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Dentistry in England

Lifecycle: Implementation Care Quality Commission · Department of Health and Social Care · Health and Social Care Committee · NHS England · Public Accounts Committee Last regenerated 3 hours ago

Summary

What this is

This thread tracks the policy, regulatory and contractual reform of NHS dentistry in England — covering the dental contract reform programme, annual patient-charge uplifts under the NHS Act 2006, CQC regulation of dental providers under the 2008 Regulated Activities regime, and parliamentary scrutiny of access and workforce.

Why it matters

NAO and PAC have concluded that the 2024 recovery plan has failed to halt decline in NHS dental access (only ~40% of adults seen in 24 months to March 2024), and the Government has committed to fundamental contract reform before the end of this Parliament, with legislation possible from April 2026.

Current status

The Government published its response to the contract quality and payment reforms consultation on 16 December 2025, committing to phased implementation from April 2026; the Health and Social Care Committee's NHS Dentistry follow-up inquiry (opened July 2025) is examining progress against the July 2023 'crisis of access' findings.

What changed recently

  • 16 Dec 2025 — Government published response to NHS dentistry contract quality and payment reforms consultation, committing to legislate where necessary from April 2026.
  • 16 Dec 2025 — Minister made Commons statement reaffirming commitment to fundamental contract reform by end of this Parliament, focused on matching resources to need, access, prevention and fair pay.
  • 9 Jul 2025 — Health and Social Care Committee opened a follow-up inquiry to its July 2023 'crisis of access in NHS dentistry' report.
  • 8 Jul 2025 — DHSC launched public consultation on NHS dental contract reforms, framed as next step from the 10-year health plan.
  • 4 Apr 2025 — PAC report 'Fixing NHS Dentistry' concluded the 2024 recovery plan was a 'complete failure' and warned 'no future for NHS dentistry without reform'.

Key documents

Framework

Statutory basis

Operationalising

Implementation

Scrutiny

Evidence

Commentary

Consultations

Stakeholders

Sponsoring department 1

  • Department of Health and Social Care → src
    Lead department for NHS dental contract reform, patient charges and oral health policy in England.

Sponsoring minister 2

  • Stephen Kinnock → src
    Minister of State at DHSC who signed SI 2025/310 (dental charges uplift) on 7 March 2025 and made the accompanying WMS HCWS512.
  • Zubir Ahmed → src
    Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State at DHSC who signed the Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated Activities) (Amendment) Regulations 2026 (Apr 2026), part of the broader regulated-activities framework for dentistry.

Regulator / delivery programme 2

  • NHS England → src
    Commissioner and contract manager for primary NHS dental services in England; subject of the HSC Committee follow-up inquiry.
  • Care Quality Commission → src
    Registers and regulates dental providers under the Health and Social Care Act 2008 (Regulated Activities) Regulations 2014.

Lead committee 2

  • Health and Social Care Committee → src
    Select committee running the NHS Dentistry follow-up inquiry (opened 9 July 2025), revisiting its July 2023 'crisis of access' findings.
  • Public Accounts Committee → src
    Published 'Fixing NHS Dentistry' (Apr 2025) concluding the 2024 dental recovery plan was a complete failure; key scrutiny driver.

Witnesses & evidence-givers 1

  • National Audit Office → src
    Published the Nov 2024 study concluding the dental recovery plan was unlikely to deliver its 1.5m additional treatments target; independent audit foundation for PAC.

Commentator 1

  • Derek Thomas → src
    Conservative MP (former MP for St Ives) who led the June 2022 Westminster Hall debate on NHS Dentistry in England, sustained backbench voice on access.

Political commitments

  • commitment Ministerial statement Labour · 2025 · Government Response to NHS Dentistry Consultation: Quality and Payment Reforms …

    Fundamental dental contract reform before the end of this Parliament

    The Government remain committed to fundamental reform of the dental contract by the end of this Parliament, with a focus on matching resources to need, improving access, promoting prevention and rewarding dentists fairly.

    Why linked: Government's central political commitment on this thread, restated in Commons statement of 16 Dec 2025.

  • commitment Ministerial statement Labour · 2025 · Government response to consultation on NHS dentistry contract: quality and paym…

    Legislate where necessary to implement contract reform from April 2026

    The government aims to introduce legislation where necessary to support implementation of proposals from April 2026.

    Why linked: Sets the implementation timetable for the reform package.

Found via web research

  • Gap A published Government Response to the Public Accounts Committee report 'Fixing NHS Dentistry'
    Treasury Minutes – June 2025 · government_response · 16 Jun 2025 · gov.uk · high
    The HM Treasury omnibus Treasury Minute published 16 June 2025, containing the Government's formal response to the PAC's Twenty-first Report of Session 2024-25 ('Fixing NHS Dentistry', published 4 April 2025). Treasury Minutes are the standard mechanism by which government departments respond to PAC reports, typically within ~2 months of publication.
    The PAC 'Fixing NHS Dentistry' report is the Twenty-first Report of Session 2024-25, published 4 April 2025. The parliament.uk publications page for the inquiry explicitly lists a 'Treasury minutes: Government response to the Committee of Public Accounts on the Twenty-first report from Session 2024-25'. The June 2025 Treasury Minute (published 16 June 2025) falls squarely within the ~2 month response window and is the first omnibus Treasury Minute issued after the April 2025 report. The gov.uk page is confirmed via web search.
    Fixing NHS Dentistry – PAC Publications Page (includes Treasury Minute link) · government_response · 4 Apr 2025 · parliament.uk · medium
    The official PAC inquiry publications page for 'Fixing NHS Dentistry', which lists the Treasury Minute government response to the Twenty-first Report of Session 2024-25 among its publications, alongside letters and evidence from DHSC and NHS England.
    The parliament.uk publications page for the inquiry explicitly references the Treasury Minute response document. While this is the index/landing page rather than the Treasury Minute PDF itself, it confirms the document exists and is linked from parliament.uk, making it a reliable secondary pointer to the gap document.
  • Gap A 2026 dental charges uplift SI (successor to SI 2025/310)
    The National Health Service (Primary Dental Services and Dental Charges) (Amendment) Regulations 2026 · statutory_instrument · 9 Mar 2026 · legislation.gov.uk · high
    SI 2026/265, made 9 March 2026, uplifts NHS dental patient charges in England from 1 April 2026 by approximately 1.66% (Band 1: £27.40→£27.90; Band 2: £75.30→£76.60; Band 3: £326.70→£332.10). It is the direct successor to SI 2025/310, which it cites as a prior amending instrument, and also amends GDS and PDS contract regulations.
    The instrument explicitly amends the NHS (Dental Charges) Regulations 2005 to increase patient charges from April 2026, references SI 2025/310 as a prior amending instrument, and was made in the same annual March window as its predecessors — precisely matching the gap description of a 2026 dental charges uplift SI succeeding SI 2025/310.
  • Gap Detailed Government Response to the May 2024 graduate-dentist tie-in consultation
    No matching documents found on the open government web.

Open questions & gaps

Pending in the lifecycle

  • What primary or secondary legislation, if any, the Government will bring forward in 2026 to implement contract reform.
  • Whether the May 2024 graduate-dentist 'tie-in' consultation will be carried forward into a published response under the current Government.
  • Whether the Health and Social Care Committee's follow-up inquiry will produce a report ahead of contract implementation.

Beyond the corpus

  • MISSING Detailed Government Response to the May 2024 graduate-dentist tie-in consultation — Consultation opened May 2024 and no outcome is in the linked events.

Confidence gaps

  • Whether the 2025 contract reform consultation response represents a complete payment-model redesign or a transitional UDA modification.
  • Scale and shape of any legislative vehicle for reform (HSCA framework powers vs new primary legislation).