UK Dental Giants Earn £1.2 Billion as Regulator Launches Probe
Four of Britain’s largest dental corporations have generated £1.2 billion in gross profits over two years, prompting a major competition investigation into rising treatment costs and industry practices.
Key Takeaways
- Four major dental firms earned £1.2 billion in gross profits (2023-2024)
- Profits increased by 20% year-on-year
- Competition regulator launches sector-wide investigation
- Only 40% of adults visited NHS dentists in past two years
Profit Surge and Regulatory Response
My Dentist, PortmanDentex, Rodericks Dental, and Bupa Dental Services reported combined gross profits of £528 million in 2023 and £631 million in 2024. The 20% annual increase comes as the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) begins a sector investigation.
Chancellor ordered the probe, citing a “scourge of hidden costs, lack of transparency and overtreatment” that has “blighted families in need of dental treatment for too long.”
Treatment Cost Disparities
A Mail on Sunday investigation revealed significant price differences between NHS and private treatments. While an NHS white filling costs £75.30, private equity-owned practices charge hundreds of pounds for the same procedure.
“This is an important market that needs to work well for consumers. We have been exploring the merit of work in the area and will be developing a proposal to put to our board,” the CMA stated.
Dental Access Crisis
The price increases coincide with a severe shortage of dental professionals across the UK. Only 40% of adults have visited an NHS dentist in the past two years, compared to 50% before the pandemic.
Large areas of the country have become NHS “dental deserts,” forcing patients to seek expensive private care.
The Association of Dental Groups warned: “Without a significant increase in new dentists, consequential inflationary pressures are bound to be felt across the sector.”




