Specialty
Emergency Dentistry
Emergency dental providers offer urgent appointments for tooth pain, swelling, knocked-out or broken teeth, and other acute dental issues.
What emergency dentistry does
Emergency dentistry provides urgent, often same-day care for dental pain, infection, trauma, and other situations that can't wait for a routine appointment.
When to see an emergency dentistry
- Severe or worsening tooth pain
- Knocked-out, broken, or loose adult tooth
- Swelling in the face, gums, or jaw
- Bleeding that won't stop after 10–15 minutes of pressure
- Lost crown, filling, or temporary restoration causing pain
Common procedures
What to expect from a visit
Call the office first — many keep daily emergency slots. Bring a list of medications and any broken pieces. Visits often focus on stabilizing the problem; definitive treatment may be scheduled later.
Insurance & cost questions
Emergency exams and X-rays are usually covered. Confirm coverage before extensive treatment, and ask about cash or financing options if you are uninsured.
Coverage varies by plan. Always confirm with both the dental office and your insurer before treatment.
Emergency warning signs
- Difficulty breathing or swallowing — call 911 or go to the ER
- Facial swelling spreading toward the eye or neck
- High fever with mouth pain
- Trauma involving the jaw or possible fracture
For airway problems, uncontrolled bleeding, or facial trauma, call 911 or go to the nearest emergency room.
Licensed emergency dentistry providers (NPI Registry)
Source: CMS NPPES (National Provider Identifier registry) · public U.S. government data. Verify license status with the state dental board before booking.