Finding solutions to the depleted dental workforce in the UK was front of mind when the Association...
Major boost for millions of NHS dental patients
Patients across England will be able to get urgent dentist appointments more easily thanks to a major overhaul of NHS services.
The Government will proceed with a raft of reforms – the most-significant modernisation of the NHS dental contract in years – following a consultation with the sector and members of the public.
By prioritising patients with the greatest needs, the changes, which will be in place from April 2026, will ensure the NHS dentistry budget – estimated at around £4b – delivers value for money for the taxpayer by diverting funds into better and more-effective treatments for those who need them most.
For example, a patient with tooth decay in several teeth or severe gum disease would require complex treatment.
Currently, they would need to be treated over multiple appointments.
For a patient this is hard to co-ordinate and book with a dentist, while, for a dentist, this would be costly and time consuming.
With the changes, this patient could secure a single comprehensive package of treatment with a dentist over a longer period, tailored to their needs and including oral health advice.
This could save a patient up to £225 in fees.
And dentists will be incentivised to deliver this under a new standardised payment package.
We inherited a broken NHS dental system and have worked at pace to start fixing it – rolling out urgent and emergency appointments and bringing in supervised toothbrushing for young children in the most-deprived areas
Patients also struggle to find dental practices that treat people with urgent needs and have to choose to live with the pain or travel out of their local area to find somewhere that can treat them.
The new reforms will make urgent dental care a core part of what NHS dental practices must provide through the new contract, making it easier for people to access an urgent appointment at their local NHS dental practice, saving them from travelling out of their area.
Urgent care may be for issues including severe tooth pain, dental infections, trauma to teeth, or other conditions that need rapid treatment, and dentists will be fairly incentivised to treat these on the NHS.
The sweeping reforms work alongside the Government’s wider rescue plan for dentistry, including the rollout of urgent and emergency care appointments and community water fluoridation schemes proven to reduce decay.
The Government has also rolled out a pioneering national supervised toothbrushing programme for 3-5 year olds, which will support up to 600,000 children this year, with over four million toothbrushes and toothpastes delivered already.
Minister for Care, Stephen Kinnock, said: “We inherited a broken NHS dental system and have worked at pace to start fixing it – rolling out urgent and emergency appointments and bringing in supervised toothbrushing for young children in the most-deprived areas.
“Now we are tackling the deep-rooted problems so patients can have faith in NHS dentistry – these changes will make it easier for anyone with urgent dental needs to get NHS treatment, preventing painful conditions from spiralling into avoidable hospital admissions.
“This is about putting patients first and supporting those with the greatest need, while backing our NHS dentists, making the contract more attractive, and giving them the resources to deliver more.
“This marks the first step towards a new era for NHS dentistry after a decade of decline, one that delivers for patients and our dedicated dental professionals.”
In a boost for children’s dental health, dental nurses will be encouraged to apply fluoride varnish to children’s teeth helping maintain good oral health.
Dental staff will also receive a fairer payment for applying fissure sealants to protect children’s teeth from decay, in a shift towards preventing poor dental health.
This marks the first step towards a new era for NHS dentistry after a decade of decline, one that delivers for patients and our dedicated dental professionals
And, to improve staff retention, NHS dental teams will receive more support through annual reviews, learning, and development, in addition to government funding to support sick leave and guidance on NHS contractual terms and benefits.
Neil Carmichael, executive chair of The Association of Dental Groups (ADG), said: “We broadly welcome the dental contract reforms and look forward to receiving more details as soon as possible in the new year so that practices have the time and ability to prepare to implement these changes.
“The ADG was part of the consultation process and it is good to see that steps are being taken to address the underpayment of more-complex care, as well as support urgent care.
“A continuing priority for our members, however, is ensuring that the necessary steps are being taken to shore up the NHS England dental workforce, which we know is short by over 2,500 dentists.
“Embracing the whole dental workforce is crucial, so to see in the plan further encouragement of the team including dental nurses to take on treatments, with fairer recompense, is a positive move.”
Dr Oosh Devalia, president of the British Society of Paediatric Dentistry (BSPD), added: “BSPD welcomes today’s announcement on NHS Dental Contract reform as a positive step and we look forward to seeing what this means for children and young people.
“Having a contract with prevention at its heart must be the way forward, and the recommendations we submitted during the consultation period are focused on ensuring that the children most in need are prioritised to receive the dental services they deserve.
“A prevention approach will have the biggest impact when it is designed to target the most-vulnerable children in our communities.
“As ever, BSPD looks forward to working with policymakers to establish the details to ensure that the dental contract really delivers for children.”
Having a contract with prevention at its heart must be the way forward, and the recommendations we submitted during the consultation period are focused on ensuring that the children most in need are prioritised to receive the dental services they deserve
The public consultation ran for six weeks from 8 July to 19 August 2025 and received 2,289 completed responses, with 60% from individuals sharing personal views, 33% from individuals sharing professional views, and 7% from organisations.
Over half of respondents to the consultation agreed the proposals would improve the current NHS dental contract and support practices to prioritise care for those who need it most.
The changes will require legislative amendments, which the Government plans to introduce from April 2026.
NHS England will then work with Integrated Care Boards and clinical experts to produce detailed implementation guidance.
The key measures being taken forward from the consultation are:
- Embedding urgent treatment in the NHS dental contract so patients have access to urgent dental care when they need it
- New treatment pathways for complex needs such as serious tooth decay and progressive gum disease
- Delivering effective, evidence-based care, making greater use of dental expertise and knowledge
- Enhanced support for dental professionals’ learning and development, benefitting patients from an enhanced skill set
- Strengthening the NHS dental workforce by supporting retention