# Dental care in Chiang Mai: a dental tourism guide

> Chiang Mai dental tourism explained — why so many visitors get their teeth done here, what it costs, and how to choose a clinic safely.

At some point in your stay, someone over coffee will mention they're "getting their teeth done while they're here". They're not joking. Chiang Mai is one of Asia's quiet **dental tourism** hubs, and plenty of long-stayers — and even people who fly in specifically — sort out work they'd been putting off at home. Here's why, and how to do it sensibly.

## Why Chiang Mai is a dental hub

The short version: **excellent private clinics at a fraction of Western prices**. Many dentists here trained internationally or in Western programmes, speak fluent English, and work with the same modern equipment and materials — implant brands, ceramic crowns — you'd find back home. The savings aren't because corners are cut; they're because rent, salaries and overheads are simply lower than in London, Sydney or San Francisco.

How much lower? Treatments typically run **50–70% cheaper** than in the US, UK or Australia. A routine **cleaning** might cost the equivalent of a nice lunch. A porcelain **crown** that runs well over a thousand at home is often a few hundred here. **Implants** that would be eye-watering back home land in a far gentler range. Treat any figure as a ballpark — clinics publish their own price lists, and they change — but the gap is real, and it's the reason this whole scene exists. It's also part of the wider [healthcare picture](/blog/healthcare-chiang-mai), which is reassuringly good across the board.

![Dental care in Chiang Mai: a dental tourism guide](/blog/dental-care-chiang-mai/visual.webp)

## What people actually get done

Pretty much everything. The common menu:

- **Cleanings and check-ups** — cheap enough that many residents just go every six months and pay out of pocket.
- **Fillings and root canals** — straightforward, same-day or two visits.
- **Crowns, bridges and implants** — the bigger-ticket work that draws fly-in visitors.
- **Whitening** — a popular add-on while you're in the chair.
- **Invisalign, braces and veneers** — longer commitments worth planning around your stay.

For a one-off filling or a clean, you can often walk in or book a day or two ahead. For anything multi-stage — **implants especially** — plan it around your trip. Implants need healing time between placing the post and fitting the crown, sometimes months, so they suit long-stayers or repeat visitors rather than a quick holiday. If you're settling in for that kind of stretch, it's the same window in which people tend to sort out other admin — like [getting a Thai driving licence](/blog/thai-driving-licence-chiang-mai) — while they're here.

## Choosing a clinic safely

This is the part to take seriously. The good news: most reputable clinics make it easy. A few honest signals to look for:

- **Qualified, named dentists** — clinics happy to tell you where they trained and to show their credentials. Thai dentists are regulated by the Thai Dental Council.
- **Clear, itemised pricing** — each procedure listed separately, with the material or implant **brand named**. Vague all-in quotes are a red flag.
- **Genuine reviews** — read Google and patient forums critically, looking for detail rather than star counts.
- **Visible hygiene standards** — a good clinic will happily explain its sterilisation.

Clinics like **Chiang Mai International Dental Centre**, **Grace Dental** or **Kitcha** come up often in expat circles — but treat any name, including those, as a starting point to verify yourself, not a blanket endorsement. Get a written quote, ask about warranties on lab work, and don't be shy about a second opinion. The same calm common sense that keeps you [safe and sensible](/blog/is-chiang-mai-safe) elsewhere in the city applies here.

## Is it worth it?

Honestly, yes — for most people, the quality genuinely holds up, which is why it's become a fixture of [the nomad scene](/blog/digital-nomad-chiang-mai) and a real line item in many people's [cost of living](/blog/cost-of-living-chiang-mai). Just go in with your eyes open: do your due diligence, keep your records, and remember that travel and health cover rarely pays for elective dental work — check your [travel insurance](/blog/travel-insurance-chiang-mai) before you assume anything.

Done thoughtfully, you might leave Chiang Mai with a better smile and a lighter dental bill than you've had in years. We'll keep the kettle on.

— The Ada House team
