Your Child's First Dental Visit: When and How
The first visit should happen by age 1 — not age 3 like older guidance. Here's why and what to expect.
Dr. Fatima Hassan
General Dentist & Endodontist
When to go
The American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry, the ADA, and the NHS all now recommend the first dental visit by the child's first birthday, or within 6 months of the first tooth erupting.
Why so early
- Catches cavity risk before decay starts
- Establishes familiarity with the dental chair (massively reduces later anxiety)
- Parent education on brushing, bottle-feeding, and diet
- Early detection of eruption patterns
- Baseline x-rays and photos for later comparison
What happens at a first visit
- A "ride" on the chair
- Counting teeth while the child sits on the parent's lap
- Quick inspection with a mirror
- Fluoride varnish applied (5 min)
- Demonstration of brushing
- Parent Q&A
Total time: 15–30 minutes. No x-rays typically at this age. No scaling.
Tips to make it easy
- Visit before lunch when your child isn't tired or cranky
- Bring a favourite toy
- Don't say "don't worry" or "it won't hurt" — this introduces fear. Use neutral words.
- Let older siblings come and watch to normalise the experience
- Praise specifically: "you did a great job sitting still"
Home care before the first visit
0–12 months (before teeth or early teeth)
- Wipe gums with a damp cloth after feeding
- Once first tooth appears: brush with a smear of fluoride toothpaste twice daily
1–3 years
- Pea-sized fluoride toothpaste
- Parent brushes (don't expect toddler to brush properly yet)
- Floss between any touching teeth
3–6 years
- Child begins to brush, parent finishes the job
- Standard fluoride toothpaste
- Start daily floss with contact points
- First x-rays around age 4–5 if molar contacts are tight
Bottles and sippy cups
- No bottle in bed with milk, juice, or any sweetened drink
- Stop bottles by 15–18 months
- Avoid sippy cups with juice throughout the day
- Water between meals
Common first-visit concerns
My child won't open their mouth
Normal. We do what's possible at visit 1, build on it at visit 2. No force, ever.
They're crying
Normal too. Infants and young toddlers often cry — it's the strangeness, not pain. Don't interpret as the clinic being "wrong."
They have a visible cavity
Early treatment is highly possible on baby teeth. Don't wait — baby-tooth decay affects adult teeth underneath.
Cost in Dubai for first visits
- First visit exam + fluoride: AED 300–600
- With x-rays (later visits): AED 500–900
- Sealants on permanent molars: AED 200–400 per tooth
References
- American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry
- NHS Dental Care for Children
- American Dental Association
Referenced sources
- AAPD
- NHS
- American Dental Association
Medical disclaimer. This article is informational and does not replace professional clinical advice. For a plan specific to your situation, book a consultation with a Paradise Dental specialist.
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