When should children start visiting the dentist?
A positive first visit can shape how children feel about dental care. This guide explains when to start and what parents can expect.

Children do better with dental care when the first visit feels calm, simple, and not rushed. Early visits are about prevention and building trust.
Start before there is pain
A first visit is easier when the child is not already in discomfort. The dentist can check growth, brushing habits, early cavities, and diet-related risks.
Parents also get practical guidance on cleaning, fluoride, and habits such as thumb sucking or bottle feeding.
Make the visit feel familiar
Simple explanations help children feel safer. Avoid using scary words before the appointment and let the dental team introduce tools gently.
Short, positive visits can build confidence for future care.
Care is adjusted to the child
Every child responds differently. Pediatric dental care should be patient, flexible, and focused on comfort as much as clinical outcomes.
At FLOSS, the team explains each step clearly to both child and parent.
Key takeawayThe best first dental visit is usually a calm preventive visit, not an emergency visit.



