Broken Tooth
Private home‑visit dental care across Liverpool and nearby areas.
Need a Home Visit?
Liverpool & Merseyside. We come to homes, care homes and hospitals.
Overview
Broken Tooth can often be delivered safely at home using portable equipment and a consent‑led approach. We prioritise comfort, clear explanations, and practical steps that ease symptoms while planning for the best long‑term outcome. This page explains the causes, symptoms, assessment and short‑term options for broken tooth at home.
Who it helps
Home appointments suit people who are housebound, have mobility challenges, experience anxiety in clinics, are recovering from illness, or simply find travel impractical. This page explains the causes, symptoms, assessment and short‑term options for broken tooth at home.
What we can do at home
We complete structured assessments and provide short‑term or definitive measures appropriate for a domestic setting. Some procedures require a clinic and we will explain why. This page explains the causes, symptoms, assessment and short‑term options for broken tooth at home.
Safety and limitations
Domiciliary dentistry balances benefit and risk. We only proceed when positioning, access and safety allow. If not, we arrange referral. This page explains the causes, symptoms, assessment and short‑term options for broken tooth at home.
Preparation
Prepare a supportive chair, clear a small area, and keep pets in another room. Carers are welcome to help with communication and positioning. This page explains the causes, symptoms, assessment and short‑term options for broken tooth at home.
Aftercare
Written guidance covers eating, pain control, oral hygiene and warning signs. We review progress and update your plan as needed. This page explains the causes, symptoms, assessment and short‑term options for broken tooth at home.
Fees and transparency
We keep pricing simple and predictable. A home visit is £450 per visit. An exam/consultation is £99. Extractions start from £210, scale and polish is £350, and dentures start from £485. This page explains the causes, symptoms, assessment and short‑term options for broken tooth at home.
Ethos
We focus on kindness, clarity and practicality. Good oral health supports nutrition, communication and confidence, so even small steps matter. This page explains the causes, symptoms, assessment and short‑term options for broken tooth at home.
Prices
Treatment | Price (£) |
---|---|
Home visit consultation | £99 |
Exam | £99 |
Scale and polish | £350 |
Extractions | from £210 |
Denture (replacing missing teeth) | from £485 |
Home visit (per visit) | £450 |
FAQs
When should I seek help for broken tooth?
If pain is persistent, there is swelling, fever, or difficulty swallowing, seek assessment promptly. Urgent changes warrant urgent care.
Can broken tooth be stabilised at home?
Many conditions can be assessed and stabilised with temporary measures at home; suitability depends on risks and complexity.
What self‑care helps before a visit?
Keep the mouth clean with gentle brushing and saltwater rinses unless told otherwise. Avoid extreme temperatures and very hard foods.
Will I always need antibiotics?
No. Antibiotics are used only when clinically indicated; definitive care often treats the cause more effectively.
Could this require a clinic procedure?
Sometimes. We explain risks and benefits and can coordinate referral to the most appropriate setting.
How much does it cost?
A home visit is £450 per visit. Examination is £99. Typical treatments include extractions from £210, scale and polish £350, and dentures from £485.
Background: Why a home‑visit model helps
Home dental visits reduce barriers such as limited mobility, anxiety in clinical environments, transport challenges, caring responsibilities, and time constraints. By moving assessment and selected treatments into the home, we make oral care timely and practical. Portable equipment allows lighting, suction, and essential instrumentation. However, safety always comes first: if a fixed clinic or hospital provides a safer setting for a procedure, we will explain why and coordinate a referral. Good oral health protects nutrition, speech, social confidence and overall wellbeing; that is why proactive care, even when limited by practical constraints, still makes a meaningful difference.
Preparation, environment and follow‑up
Before a visit, it helps to clear a small workspace near a chair with back support and access to domestic power. Pets should be moved to another room where possible, and carers are welcome to be present for consent and support. After the appointment, keep written advice to hand and note any medications or mouthwashes we recommend. If symptoms change unexpectedly—such as increasing swelling, fever, or new difficulty swallowing—seek urgent medical help and let us know.
Background: Why a home‑visit model helps
Home dental visits reduce barriers such as limited mobility, anxiety in clinical environments, transport challenges, caring responsibilities, and time constraints. By moving assessment and selected treatments into the home, we make oral care timely and practical. Portable equipment allows lighting, suction, and essential instrumentation. However, safety always comes first: if a fixed clinic or hospital provides a safer setting for a procedure, we will explain why and coordinate a referral. Good oral health protects nutrition, speech, social confidence and overall wellbeing; that is why proactive care, even when limited by practical constraints, still makes a meaningful difference.
Preparation, environment and follow‑up
Before a visit, it helps to clear a small workspace near a chair with back support and access to domestic power. Pets should be moved to another room where possible, and carers are welcome to be present for consent and support. After the appointment, keep written advice to hand and note any medications or mouthwashes we recommend. If symptoms change unexpectedly—such as increasing swelling, fever, or new difficulty swallowing—seek urgent medical help and let us know.
Background: Why a home‑visit model helps
Home dental visits reduce barriers such as limited mobility, anxiety in clinical environments, transport challenges, caring responsibilities, and time constraints. By moving assessment and selected treatments into the home, we make oral care timely and practical. Portable equipment allows lighting, suction, and essential instrumentation. However, safety always comes first: if a fixed clinic or hospital provides a safer setting for a procedure, we will explain why and coordinate a referral. Good oral health protects nutrition, speech, social confidence and overall wellbeing; that is why proactive care, even when limited by practical constraints, still makes a meaningful difference.
Preparation, environment and follow‑up
Before a visit, it helps to clear a small workspace near a chair with back support and access to domestic power. Pets should be moved to another room where possible, and carers are welcome to be present for consent and support. After the appointment, keep written advice to hand and note any medications or mouthwashes we recommend. If symptoms change unexpectedly—such as increasing swelling, fever, or new difficulty swallowing—seek urgent medical help and let us know.