How soaring fees for private care are deepening England’s dentistry crisis

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How soaring fees for private care are deepening England’s dentistry crisis
Author: Andrew Gregory Health editor
Published: Dec, 31 2024 18:00

Ever growing numbers of people find themselves unable to get NHS treatment or pay for the alternative. Exclusive: patients unable to get dental care after ‘eye-watering’ rise in private fees. The inability of millions of patients to access an NHS dentist is one of the longest-running injustices in the history of the health service. The misery and the harm it causes is profound and well documented. The scandal is not new.

Going private is often the only alternative. If it means getting a checkup, a scale and polish, a filling, an extraction or if necessary a root canal, many will pay. Anything to keep your teeth in good nick. But now a new horror is emerging. Just like NHS dental care, private dental care risks becoming more inaccessible too. Fees for private treatments are rocketing, an analysis shows. Average costs of non-surgical treatments are up by as much as 32% in two years.

Patients can be billed £325 for a white filling, £435 to have a tooth out and in some cases £775 for root canal work. It means millions more people could face a double blow in 2025: inability to access NHS dental care and inability to afford to go private.

Of course, many of those denied NHS dental care have not been able to afford to go private for some time. One in five people, and two in five of those on lower incomes, already avoid going to the dentist in England because it costs too much, according to a recent survey by Healthwatch.

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