost is higher for new patients- £100 plus any treatment or diagnostic costs. You can only see the hygienist once registered.

So you probably will need to swallow an initial cost to get yourself registered and on to a plan.

psuedocream3 · 20/01/2026 09:39

When I was an NHS patient I visited the dentist regularly and had any/all work done. Since moving many years ago private is the only option available locally. I do pay for hygeniest yearly (circa £90) and emergency work only. Last appointment was to fix a chip on the front tooth which was £180 for a composite bonding fix.The last time I went for a checkup at a different private dentist it was the best part of £200 just for check up, xrays and toothpaste, then they wanted an additional £500 for work which is unaffordable.

123H · 20/01/2026 09:41

Taking dentistry ‘out’ of the NHS has gone well hasn’t it - not!

Hopefully people will remember this disaster when they consider voting for Reform UK PLC, whose stated aim is to introduce some sort of ‘insurance based’ health care system … perhaps along the lines of dentistry!

What could possibly go wrong!!!

Isobel201 · 20/01/2026 09:47

I have used medical insurance (UK) for years for the dentist and opticians. It also came in handy when I decided to go for some private physio, and I had toe nail surgery done privately too. I just put in claims and get the money paid back.

trappedCatAsleepOnMe · 20/01/2026 09:47

I check regularly but what the NHS website says is very different to the actual reality.

That what we found when we moved here decade ago - hiding the problem really as one we contaced from NHS hadn't taken NHS pateient on for years by that point.

Previous area I found a dentist taking on NHS but had to write to every practise in the area. Here did same one got back said they'd take the kids as NHS if we went private with them - and TBF they still are NHS even now one over 19 - so we pay monthly sum that covers most of the cost for DH and I - though TBH have needed little other than scrap and polish and x-rays.

My Mum's denstist went private so she now on the dentplan scheme as well. IL still have an NHS dentist - but FIL retired and it took 18 months to find a new one and the pratcice thought they'd not find one at all.

DD1 come home for dental check up - uni - DS thought he'd find one up there but suspect he'll do the same but then it's a worry if they suddenly need one where they are.

Nevermind17 · 20/01/2026 09:57

I’m lucky I guess that I still have an NHS dentist, but their treatments have gone massively downhill. I still get a cheap check-up. They no longer do X-Rays unless they suspect a problem. They don’t give me a scale and polish anymore. I have two missing teeth at the back, which I was supposed to be given a bridge for (just prior to COVID) on the NHS. Once I went back after lockdown they said that it was no longer covered on the NHS and would now cost £4000 per tooth. Needless to say I still have those gaps!

I was given a filling a couple of years ago without any anaesthetic, cleaning or drilling. She literally got the filling material on the end of her gloved finger and pressed it into the hole. It’s an absolute mess.

Ginmonkeyagain · 20/01/2026 09:59

£4000 for a bridge? Are you sure? I paid £4k for a bone graft and implant privately.

Gettingbysomehow · 20/01/2026 10:01

I drive 4 hours to my old dentist and stay with friends overnight. Its bloody ridiculous.

Mukey · 20/01/2026 10:03

Ginmonkeyagain · 20/01/2026 09:59

£4000 for a bridge? Are you sure? I paid £4k for a bone graft and implant privately.

I do think sometimes some things get a bit lost in translation. Treatments and costs get mixed up. It’s possible that 4k was for an implant because possibly a bridge was not suitable/wouldn’t work.

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