Everything expats and long-stay visitors need: English-speaking clinics in Phuket Town, Patong, Chalong and Rawai, hospital dental departments for complex work, cosmetic and implant dentistry, a full THB and USD price guide, and how to combine treatment with an island stay.
Phuket is one of Thailand's most popular places to get dental work done. Modern, English-speaking clinics and hospital dental departments deliver Western-standard care - digital X-rays, CAD/CAM crowns, implants, veneers and orthodontics - at a fraction of home prices, which makes the island both a practical base for resident expats and a genuine dental-tourism destination. Here is where to go, what it costs, and how to fit treatment around living on, or visiting, Phuket.
Most day-to-day dentistry in Phuket happens at modern private clinics used to treating foreigners, concentrated in Phuket Town and Patong. Expect English-speaking dentists, digital X-rays, same-day or next-day appointments and often same-visit work like fillings and cleanings. These clinics handle the bulk of routine care - check-ups, cleanings, fillings, crowns and whitening - at prices far below Western Europe, the US or Australia.
For oral surgery, sedation dentistry, difficult extractions or work you want done alongside other medical care, Phuket's private hospitals run full dental departments - among them Bangkok Hospital Phuket, Dibuk Hospital and Phuket International Hospital. They suit more complex cases and patients who want hospital-grade facilities, and they are used to international patients and insurance paperwork.
Phuket has a strong cosmetic scene: porcelain veneers, professional whitening, smile makeovers and Hollywood-style transformations are widely offered, often as packages for visitors. Specialist clinics also cover periodontics and endodontics (root canals) with modern equipment and clear before-and-after treatment plans.
Braces, clear aligners such as Invisalign, and dental implants are all readily available and popular with long-stay expats because the savings versus home are large. Implants and aligners take multiple visits over months, which fits residents and DTV/retirement-visa holders well; short-stay visitors usually plan the timeline with the clinic in advance.
For a broken tooth, lost filling or sudden pain, larger clinics and hospital dental departments in Phuket Town and Patong take walk-ins or same-day bookings, and some tourist-area clinics keep extended hours. Keep a clinic's line saved if you are on a long stay so an emergency is a quick fix rather than a lost holiday.
The island's administrative centre has the highest concentration of clinics and the best local pricing, from long-established family dentists to modern cosmetic practices. It is the practical choice for residents who want quality work without tourist-area mark-ups.
The main west-coast resort strip has plenty of visitor-friendly clinics with English signage, extended hours and package pricing aimed at holidaymakers and dental tourists. Handy if you are staying on the beach, though generally a little pricier than Phuket Town.
The southern expat and long-stay hub around Chalong and Rawai has a growing set of clinics serving the resident nomad, fighter and retiree community, with convenient parking and a relaxed, local feel that suits people living in the south.
The affluent northwest around Laguna and Bang Tao offers premium clinics and hospital-linked dental services aimed at the villa-and-branded-residence crowd. Expect the island's most polished facilities and highest prices here.
The Kathu corridor between Phuket Town and Patong, near the Central Phuket malls, is an easy, central base with modern clinics that are simple to reach from most of the island - a good middle ground for value and convenience.
Indicative private-clinic prices. Actual quotes vary by clinic, materials and case complexity; USD is approximate at about 36 THB to the dollar.
| Treatment | Cost (THB) | Approx (USD) |
|---|---|---|
| Scale & polish (cleaning) | 800 - 1,500 | 22 - 42 |
| Composite filling | 800 - 2,500 | 22 - 70 |
| Root canal (per tooth) | 6,000 - 15,000 | 165 - 415 |
| Porcelain crown | 10,000 - 20,000 | 275 - 550 |
| Porcelain veneer (per tooth) | 12,000 - 22,000 | 330 - 610 |
| Single implant (incl. crown) | 45,000 - 90,000 | 1,250 - 2,500 |
| Professional teeth whitening | 6,000 - 15,000 | 165 - 415 |
Booking is quick - most clinics take same-day or next-day appointments by phone, LINE or website, and many have English-speaking front desks. For implants, veneers or orthodontics, message the clinic before you travel so they can plan the number of visits around your dates.
Routine dental work is almost always paid out of pocket by card or cash, and prices are low enough that many people simply self-fund. Some international health policies include limited dental cover - if yours does, hospital dental departments are the most used to handling claims and paperwork.
Thailand's leading dental clinics use digital X-rays, CT scanning and CAD/CAM crowns, and many dentists trained or hold qualifications abroad. Look for clinics that display sterilisation standards and clear treatment plans; hospital departments add internationally accredited, hospital-grade facilities for complex cases.
Phuket is a genuine dental-tourism destination: the savings on crowns, veneers and implants can cover much of a trip, and clinics routinely schedule multi-visit work around a one-to-two-week island stay. It is easy to pair a course of treatment with beaches, spas and recovery time - just book the sequence with the clinic first.
There is no dental rule tied to your visa - DTV, LTR, retirement, Education and tourist visitors all use the same clinics and pay the same way. Longer visas simply make multi-visit treatment (implants, aligners, full-mouth work) easier to complete without a special trip home.
Yes. Phuket's leading private clinics and hospital dental departments use digital X-rays, CAD/CAM crowns and modern sterilisation, with English-speaking, often foreign-trained dentists. Standards at the top clinics are comparable to the West at a fraction of the price, which is why the island is an established dental-tourism destination.
As a rough guide, a cleaning runs about 800-1,500 THB, a composite filling 800-2,500 THB, a porcelain crown 10,000-20,000 THB (roughly USD 275-550), veneers 12,000-22,000 THB per tooth, and a single implant including the crown 45,000-90,000 THB (roughly USD 1,250-2,500). Prices vary by clinic and are typically well below US, UK or Australian costs.
Phuket Town has the highest concentration of clinics and the best local pricing, Patong is the most tourist-facing with extended hours and packages, and Chalong/Rawai serve the southern expat community. Bang Tao and Laguna offer the most upscale facilities, while Kathu near Central Phuket is a convenient central option.
Yes - that is exactly how dental tourism works here. Clinics routinely schedule multi-visit work such as crowns, veneers and implants around a one-to-two-week stay, so you can pair treatment with beaches, spas and recovery. Message the clinic before you travel so they can plan the number of visits around your dates.
No. There is no dental rule tied to your visa - DTV, LTR, retirement, Education and tourist visitors all use the same clinics and pay out of pocket. Longer visas simply make multi-visit treatments like implants and aligners easier to finish without an extra trip.
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Hero photo by Daniel Frank on Pexels. General information only; confirm current clinics, prices and treatment plans locally. Prices in Thai baht (THB) are indicative and USD is approximate.