How to Get More Google Reviews as a Dental Practice
If you've ever finished a treatment and forgotten to ask, this is for you. A short, honest guide to filling your Google profile with real reviews — without it feeling weird.
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Why More Reviews = More Work for Dental Practices
Before the how, here's the why. High-value dental treatments require high-trust decisions. Patients considering implants, veneers, or orthodontics read dozens of reviews before choosing a practice. Detailed reviews about results, aftercare, and value for money are essential. Every extra review past your current count earns you a slightly better position in local search, which means slightly more phone calls — and the maths compounds fast.
"dental practice near me"
Google shows the top three results for this search based heavily on review count, rating, and recency. Most clicks go to those three.
Trust signal
For a dental practice, reviews are the first social proof potential patients see — long before they ever talk to you.
Permanent asset
Reviews are an owned, permanent asset — unlike paid leads that stop the moment you stop paying.
Why It's So Hard to Get Reviews as a Dental Practice
The barrier isn't your work — it's the moment. Reviews happen when the asking is easy and the timing is right, and for most dental practices both of those things are working against you.
Cosmetic treatments are high-value but patients research extensively
Implants cost thousands — patients need enormous trust before committing
Bad reviews about pain or billing can devastate a practice
You compete with dental tourism for expensive treatments
Top-ranking dental practices typically have 50-200 Google reviews.
The 5-Step System to Get More Reviews
This is the playbook we've watched work across hundreds of dental practice owners. None of it is clever — it's just consistent.
- 1
Ask within 24-48 hours of finishing the treatment
Response rates roughly halve after a week. The fresher the experience, the more likely they post.
- 2
Send by SMS, not email
SMS gets opened in minutes. Email gets opened, maybe, on Sunday night. SMS wins for dental practices every time.
- 3
Personalise the message
Use the patient's name and reference the actual treatment. Generic templates underperform personalised messages by 2-3x.
- 4
Give them a direct link to your Google review form
Don't make them search for your business. One tap from SMS to review form is the gold standard.
- 5
Filter out unhappy patients first
Send a low-friction "how was it?" question first. Only patients who rate you highly should be funnelled to Google. The rest give you private feedback.
Or Let It Run Itself
The five steps above work. The problem is keeping them up when you're knee-deep in a treatment. Grow Our Reviews automates step 1 through step 4 — you just finish the job.
Finish a treatment
Wrap up the work the same way you always have. Nothing changes in how you operate.
Add the patient
Drop their name and mobile into the app — fifteen seconds, from your phone.
Reviews land
Happy patients post directly to Google. Unhappy ones give you private feedback first.
Examples From a Working Dental Practice's Week
Picture a typical week — a cosmetic dentistry, a dental implants, maybe a orthodontics. Each one is a potential review. Here's how the asking fits each.
cosmetic dentistry
A patient who's just had a cosmetic dentistry from you is the easiest review you'll ever ask for — when the moment is right. The system catches that moment.
dental implants
A patient who's just had a dental implants from you is the easiest review you'll ever ask for — when the moment is right. The system catches that moment.
orthodontics
A patient who's just had a orthodontics from you is the easiest review you'll ever ask for — when the moment is right. The system catches that moment.
emergency dental treatment
A patient who's just had a emergency dental treatment from you is the easiest review you'll ever ask for — when the moment is right. The system catches that moment.
What It Costs (For a Dental Practice)
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Lite
Enough credits for around 30 treatments a month.
- Up to 30 message credits per month
- SMS review requests
- Automatic follow-up nudges (can enable/disable)
- Sentiment gate (review filtering)
- Analytics dashboard
- Email support
Starter
Enough credits for around 150 treatments a month.
- Up to 150 message credits per month
- SMS review requests
- Automatic follow-up nudges (can enable/disable)
- Sentiment gate (review filtering)
- Analytics dashboard
- Email support
Growth
Enough credits for around 300 treatments a month.
- Up to 300 message credits per month
- Everything in Starter
- Priority support
Quick Answers
When is the best time to ask a patient for a review?+
Within 24-48 hours of finishing the treatment, while the experience is fresh. Wait a week and the response rate drops by more than half — we've measured it.
What's the highest-converting message to send?+
Short, polite, and personal. Mention the patient's name, what you did, and a direct link to your Google review page. The fewer clicks between SMS and review form, the higher the conversion.
Is it OK to offer an incentive?+
No. Google's policy explicitly bans incentivised reviews and they'll strip them — sometimes along with your whole rating. Don't risk it.
How many requests should I send per month as a dental practice?+
Send one to every patient you've genuinely served. The "right number" is whatever your real job volume is — the goal is steady, not bulk.
Ready to get your first wave of new reviews?
The guide above is what works. The fastest way to actually do it is to let the system ask for you — after every treatment, automatically.
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Other Health & Wellness we work with
The same approach works for adjacent health & wellness — same automation, different defaults.
More for dental practices
Same topic, different angles — useful if you're researching how reviews fit into your wider dental practice business.
Further reading
Articles from the blog that go deeper into the topics on this page.