Find a dental clinic in Braunschweig
Braunschweig, Lower Saxony's second-largest city with roughly 250,000 residents, supports a dental directory of 55 verified clinics serving a mixed population of long-term residents, TU Braunschweig students, researchers tied to the city's strong aerospace and automotive cluster, and patients commuting in from surrounding Wolfenbüttel, Salzgitter and Peine. Practices cluster densely inside the Ringgleis around the Innenstadt and Magniviertel, with secondary concentrations in Westliches Ringgebiet, Östliches Ringgebiet near the university, and the suburban belt covering Querum, Lehndorf, Stöckheim and Watenbüttel. The mix leans heavily towards small owner-led Einzelpraxen and two- to four-dentist Gemeinschaftspraxen rather than corporate chains, with a handful of specialist surgeries focused on implantology, paediatric care and orthodontics rounding out the offering.
The market here is fragmented and largely independent: no single chain dominates, and most listings are family-run practices. Praxis für Zahnheilkunde Torsten Schling and the Zahnarztpraxis Christian Pfeifer typify the established generalist model in the central districts, while Dr. Stefan Hesse and Manuela Kintzi-Hesse run a long-standing partnership common to the Ring area. The Zahnärztliche Gemeinschaftspraxis Querum anchors the north-eastern Querum-Veltenhof district, and the Praxisgemeinschaft Anette Czora und Franziska Herden illustrates the female-led shared-overhead model increasingly visible across the city. Paediatric-focused practices such as Löwenzähne Olsen sit alongside oral surgery and implant referrals that frequently flow to the Klinikum Braunschweig's Mund-, Kiefer- und Gesichtschirurgie department for hospital-level cases.
Pricing & coverage
Statutory (GKV) insurance covers basic conservative dentistry — check-ups, scaling, amalgam or basic composite fillings, and standard extractions — usually at no out-of-pocket cost beyond the standard co-payment structure. Typical private fees in Braunschweig run roughly €80–€150 for a professional cleaning (PZR, rarely fully reimbursed by GKV), €150–€400 for high-grade composite fillings depending on surface count, €1,800–€3,000 per single implant including crown, and €500–€900 for root canal treatment on molars when GKV criteria aren't met. PKV patients are generally reimbursed per the GOZ fee schedule; medical devices and materials follow oversight by BfArM. A Heil- und Kostenplan must be approved before larger prosthetic work.
Emergencies & out-of-hours care
Outside surgery hours, evenings, weekends and public holidays, Braunschweig operates a rotating Zahnärztlicher Notdienst organised by the Zahnärztekammer Niedersachsen; the current duty practice is published daily and can be reached via the regional hotline 116 117 or local rota listings. Severe maxillofacial trauma, swelling threatening the airway, or post-operative haemorrhage should go directly to the emergency department at Klinikum Braunschweig (Salzdahlumer Straße), which hosts the regional oral and maxillofacial surgery service. Call 112 only for life-threatening situations — airway compromise, uncontrolled bleeding, or signs of spreading facial infection with fever.
Frequently asked questions
Are English-speaking dentists available in Braunschweig?
Yes. Because of TU Braunschweig, the DLR research centre and the city's international engineering workforce, many central practices — particularly those around the Innenstadt, Östliches Ringgebiet and near the university campus — list English-language consultations on their websites. Russian, Turkish and Polish are also commonly offered. It is best to confirm language support when booking, as smaller suburban Einzelpraxen in districts like Watenbüttel or Stöckheim may operate primarily in German.
Which district has the highest concentration of clinics?
The Innenstadt and the immediately adjacent Östliches and Westliches Ringgebiet hold the densest cluster, with practices on streets like Petritorwall, Steinweg and the Bohlweg. Querum-Veltenhof, Lehndorf and the southern belt around Stöckheim/Mascherode each host a handful of neighbourhood practices serving local catchments. The Magniviertel and Hagenmarkt area attract specialist and boutique-style practices.
Do I need a referral to see a dental specialist?
No. Patients in Germany can self-refer directly to a Fachzahnarzt für Oralchirurgie or Kieferorthopäde without a Überweisung from a general dentist. However, for complex implant or maxillofacial cases handled at Klinikum Braunschweig's MKG-Chirurgie, a referral letter and a Heil- und Kostenplan from your treating dentist substantially smooth the GKV authorisation process.
How quickly can I get an appointment?
Routine check-ups in Braunschweig typically book one to four weeks out at established central practices, while suburban Einzelpraxen in Querum, Lehndorf or Watenbüttel often accommodate new patients within a week. Acute pain appointments are usually fitted in same-day or next-day by your registered practice. Orthodontic and implant consultations with the specialist clinics around the Ring can require six to twelve weeks.
Does GKV cover orthodontics for adults?
Generally no. GKV reimburses orthodontic treatment for children and adolescents classified at KIG levels 3–5; adult orthodontics, aligner therapy and cosmetic alignment are paid privately or via PKV add-on policies. Several Braunschweig practices offer in-house instalment plans for Invisalign-style treatments, which typically run €3,500–€6,500 for a full case.
Safety note
This directory is informational only and is not medical advice. Patients should consult a licensed dental clinic in Braunschweig for individual diagnostic, treatment or emergency decisions.