Find a dental clinic in Nivelles
Nivelles, the historic capital of Roman Pays in Walloon Brabant, hosts a compact but well-organised dental sector serving roughly 28,000 residents plus a wider catchment drawn from the surrounding rural communes of Ittre, Genappe and Seneffe. PillsCard's directory lists five verified clinics, most clustered around the medieval centre near the Collégiale Sainte-Gertrude and along the Faubourg de Mons axis, with a secondary cluster following the commercial belt towards the E19/E420 junction. The patient mix is overwhelmingly local francophone households and commuters working in Brussels, with a modest cross-border flow from French nationals settled in the Tubize–Braine corridor. Unlike larger Walloon cities, Nivelles has no university dental school, so most practices operate as independent surgeries rather than teaching-affiliated centres, and specialist procedures are typically referred onward to Brussels or Charleroi.
The market in Nivelles is fragmented and practitioner-led rather than chain-dominated. Independent surgeries such as those run by Xavier Canoo and Nathalie Cantineau anchor the town-centre offer, while Daniel Balon and Pierre Defleur represent the longer-established generalist practices serving multi-generational local families. My Clinic operates as a multi-chair group practice, offering a broader scope including hygiene, orthodontics and aesthetic dentistry under one roof — closer to the integrated model seen in Brussels suburbs. There are no hospital-embedded dental departments within the commune itself; the Clinique Saint-Pierre in Ottignies and CHU Tivoli in La Louvière function as the nearest referral points for oral surgery, maxillofacial work and inpatient procedures. Orthodontic and implantology specialists are present but limited in number.
Pricing & coverage
Under the INAMI/RIZIV convention, a routine consultation with a conventioned dentist runs roughly €–, with patient out-of-pocket around €– after mutuelle reimbursement. A scale-and-polish (détartrage) sits at approximately €, fully or largely reimbursed annually for insured adults under and partially thereafter. A single-surface composite filling typically costs €–, while a ceramic crown — non-reimbursed under standard nomenclature — ranges €–, and a titanium implant with crown commonly €–. Non-conventioned practitioners set free fees. Verify your dentist's convention status and current tariffs via