By Dr. Alan Francis, DDS (Retired)
Every guide in this series ends with a version of the same advice: ask specific questions before you commit, and evaluate the quality of the answers as carefully as their content. What makes a clinic worth trusting is not its marketing materials, its social media following, or the general reputation of the country it operates in. It is the precision and completeness of its answers to direct clinical questions—and its willingness to provide written documentation that backs those answers up. This guide collects the most important questions across every category that matters—the treating clinician, materials and lab quality, treatment timelines, infection control, pricing transparency, records, complications, warranties, emergency planning, and follow-up care—in a format you can send directly to any clinic you are evaluating, before paying a deposit or booking a flight. The questions are organized by category. Each includes a note on what an adequate answer looks like and what response patterns are warning signs. Use this guide as a working document, not a reading exercise.
How to Use This Guide
Send these questions in writing—email is preferable to a phone call because it creates a record you can refer back to and because written answers reveal more about how a clinic operates than verbal reassurances do. Do not accept general replies. If a clinic answers "we use only the best materials" without specifying the brand, or "our patients are always well cared for" without describing a protocol, follow up with the specific question again. Vagueness is the answer. What you do with it is your clinical decision.
You do not need to send every question to every clinic. Select the categories most relevant to your procedure. Implant patients need the full infection control and materials sections. Cosmetic crown patients should focus particularly on the timeline and lab sections. All patients need the records, complications, and warranty sections regardless of procedure type.
Where a question includes placeholder text in brackets, substitute your specific details.
Category 1: The Treating Clinician
These questions establish who will actually perform your treatment—not who owns the clinic or who appears in the marketing materials—and whether their training is verifiable.
Q1: What is the full name and dental qualification of the clinician who will perform my treatment?
What a good answer looks like: A specific name, the degree held (DDS, DMD, BDS, LD, or country-equivalent), the awarding institution, and the year of graduation. These details are checkable through the relevant country's dental council registration system.
Warning sign: A clinic name without a clinician name, or a clinician name without institution and year details.
Q2: Does the treating clinician hold any postgraduate specialist qualification relevant to my procedure? If so, what qualification, from which institution, and in what year was it completed?
What a good answer looks like: Specific postgraduate credential—MDS in Prosthodontics, Fellowship in Implantology, European Board of Prosthodontics diploma, or country-specific equivalent—with institution and year. Verifiable through the awarding body.
Warning sign: "Extensive experience" or "years of training" without a specific credential. Experience is not a specialty qualification.
Q3: Is the treating clinician registered with the national dental regulatory body in [country]? Can you provide their registration number?
What a good answer looks like: A specific registration number with the relevant body—General Dental Council (UK), Dental Council of India, Colegio de Cirujanos Dentistas (Costa Rica), Consejo General de Dentistas (Spain), or country-equivalent. Registration numbers are verifiable online for most countries.
Warning sign: Reluctance to provide a registration number, or inability to name the regulatory body.
Q4: Will the same clinician perform all stages of my treatment, or will different clinicians handle different parts of the case?
What a good answer looks like: A clear description of who performs each element—which clinician places the implant, which performs the prosthetic work, who handles surgical versus restorative phases.
Warning sign: A vague answer suggesting treatment continuity that the clinic cannot actually guarantee, or confirmation that multiple clinicians will be involved without a clear coordination protocol.
Category 2: Materials and Lab Quality
These questions establish what will actually be placed in or on your teeth, and where it was made. They are non-negotiable for any crown, implant, or prosthetic case.
Q5: What implant system do you use? Please provide the brand, product line, and model.
What a good answer looks like: A specific named system—Straumann Bone Level Tapered, Nobel Biocare Active, Dentsply Sirona Astra Tech, Osstem TSIII, MIS Seven—with enough specificity to verify the product exists in the manufacturer's catalog.
Warning sign: "A premium implant system," "the best available," or any answer that does not name a manufacturer. Generic or unbranded implant systems have no established long-term outcome data and no traceable prosthetic component supply chain for future maintenance.
Q6: Can you confirm that implant components are sourced from an authorized distributor in [country], and provide lot number documentation at the time of placement?
What a good answer looks like: Unambiguous confirmation of authorized distributor sourcing, and commitment to provide lot number and placement documentation before you leave the clinic.
Warning sign: Uncertainty about distributor status, reluctance to provide lot number documentation, or a response that conflates brand with sourcing authorization.
Q7: What material will my crown / veneer / bridge be fabricated from? Please specify the brand of ceramic block or material used.
What a good answer looks like: A specific answer—Ivoclar IPS e.max for lithium disilicate, 3M Lava or Zirkonzahn for zirconia, with the specific block type—not just the material category.
Warning sign: "High-quality ceramic" or "zirconia" without brand specification. Material category tells you nothing about the quality of the specific product being used.
Q8: Which laboratory fabricates your prosthetic work? Does it hold ISO 13485 certification or CE marking for dental prosthetics?
What a good answer looks like: A named laboratory with a specific certification reference. In EU countries, CE marking for dental prosthetics is a regulatory requirement; outside the EU, ISO 13485 is the relevant international standard. The lab's name should be findable independently.
Warning sign: "Our in-house lab" without certification details, or "a certified lab" without naming it.
Q9: For my case specifically, what material would you recommend and why? What alternatives did you consider?
What a good answer looks like: A clinician-specific answer that references your tooth location, bite forces, aesthetic zone, and any parafunction history. The answer should explain why the recommended material fits your case.
Warning sign: A uniform recommendation that does not vary by patient—"we use zirconia for everything"—indicates inventory management rather than clinical decision-making.
Category 3: Treatment Timelines
These questions establish whether the clinic's proposed schedule is clinically appropriate for your case, or compressed to fit a travel window.
Q10: What is the minimum number of days you recommend I stay in [country] for my specific treatment plan, and what does each day involve?
What a good answer looks like: A day-by-day breakdown that accounts for consultation and imaging, preparation appointments, provisional placement, lab fabrication time, try-in and adjustment, cementation, and post-op review. The total should reflect the clinical requirement, not the shortest possible visit.
Warning sign: A timeline that compresses multiple clinical stages into a single day without explanation, or a visit length that seems driven by a standard package rather than your specific case.
Q11: What is your provisional phase protocol for a case of my complexity? How long will I wear temporaries before final fabrication, and what adjustments are made during that period?
What a good answer looks like: A specific duration—typically 3 to 7 days for multi-crown cases, 4 to 12 weeks for full-mouth rehabilitation—with a description of bite verification, tissue healing assessment, and adjustment appointments during the provisional phase.
Warning sign: Provisionals placed for 24 to 48 hours without clinical justification, or the provisional phase described as an administrative step rather than a functional trial.
Q12: For implant cases: does my treatment require one trip or two? If one trip, what is the clinical justification for immediate loading in my specific case?
What a good answer looks like: Honest acknowledgment that standard implant osseointegration requires a two-trip protocol (placement trip, return trip for crown after 3 to 6 months), or a specific clinical justification for immediate loading based on bone density assessment and surgical outcome.
Warning sign: Immediate loading presented as standard without case-specific justification, or the two-trip requirement described only when the patient asks directly.
Q13: What happens clinically if I cannot extend my stay? What are the consequences of departing before the ideal post-op window?
What a good answer looks like: A direct clinical assessment—sensitivity risk, bite verification limitations, complication detection gaps—that helps you make an informed scheduling decision.
Warning sign: Reassurance that early departure is fine without clinical qualification. It is sometimes fine; it is sometimes not; the answer should reflect your specific procedure, not a blanket accommodation of patient preference.
Category 4: Infection Control
These questions are essential for any procedure involving instruments entering the mouth, and are most critical for surgical cases—implants, extractions, bone grafting—in markets where infection control variance is documented.
Q14: What sterilization method do you use for handpieces and instruments, and how do you document the sterilization cycle for each patient?
What a good answer looks like: Autoclave sterilization with documented cycle validation (Class B autoclave is the EU standard for hollow instruments including handpieces), spore testing at regular intervals, and a tracking system linking sterilization records to patient appointments.
Warning sign: "We sterilize everything" without method specification, or inability to describe the validation and documentation process.
Q15: Can you confirm that needles, anesthetic cartridges, saliva ejectors, and irrigation tips are single-use and disposed of after each patient?
What a good answer looks like: Unambiguous confirmation, with willingness to demonstrate unopened single-use packaging at the appointment on request.
Warning sign: Evasion, redirection to general quality claims, or any answer that does not confirm single-use protocol specifically.
Q16: What is your dental unit waterline maintenance protocol? Do you use sterile water or treated water for surgical procedures and handpiece irrigation?
What a good answer looks like: Sterile water or sterile saline for surgical irrigation, regular waterline flushing and chemical treatment for non-surgical handpiece water, periodic microbial testing of waterline output.
Warning sign: Confusion about the question, or assurance that the water is "clean" without describing a maintenance and testing protocol. Dental unit waterlines require active maintenance; a clinic that does not have a protocol has not maintained them.
Q17: What is your between-patient disinfection protocol for the chair, surfaces, and equipment?
What a good answer looks like: EPA-registered or equivalent disinfectant wipedown of all contact surfaces, barrier protection on surfaces that cannot be effectively wiped, documented protocol applied consistently between every patient.
Warning sign: A general description of cleanliness without a specific disinfection protocol.
Category 5: Pricing and Quote Transparency
These questions establish what is and is not included in the quoted price, and what additional costs may arise during treatment.
Q18: Can you provide a fully itemized treatment plan with per-procedure costs, specifying the material, implant brand or component, lab fee, and any additional fees separately?
What a good answer looks like: A line-by-line breakdown: consultation fee, imaging (panoramic, CBCT if indicated), per-unit procedure cost with material specification, lab fee, provisional restoration fee, sedation if applicable, post-op appointments. Each item is separately priced.
Warning sign: A headline price without itemization. An un-itemized quote cannot be evaluated, compared, or used to identify what has been excluded.
Q19: What is not included in this quote that might become necessary during treatment? Specifically: bone grafting, CBCT imaging, endodontic treatment, sedation, or night guard fabrication?
What a good answer looks like: A direct acknowledgment of what the quote excludes and under what circumstances those excluded items might become necessary, with their associated costs.
Warning sign: "Everything is included" without specificity, or a quote that becomes "all-inclusive" only in the sense that the clinic does not perform any of the commonly excluded procedures.
Q20: Does your quoted price include the provisional phase and any adjustment appointments during my stay?
What a good answer looks like: Explicit confirmation that provisional fabrication, placement, and adjustment appointments are included in the quoted fee.
Warning sign: Provisionals billed separately, or adjustment appointments described as additional charges.
Category 6: Records and Documentation
These questions establish what documentation you will receive before leaving, and in what format.
Q21: What records will you provide before I depart, and in what format? Specifically: digital X-rays, CBCT files, operative notes, implant lot documentation, and digital scan files.
What a good answer looks like: A complete list of records provided as standard—pre-op panoramic and periapical X-rays in digital format, CBCT in .DICOM format, implant documentation with lot numbers, operative notes in English, lab work order with material specifications, post-cementation X-rays, and digital scan files in .STL or .PLY format.
Warning sign: Records provided only on request, records available only in printed form, or reluctance to share digital scan files citing proprietary concerns. Digital scan files belong to the patient; a clinic that withholds them is retaining leverage over future treatment, not protecting clinical quality.
Q22: Will operative notes and post-operative instructions be provided in English?
What a good answer looks like: Confirmation that clinical documentation is produced in English as standard for international patients.
Warning sign: Records only in the local language, with translation as a patient responsibility. A home-country dentist treating a complication cannot work effectively from records in a language they do not read.
Q23: Can you send me a copy of the records digitally before I board my return flight, rather than only providing them in the clinic on the day?
What a good answer looks like: Yes, sent to your email or via secure patient portal before departure.
Warning sign: Records only provided in person at the clinic on departure day, creating a situation where incomplete records cannot be followed up without missing your flight.
Category 7: Complications During Your Stay
These questions establish what happens if something goes wrong before you leave the country.
Q24: What is your protocol if I develop a complication during my stay—swelling, infection, severe sensitivity, or a failing temporary—before my scheduled return flight?
What a good answer looks like: A specific clinical pathway: who to contact, when the clinic is accessible outside scheduled hours, what emergency appointment access looks like, and whether same-day evaluation is available for urgent concerns.
Warning sign: "Contact us anytime" without a specific out-of-hours protocol, or a response that implies complications are not anticipated and therefore no specific plan exists.
Q25: If a surgical complication requires hospital-level management during my stay, which hospital does your clinic refer to, and do you have an established referral relationship there?
What a good answer looks like: A named private hospital with an established referral pathway—not "the nearest hospital" but a specific named institution the clinic actively works with.
Warning sign: An inability to name the hospital, or a response that implies serious complications are sufficiently unlikely that no referral relationship has been established.
Q26: What is your policy if I need to extend my stay due to a clinical complication? Does the clinic provide any support for accommodation or rebooking costs in those circumstances?
What a good answer looks like: A clear policy statement, even if it only confirms that accommodation and rebooking costs are the patient's responsibility. Transparency about what is and is not covered is the adequate answer here.
Warning sign: A response that suggests complications never require extended stays, or that the possibility has not been considered.
Category 8: Warranties and Remake Policy
These questions establish what the warranty actually covers and whether it is accessible from your home country.
Q27: What does your warranty cover, for how long, and what are the specific exclusions?
What a good answer looks like: Written warranty terms specifying: what is covered (material defects, fit failures, debonding due to lab or clinical error), what is excluded (bruxism without night guard, trauma, poor oral hygiene, missed follow-up), the duration of coverage, and the remake policy if a covered failure occurs.
Warning sign: "Lifetime warranty" without written terms. A verbal warranty without documented exclusions and claim procedures is not a warranty—it is a sales statement.
Q28: If I need to make a warranty claim from my home country, how does the process work? Can claims be initiated remotely, or do I need to return to the clinic?
What a good answer looks like: A specific remote claim initiation process—photograph submission, X-ray from a local dentist, written assessment from a home-country provider—with a clear pathway that does not require an immediate return flight as the first step.
Warning sign: Warranty claims that require physical return to the clinic as the only option. A warranty that is geographically inaccessible to an international patient is not a functional warranty.
Q29: If a crown, veneer, or implant restoration fails within the warranty period due to a lab or clinical error, what exactly does the clinic provide—material cost only, or labor and placement as well?
What a good answer looks like: Full remake coverage including lab fabrication and clinical placement, not material cost only.
Warning sign: Coverage limited to "manufacturing defects" that the clinic defines unilaterally, or coverage that excludes clinical labor costs from the remake.
Category 9: Emergency Planning and Medical Backup
These questions establish what infrastructure exists if the clinical situation becomes urgent.
Q30: Does your clinic have on-site emergency equipment—defibrillator, oxygen, epinephrine for anaphylaxis—and is staff trained in emergency response?
What a good answer looks like: Specific confirmation of emergency equipment on-site and clinical staff trained in basic life support and anaphylaxis management. This is a minimum standard for any dental clinic performing procedures with local anesthesia.
Warning sign: Uncertainty about emergency equipment, or a response that implies emergencies are sufficiently rare that no specific preparation has been made.
Q31: For cases involving IV sedation or general anesthesia: who administers the anesthesia, what are their credentials, and what monitoring equipment is used during the procedure?
What a good answer looks like: A named anesthesiologist or certified sedation provider with verifiable credentials, specific monitoring equipment (pulse oximetry, capnography, ECG for deeper sedation), and documented emergency reversal agents on hand.
Warning sign: Sedation administered by the treating dentist without a dedicated anesthetic provider for anything beyond minimal oral sedation, or uncertainty about monitoring equipment and emergency protocols.
Q32: What is the nearest facility capable of managing a serious medical emergency, and how long does it take to reach from your clinic?
What a good answer looks like: A named private hospital with emergency department capability and a realistic time estimate.
Warning sign: A vague reference to "nearby hospitals" without a specific name and time estimate.
Category 10: Follow-Up and Aftercare
These questions establish how the clinical relationship continues after you return home.
Q33: What is your protocol for remote follow-up after I return home? How do I submit photographs or X-rays for review, and what is the expected response time?
What a good answer looks like: A specific communication channel—secure email, patient portal, WhatsApp with defined response time—and a clear process for submitting clinical photographs or X-rays taken locally for remote assessment.
Warning sign: "Contact us anytime" without a specific protocol, or a response that implies post-departure follow-up is not a service the clinic has planned for.
Q34: For implant cases requiring a return visit: what is your recommended timeline for the osseointegration verification and crown delivery appointment, and what does that visit involve?
What a good answer looks like: A specific timeline—typically 3 to 6 months after placement—with a description of what the return visit includes: periapical X-ray, implant stability assessment, impression or digital scan for crown fabrication, try-in, cementation, and post-cementation X-ray.
Warning sign: Vagueness about the return visit timeline, or framing the return visit as optional rather than clinically standard.
Q35: Do you have referral relationships with dentists in my home country who are willing to provide follow-up care for your patients?
What a good answer looks like: Specific referral relationships with named providers or networks in major cities of the patient's home country—more common in established international patient clinics in Medellín, Budapest, San José, and Bangkok than in emerging markets.
Warning sign: No referral relationships and no guidance on how to identify a willing local provider—which places the entire follow-up burden on the patient after departure.
Q36: If a complication arises after I return home that requires emergency care locally, what documentation can I provide to a home-country dentist to enable them to treat me effectively?
What a good answer looks like: A commitment to provide the complete records package described in Category 6, plus direct clinician contact information accessible to a home-country provider for clinical questions about your case.
Warning sign: Records that are incomplete, only in the local language, or not in formats recognizable to international dental providers.
Reading the Responses: What to Look For Beyond the Content
The questions above produce useful information through their answers. They produce equally useful information through the response patterns they generate.
Clinics that are operating to a documented clinical standard:
- Answer specifically, with verifiable details
- Provide written documentation rather than verbal reassurance
- Do not express surprise or defensiveness at detailed clinical questions
- Offer to connect you directly with the treating clinician for a pre-booking consultation
- Have warranty terms and records policies available in writing before you ask for them
Clinics that are not:
- Answer generally without specifics
- Redirect clinical questions to pricing discussions
- Express impatience at detailed questions or frame them as unusual
- Cannot name the laboratory, the implant system, or the hospital referral
- Provide warranty terms only after a deposit has been paid
The response pattern is the signal. A clinic that answers Question 14 about sterilization with a specific protocol description is the same clinic that will answer Question 33 about remote follow-up with a specific protocol description. Clinical discipline is consistent across an operation, not selective. Its absence in one area predicts its absence in others.
Send the questions before the deposit, not after. A deposit changes the psychological dynamic of evaluation. Before it is paid, you are a potential patient evaluating a clinical provider. After it is paid, most people unconsciously shift to confirming the decision they have already made. The time for clinical scrutiny is before the financial commitment, not after.
Final Thoughts
The questions in this guide are not adversarial. They are the questions a clinician reviewing your case would ask before treating you, expressed in terms a patient can use before choosing who to trust with that case. Reputable clinics—in any destination, at any price point—welcome them. They demonstrate that the patient is engaged, informed, and planning for the full arc of treatment including follow-up, which makes the clinical relationship easier to manage, not harder.
Clinics that resist or deflect these questions are telling you something specific about how they operate. That information is as clinically useful as any answer to the questions themselves.
The series of destination and procedure guides on this site exists to give you the clinical context behind each of these questions—why the implant lot number matters, what the provisional phase actually accomplishes, why dental unit waterlines require active maintenance. If a specific answer to a specific question raises further questions, the relevant guide in this series is the place to develop the clinical understanding that lets you evaluate the answer properly.
At Dental Services Abroad, the goal has always been the same: give patients the tools to make decisions based on clinical evidence, not marketing confidence. These questions are the most direct expression of that goal.
To informed questions and specific answers,
— Dr. Alan Francis, DDS (Retired)
Disclaimer: This guide is for educational purposes only and does not replace professional dental or medical advice. The questions provided are intended to support patient due diligence and do not constitute a clinical evaluation framework. Dental treatment requires individualized assessment by a licensed clinician. Always verify credentials, certifications, and protocols independently before committing to care abroad.
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