Where foreign residents, Thammasat/AIT students and long-stayers get dental work done — Thammasat University Hospital's Faculty of Dentistry, the Bangkok Hospital clinic at Future Park Rangsit, private clinics like Smile Signature Rangsit, and public Pathum Thani Hospital — with a full THB and USD price guide and when to head into Bangkok instead.
Pathum Thani's dental scene is anchored by its university identity: Thammasat University Hospital runs its own Faculty of Dentistry in Khlong Luang, giving residents academic-hospital standards at public pricing, while Bangkok Hospital operates a convenient BDMS-network clinic inside Future Park Rangsit and independent clinics such as Smile Signature Rangsit cover everyday and cosmetic work. Public Pathum Thani Hospital covers the budget end with longer waits. Below is where to go, what it costs in baht, and when heading into Bangkok makes more sense for complex work.
A large public teaching hospital run by Thammasat University with its own Faculty of Dentistry, offering fillings, extractions, scaling, fluoride treatment and wider restorative care under academic-hospital standards. It serves the huge Thammasat and nearby AIT student and staff population as well as the general public, and is the standout dental asset in the province — solid clinical oversight at public-hospital pricing.
Bangkok Hospital runs an outpatient clinic inside Future Park Rangsit, one of Southeast Asia's largest malls, giving foreign residents an easy, walk-in-friendly BDMS-network touchpoint for routine consults and referrals. More involved dental work is typically referred into the wider Bangkok Hospital network in the capital.
A private specialty dental clinic covering general dentistry, orthodontics, cosmetic dentistry, implants and whitening, open seven days a week and well used to both Thai and foreign patients. A solid mid-market option for routine and cosmetic work without a trip into Bangkok.
The province's public hospital runs a dental center open daily from 8am to 6pm, covering routine treatment at the lowest cost in the province. Expect longer queues and less English support than the private options, so it suits straightforward, non-urgent care best.
For oral surgery, full-mouth reconstruction or specialist prosthodontic work beyond what Rangsit's dental providers handle day-to-day, patients are typically referred into Bangkok's flagship private network (Bumrungrad, Samitivej, the wider BDMS group) via Vibhavadi Rangsit Road, the Don Mueang Tollway, or the SRT Red Line into Bang Sue.
Indicative prices gathered from Thammasat University Hospital, the Bangkok Hospital clinic at Future Park Rangsit, Smile Signature Rangsit and public Pathum Thani Hospital. Actual quotes vary by provider, materials and case complexity; USD is approximate at about 36 THB to the dollar.
| Treatment | Cost (THB) | Approx (USD) |
|---|---|---|
| Scale & polish (cleaning) | 500 - 1,500 | 14 - 42 |
| Composite filling | 600 - 1,800 | 17 - 50 |
| Root canal (per tooth) | 4,500 - 12,000 | 125 - 333 |
| Porcelain crown | 8,000 - 16,000 | 222 - 444 |
| Porcelain veneer (per tooth) | 9,000 - 18,000 | 250 - 500 |
| Single implant (incl. crown) | 35,000 - 75,000 | 972 - 2,083 |
| Professional teeth whitening | 4,500 - 12,000 | 125 - 333 |
Thammasat University Hospital and the Bangkok Hospital clinic at Future Park both take phone or walk-in bookings, and English support is common given the large Thammasat and AIT international community. Smile Signature Rangsit is also well used to foreign patients — message ahead in English or via LINE to confirm before a multi-visit treatment plan.
Routine dental work is almost always self-funded, and Pathum Thani's prices are low enough that this rarely stings. Student insurance through Thammasat or AIT and most work-permit policies focus on hospitalisation rather than routine dental, so budget separately; where a policy does include dental cover, Bangkok Hospital's BDMS network is the most practised at direct billing.
Thammasat University Hospital's Faculty of Dentistry brings digital imaging and academic-medicine sterilisation standards to public-hospital pricing. Bangkok Hospital's Future Park clinic follows BDMS-wide protocols. Independent clinics vary more — ask to see equipment and sterilisation process before committing to multi-visit treatment such as implants.
Pathum Thani's foreign population skews toward Thammasat/AIT students, academic staff and BOI/industrial workers rather than short seasonal rotations, so there's less pressure to squeeze in treatment before a departure date. Even so, book implants, crowns or bridge work in a stretch that avoids exam periods, term breaks or a trip back home, since these need two or more visits spaced weeks apart.
There is no dental rule tied to any visa category — DTV, LTR, Non-B work permit, student and retirement (O-A/O-X) visa holders all use the same hospitals and clinics and pay the same way. A longer-term visa or student enrolment simply makes it easier to plan multi-visit treatment without a special trip back to Thailand.
Yes. Thammasat University Hospital runs its own Faculty of Dentistry with digital imaging and academic-hospital standards, Bangkok Hospital operates a convenient BDMS-network clinic inside Future Park Rangsit, and private clinics such as Smile Signature Rangsit cover everyday and cosmetic work. For oral surgery or highly specialist treatment, Bangkok's flagship private hospitals are about 30–45 minutes away by road or the SRT Red Line.
Thammasat University Hospital's dental department is the standout option — academic-hospital oversight at public pricing — and is especially convenient for anyone already affiliated with Thammasat or AIT. Bangkok Hospital's Future Park Rangsit clinic is the easiest private, walk-in-friendly touchpoint, while Smile Signature Rangsit is a solid independent option for cosmetic and routine work.
As a rough guide, a cleaning runs about 500-1,500 THB, a composite filling 600-1,800 THB, a porcelain crown 8,000-16,000 THB (roughly USD 222-444), veneers 9,000-18,000 THB per tooth, and a single implant including the crown 35,000-75,000 THB (roughly USD 972-2,083). Prices vary by provider and sit well below US, UK, Australian or European costs, broadly in line with other Bangkok Metro provinces.
Usually not for routine work — most student insurance plans through Thammasat or AIT, along with typical work-permit and retirement-visa policies, focus on hospitalisation and emergency care rather than everyday dental treatment, so check your policy's fine print. Where a plan does include dental cover, Bangkok Hospital's Future Park clinic is the most practised at direct billing given its BDMS network ties; otherwise routine dental care is paid out of pocket, which is standard practice given how affordable it is.
Thammasat University Hospital and the Bangkok Hospital clinic at Future Park Rangsit both handle urgent issues such as a broken tooth or lost filling during clinic hours. Save a direct clinic or hospital number rather than relying on a walk-in, particularly outside city-centre hours, and confirm which facility your insurer's network covers before you need it.
Primary and official sources are cited above. Government rules, fees and procedures in Thailand change over time and vary by office; always confirm current requirements with the relevant authority before relying on them. BAANLYY never takes paid placement in editorial content.
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Hero photo by Pavel Danilyuk on Pexels. General information only, not medical advice; clinics, prices and treatment options change — confirm current details directly with a clinic or hospital.