Dental Clinics in Dresden, Germany
Dresden's 97 verified Zahnarztpraxen serve Saxony's capital (~560,000 residents) — historically one of Germany's most culturally prestigious cities, now a major centre for microelectronics (Infineon, Bosch, Globalfoundries) and biomedical research (Max Planck Institute for Cell Biology and Genetics). The dental market reflects Dresden's distinctive profile: rebuilt post-1945, with mixed Plattenbau-and-restored-historic urban fabric, and a relatively concentrated city centre with practice density around the Altstadt and Neustadt districts. This page lists the 97 verified dental clinics in Dresden with addresses, phone numbers, opening hours, and contact details, and summarises typical pricing context. Information here is editorial and not medical advice.
Finding dental clinics in Dresden
Practices cluster around Pragerstraße and Wilsdruffer Straße in the central commercial district, the affluent Striesen and Blasewitz residential corridor, and the gentrified Äußere Neustadt north of the Elbe. The TU Dresden's medical faculty (Carus-Klinikum) operates the regional academic-clinical network including the University Hospital Dresden — Carl Gustav Carus — which serves as Saxony's main academic medical referral centre.
Polish dental practice rules require every clinician to be registered with the relevant national authority — in Germany that's Bundeszahnärztekammer (BZÄK). Verifying a dentist's registration number before booking is the single most useful pre-visit check.
What we track for each clinic
The directory below lists verified addresses, primary phone numbers, websites where the clinic maintains one, opening hours where published openly, and operator brand affiliation for chain practices. Each clinic links to a detail page with the full record. NFZ/equivalent statutory-insurance acceptance isn't published uniformly across Germany's clinics and should be confirmed by phone before booking.
What's typical for dental pricing in Dresden
gesetzliche Krankenversicherung (GKV) and private Krankenversicherung (PKV) covers a narrow public basket — primarily routine examination, basic restorative work, simple extractions, and emergency relief — with broader coverage for children. Most adult prosthetic, all implant, and adult orthodontic work is private or out-of-pocket.
Dresden fees run 10-15% below the German national average — typical of eastern German cities. Hygienist (PZR) €80-€150, single implant total €2,000-€3,500, Invisalign Full €4,500-€7,000.
Urgent and after-hours care
Dresden's zahnärztlicher Notdienst rotates through clinics affiliated with the TU Dresden Carus-Klinikum on weekends and holidays. The University Hospital handles regional maxillofacial referrals for eastern Saxony and serves as the tertiary trauma centre.
For severe facial swelling reaching the eye or neck, breathing difficulty, uncontrolled bleeding, a knocked-out adult tooth, or fever above 38.5 °C with dental pain — dial 112. These are signs of spreading infection that need hospital, not dental-chair, care. For accidental medication or chemical exposure, the regional poison information centre is +49 30 19240 (Berlin Giftnotruf).