Your first visit is for the full picture.

Bring what you know. The office should help organize the rest without turning an overdue visit into a lecture.

Bring what helps. Send health details securely.

  • Photo ID and insurance card, if using a plan.
  • A current medication list and relevant health history through the office’s secure system.
  • Existing dental images or records if they are recent and available.
  • Questions you want answered before treatment decisions.

A useful order for the visit.

The plan comes after the information and the conversation, not before.

01

Review

Forms, current concerns, goals, and anything that makes visits harder.

02

Images

Existing records first. New images only when needed for the exam.

03

Exam

Teeth, gums, bite, and the areas connected to the reason for the visit.

04

Conversation

Findings, options, timing, and estimated cost before a treatment plan moves forward.

01

If it has been a while

You do not need an apology prepared. A useful first visit starts with where things are now.

02

Parents and caregivers

A real practice would explain age range, guardian forms, accessibility, support-person policy, and referral boundaries here.

If it feels urgent, call first.

Severe swelling, trouble breathing, heavy bleeding, or a life-threatening emergency: call 911. For a time-sensitive dental concern, call an office instead of using a request form.

Call (810) 555-0148

Fictional number. No dental office will answer.

Ask for a first visit.

Share scheduling basics only. A real office would call to confirm and send any secure forms separately.