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Reviewed by Jacob Whitmore, Whito · Fact-checked for accuracy

Last Updated on May 26, 2026

What to Spend and Where

Published by Whito | Updated May 2026

Real costs. Budget templates. No sales pitch.

Executive Summary

Dental practices in the UK spend anywhere from £500 to £15,000 per month on marketing, depending on their size, patient mix, and growth ambitions. Most practice owners have no clear idea whether their spend is too high, too low, or pointed in the wrong direction.

This page breaks down what each marketing channel actually costs, what you should expect to spend based on your practice type, and where the money is usually wasted. No agency upsell. Just the numbers.

£500–£1,500/moSole Dentist BudgetTypical monthly marketing spend
£1,500–£4,000/moSmall Practice Budget2-3 dentist practice
£4,000–£15,000/moMulti-site BudgetGroup practices and corporate

Key Takeaways

  • Private-focused practices should spend 5-10% of revenue on marketing. NHS-heavy practices can get away with 1-3%.
  • Google Ads is the most expensive channel per click but often delivers the highest-value patients, especially for emergency and cosmetic terms.
  • SEO retainers of £800 to £3,000 per month are standard for dental practices. Below £800, you’re unlikely to get meaningful results.
  • The single best ROI investment for most practices is a systematic Google review strategy, which costs almost nothing.
  • Budget templates in this report give you a starting point for Starter (under £1,000/mo), Growth (£1,000-£3,000/mo), and Scale (£3,000+/mo) levels.
  • The biggest waste of money in dental marketing is spending on channels without conversion tracking. If you can’t measure it, you can’t improve it.

How to Read This Page

This is a reference page, not a blog post. Jump to what’s relevant.

If you want to know what Google Ads costs for dental keywords, go to Section 3. If you’re building a monthly budget, go straight to Section 7. If you want to make sure you’re not wasting money, skip to Section 8.

CPC means cost per click. It’s what you pay Google each time someone clicks your ad.

Retainer refers to a fixed monthly fee for ongoing services like SEO or social media management.

ROI in this context means the return on your marketing investment, measured as new patients acquired relative to what you spent acquiring them.

All figures are in GBP and reflect UK dental market pricing as of early 2026.

SEO Costs

SEO is a slower channel than Google Ads, but it compounds over time. A practice that ranks on page one for “dentist in [city]” gets a steady stream of free clicks every month, year after year.

£800–£3,000/moSEO RetainerStandard range for dental practices
6–12 monthsTime to ResultsBefore seeing meaningful ranking improvements
£3,000–£12,000Website BuildNew dental practice website

SEO Pricing Breakdown

ServiceTypical CostWhat You Get
Basic SEO Retainer£800 – £1,500/moLocal SEO, Google Business Profile optimisation, basic on-page work, monthly reporting
Mid-tier SEO Retainer£1,500 – £3,000/moContent creation, link building, technical SEO, competitive analysis, multi-location
Website Build (Basic)£3,000 – £6,0005-10 page site, mobile responsive, basic SEO foundations, contact forms
Website Build (Advanced)£6,000 – £12,000Custom design, online booking integration, treatment pages, before/after gallery, blog
An SEO retainer under £800 per month is unlikely to deliver meaningful results for a dental practice. At that level, the provider simply cannot invest enough time to move the needle against established competitors.

Other Channel Costs

Beyond Google Ads and SEO, several other channels play a role in dental marketing. Here’s what each one costs.

Social Media Management

£300–£1,000/moSocial Media ManagementInstagram is particularly effective for cosmetic dentistry. Facebook remains useful for community engagement.
Channel / ServiceTypical CostWhat’s IncludedBest For
Social Media (Basic)£300 – £500/mo3-4 posts per week, community managementBrand awareness, patient communication
Social Media (Full)£500 – £1,000/moDaily posts, stories, paid promotion, reportingCosmetic practices, Invisalign, whitening
Before/After Photography£500 – £1,500/sessionProfessional dental photography, editing, consentCosmetic, implants, smile makeovers
Patient Video Testimonials£300 – £800/videoFilmed, edited, captioned patient storiesTrust building, website, social media
Review Management Software£50 – £150/moAutomated review requests, monitoring, responsesAll practice types
Email/SMS Recall System£100 – £300/moAutomated appointment reminders, recall campaignsPatient retention, reducing no-shows
Referral Incentives£100 – £200/referralTeeth whitening vouchers or similar for referralsWord-of-mouth growth

Costs reflect UK market rates as of Q1 2026. London rates may be higher.

Monthly Channel Cost Comparison (£)

SEO Retainer
£800–£3,000
Google Ads (Spend)
£500–£3,000+
Social Media
£300–£1,000
Email/SMS Recalls
£100–£300
Review Software
£50–£150

Budget by Practice Type

How much you should spend depends on what kind of practice you run and how aggressively you want to grow.

Marketing Spend as % of Revenue by Practice Type

Private-focused
5–10%
Mixed Practice
3–5%
NHS-heavy
1–3%

Monthly Budget by Practice Size

Practice SizeTypical RevenueMarketing BudgetPriority Channels
Sole Dentist£200k – £500k/yr£500 – £1,500/moGoogle Business Profile, reviews, basic website
Small Practice (2-3 dentists)£500k – £1.2m/yr£1,500 – £4,000/moSEO, Google Ads, social media
Medium Practice (4-6 dentists)£1.2m – £3m/yr£3,000 – £8,000/moFull digital, content, video, paid social
Multi-site Group£3m+/yr£4,000 – £15,000/moBrand, multi-location SEO, full paid media
An NHS-heavy practice spending 1-3% of revenue on marketing is not under-investing. It’s appropriate for a model where patient acquisition is largely handled by the NHS system. A private practice spending the same percentage is almost certainly under-investing.

Budget Templates

These templates give you a starting allocation for three common spending levels. Adjust based on your practice type, location, and current strengths.

Starter: Under £1,000/month

For sole dentists and practices just starting to invest in marketing.

ItemMonthly CostNotes
Google Business Profile Optimisation£0 (DIY)Claim, complete, add photos, respond to reviews
Review Management Software£50 – £100Automated review request emails/SMS
Google Ads (Focused)£300 – £500Emergency or one cosmetic treatment only
Email/SMS Recalls£100 – £150Appointment reminders, recall campaigns
Basic Social Media£0 – £200DIY or low-cost freelancer, 2-3 posts/week
Total: £450 – £950/month

Growth: £1,000–£3,000/month

For small practices ready to grow, particularly those expanding private services.

ItemMonthly CostNotes
SEO Retainer£800 – £1,500Local SEO, Google Business Profile, on-page
Google Ads£500 – £1,500Emergency + 1-2 cosmetic treatments
Social Media Management£300 – £500Regular posts, community management
Review Management£75 – £150Automated requests and monitoring
Email/SMS Recalls£100 – £200Automated reminders and campaigns
Photography (amortised)£80 – £125One professional session every 6-12 months
Total: £1,855 – £3,975/month

Scale: £3,000+/month

For medium-to-large practices and multi-site groups pursuing aggressive growth.

ItemMonthly CostNotes
SEO Retainer (Advanced)£1,500 – £3,000Content, link building, technical, multi-location
Google Ads£2,000 – £5,000Full treatment range, remarketing
Google Ads Management£500 – £1,500Agency or specialist management fee
Social Media (Full)£500 – £1,000Daily content, paid social, stories, reels
Video Production£300 – £600Monthly patient testimonials and treatment videos
Review and Recall Systems£200 – £400Full automation, SMS, email
Referral Programme£200 – £500Whitening vouchers, incentive costs
Total: £5,200 – £12,000/month

Red Flags in Dental Marketing Spend

Dental practices waste thousands every year on marketing that doesn’t work. Here are the most common ways money gets burned.

  • Spending on print Yellow Pages or newspaper ads. These channels deliver almost zero measurable patient flow in 2026. The money is better spent on any digital channel where you can track results.
  • No call tracking on Google Ads. If you’re spending £500+ per month on ads and don’t know which calls came from which keywords, you’re flying blind. Call tracking should be set up before the first ad goes live.
  • Paying per lead to aggregator sites. Lead aggregator platforms sell the same enquiry to multiple practices. You’re competing for a patient who is simultaneously being contacted by three or four of your competitors. The conversion rate is terrible and the cost per actual patient is far higher than it appears.
  • No conversion tracking on your website. If you can’t tell which website visitors booked an appointment, you can’t measure what’s working. Form tracking, click-to-call tracking, and online booking tracking should all be in place before spending on any traffic channel.
  • Paying an agency with no reporting on patient acquisition. Reports that only show impressions, clicks, and ranking positions are hiding the numbers that matter. You should know exactly how many new patients each channel is generating and what each one costs to acquire.
  • Long-term agency contracts with no performance clauses. A 12-month lock-in contract with no exit clause based on results gives the agency no incentive to perform. Three-month rolling terms are standard and fair.

Before You Spend: Pre-Flight Checklist

  • Your website loads in under 3 seconds on mobile and has clear calls to action on every page.
  • Call tracking is set up and you can attribute phone calls to specific marketing channels.
  • Google Analytics (or equivalent) is installed with conversion goals configured for form submissions and bookings.
  • Your Google Business Profile is fully completed with current photos, hours, services, and a booking link.
  • You have a process for requesting reviews and responding to every review within 48 hours.
  • You know your average new patient value and can calculate cost-per-acquisition against it.

ROI Benchmarks

The right way to evaluate dental marketing spend is not by looking at cost per click or even cost per lead. It’s by looking at cost per acquired patient relative to that patient’s lifetime value.

Cost Per Patient by Channel

ChannelTypical Cost Per New PatientPatient Lifetime ValueTypical ROI
Google Ads (Emergency)£80 – £200£2,000 – £5,00010x – 25x
Google Ads (Cosmetic)£100 – £300£2,500 – £5,0008x – 17x
SEO (Organic)£30 – £80£2,000 – £5,00025x – 60x+
Referral Programme£100 – £200£3,000 – £6,00015x – 30x
Social Media (Organic)£20 – £60£1,500 – £3,00025x – 50x
Google Ads (General “dentist near me”)£50 – £150£2,000 – £5,00013x – 33x

ROI figures assume a 5-year patient lifetime value with average retention. Actual results vary by practice quality, location, and execution.

£50–£200Target Cost Per PatientReasonable acquisition cost for a mixed practice
10x–25xHealthy ROI RangeReturn on marketing spend over patient lifetime
5xMinimum Viable ROIBelow this, revisit your strategy
If your marketing is generating new patients at £100 each and those patients are worth £3,000 over five years, your marketing is working. If you can’t calculate these numbers, that’s the first problem to solve.

Methodology

This page is based on a combination of publicly available UK dental marketing pricing data, industry benchmarks, and published rate cards from UK dental marketing providers.

Sources include:

  • Google Ads Keyword Planner data for UK dental search terms
  • Publicly listed pricing from UK dental SEO agencies and marketing providers
  • Published benchmarks from dental industry bodies and trade publications
  • Market data from dental practice management consultancies
  • Community-sourced data from UK dental practice owner forums and networks

All cost figures represent typical UK market rates as of Q1 2026. Actual costs will vary based on location, competition, provider quality, and scope of services. London and South East rates tend to be 15-30% above these averages.

ROI benchmarks are based on aggregate data and assume reasonable execution quality. Poorly executed campaigns will see significantly worse returns regardless of budget.

This page is updated periodically. If you spot something outdated, let us know.

About Whito

Whito helps UK businesses figure out what’s working and what’s not in their marketing. We’re not a dental marketing agency and we don’t sell marketing services to dentists.

We publish independent research, tools, and audits designed to give business owners the information they need to make better decisions, whether that means hiring a specialist, doing it themselves, or deciding not to spend at all.

We built this page because dental practice owners deserve to know what things actually cost before they commit. Too many practices sign up for marketing packages without understanding what they’re paying for or whether the results justify the spend. If this page helps you avoid a bad deal or build a smarter budget, it’s done its job.

Learn more at whito.co.uk