A NEW dental contract will transform how NHS services are delivered across Wales, as Health Secretary Jeremy Miles recognises that “Every person in Wales deserves quality dental care when they need it, regardless of where they live or their background.”

Replacing the current contract, which pays dentists to recall patients every six months, regardless of whether they have any problems, the new contract, which will come into effect in April 2026, will mean people will be seen based on their oral health needs. Those who need active treatment or support to maintain their oral health will be seen more regularly.

This will mean people with the healthiest mouths will maintain their relationship with their chosen dentist through recall appointments, rather than returning to a central waiting list – the Dental Access Portal – until their next scheduled appointment, as originally proposed.

Under the reformed system, practices will receive payments to continue seeing existing patients for recall appointments, giving dentists the freedom to monitor oral health based on individual risk and need.

The new contract will also see increased NHS payments to dentists, with general fee rates rising from the proposed £135 to £150 per hour.

Patient charges have been simplified under the new system. Those who pay for NHS treatment will pay 50% of their treatment package value, capped at a maximum of £384 regardless of how much care they need.

Around half the Welsh population is exempt from paying NHS dental charges, including children under 18, pregnant women, hospital dental patients, and people receiving certain benefits.

The low-income scheme will continue providing help with costs based on individual circumstances.

The reforms also include increased funding for accelerated cluster development to support dental professionals’ engagement in breaking down silos in dentistry provision and involve teams in wider NHS reform, particularly in preventative care.