Veneers are a popular dental tourism procedure but the quality gap between destinations is significant. DTW data shows 31% of veneer cases report complications. Here is what to know before you book.
Dental implants are the highest-risk dental tourism procedure because they require time, precision diagnostics, and a biological integration process that cannot be shortened. This guide covers the full risk landscape: implant brands, osseointegration timelines, country-level complication data, and the questions to ask before you commit.
Standard travel insurance will not pay for complications from planned dental treatment abroad. This guide explains what dental tourism insurance actually covers, how to evaluate a policy, and how Section 75 and chargeback provide a financial safety net.
Some red flags are obvious. Others are subtle. Here are 12 warning signs that an overseas dental clinic may cut corners on safety or quality — drawn from patterns in the DTW case database.
Choosing the wrong clinic abroad is the primary cause of dental tourism complications. This guide gives you a step-by-step verification framework covering licences, accreditation, implant brands, sterilisation, and the questions to ask before you pay any deposit.
Most dental tourism cost comparisons stop at the treatment price. The true cost includes flights, accommodation, lost income, and a risk premium for remedial treatment back home. This guide builds the complete financial picture before you book.
Many UK and US dentists hesitate to take on overseas dental cases. This practical guide shows you exactly who to approach, what documentation to bring, how to frame the request, and where to find specialists willing to assess and fix dental work done abroad.
A failed dental implant after overseas treatment is more common than clinics admit. This guide walks you through immediate steps, how to contact your overseas provider, finding the right local specialist, and what remedial treatment will realistically cost.
Post-operative infection is the most common complication reported to DTW, accounting for 27% of all cases, with a median onset of 9 days after treatment. Know the difference between normal discomfort and a spreading infection that needs emergency care.