Trinity House, Stratford Dental Centre, Aintree Rd, Stratford-upon-Avon CV37 9FL, CV37 9FL
- Friendly staff
- Modern clean surgery
- Good parking
- Punctual appointments
6 dental practices in Stratford-upon-Avon list emergency appointments. If you have severe pain, bleeding, or a knocked-out tooth, call ahead — most practices will fit urgent cases in on the same day. The list below shows practices that explicitly offer emergency care.
Ranked by patient mentions of Emergency in reviews, overall rating, and review volume. Practices marked with a quote contain direct patient experiences with this treatment.
Trinity House, Stratford Dental Centre, Aintree Rd, Stratford-upon-Avon CV37 9FL, CV37 9FL
28 Ely St, Stratford-upon-Avon CV37 6LW, CV37 6LW
Meon Dental Care, Goose Ln, Lower Quinton, Upper Quinton, Stratford-upon-Avon CV37 8TA, CV37 8TA
14 Evesham Pl, Stratford-upon-Avon CV37 6HT, CV37 6HT
Suite A, Elta house, Birmingham Rd, Stratford-upon-Avon CV37 0AQ, CV37 0AQ
9 Tiddington Rd, Stratford-upon-Avon CV37 7AE, CV37 7AE
A dental emergency includes severe toothache that paracetamol/ibuprofen won't control, swelling of the face or jaw, a knocked-out adult tooth (best chance of saving it is within 1 hour), uncontrolled bleeding after an extraction, and trauma to the teeth or jaw. If you have facial swelling spreading to your eye or neck, go to A&E — that's a medical emergency.
Private emergency appointments in Stratford-upon-Avon typically cost £75–£150 for the assessment, with treatment (extraction, temporary filling, root canal start) charged separately. NHS emergency dental treatment falls under Band 1 (£27.90) — but availability is very limited.
NHS 111 can refer you to an emergency NHS dentist if one is available — call them first. Some practices in Stratford-upon-Avon also offer NHS emergency slots, but availability is extremely limited and often booked days in advance. Most patients with urgent issues end up paying for private emergency care.
Take paracetamol and ibuprofen alternating (if you can take both — check with a pharmacist), apply a cold compress to the outside of your cheek for swelling, rinse with warm salt water (1 tsp salt in a cup of water), and avoid very hot/cold food. Don't put aspirin directly on the tooth — it burns the gum. If pain is severe or you're developing facial swelling, seek same-day care.