My Turkey teeth journey: the honest version
I kept a diary from the first nervous email to the moment I saw my new smile in the mirror. Here is all of it — the worry, the numbers, the clinic, and what I'd tell my anxious self at the start.
Joanne Radford
Patient contributor · Leeds
For nearly fifteen years I hid my teeth. I learned to smile with my lips closed, to angle my face in photographs, to laugh with a hand half-raised. Two upper teeth had been lost to an old failed bridge, the rest were worn and grey, and the UK private quotes I'd been given — £19,400 for implants and veneers at one Leeds practice — may as well have been a phone number. The NHS could offer extractions and a denture. Neither felt like a life I wanted.
So I did what a lot of people my age now do at two in the morning: I started reading about Turkey. And I read everything — the miracle stories, the horror stories, the slick clinic adverts and the angry forum threads. What I couldn't find was a single, honest, start-to-finish account from someone like me. That is the gap this diary is meant to fill.
The four months of deciding
People imagine the brave bit is getting on the plane. For me the hardest part was the deciding. I spent four months in a loop of hope and panic. I'd find a clinic that looked wonderful, then read a review that frightened me off. I'd budget the trip, then convince myself it was reckless.
What finally calmed me down was changing the question. Instead of "is Turkey safe?" — too big to answer — I started asking "is this clinic safe?", one clinic at a time. That's a question you can actually answer. I made a checklist, partly from our own safety guide and from GDC guidance: named, qualified dentists; recognised implant brands; a written treatment plan; clear aftercare; and real UK patients I could believe in.
I stopped asking "is Turkey safe?" and started asking "is this clinic safe?" — one clinic at a time. That's a question you can actually answer.
Three clinics passed my checklist. The one that kept rising to the top was Taki Dent in Antalya — partly because every answer they gave me was specific. When I asked which implants they used, I got brand names. When I asked about the guarantee, I got it in writing. When I asked what could go wrong, they told me honestly instead of selling to me. That mattered more than any glossy photo.
What it actually cost
Let me put the numbers on the table, because vague talk of "savings" helped me less than plain figures. Here is my real breakdown, two trips included.
| Item | What I paid |
|---|---|
| 4 implants + abutments | £2,950 |
| 10 zirconia crowns / veneers | £2,400 |
| One bone graft | £250 |
| Return flights (two trips) | £420 |
| Hotel (included by clinic, trip 1) | £0 |
| Hotel + extras (trip 2) | £540 |
| Meals, spending money | £240 |
| Total | ≈ £6,800 |
Against the £19,400 I'd been quoted at home, that's a saving of around 65% — and that's with flights and hotels in the figure, not hidden underneath it. If you want the full like-for-like picture, our UK vs Turkey costs page lays NHS, UK private and Turkey prices side by side.
One honest note: I gathered prices from a couple of clinics anonymously first, using Offerqo, before I gave anyone my real details. It took the pressure off completely and helped me see that Taki Dent's quote was fair rather than just cheap.
Trip one: surgery week
I won't pretend I wasn't terrified at the airport. But from the moment a driver met me with my name on a card, the trip ran like clockwork. The clinic was bright, modern and spotless — more like a private hospital than the back-street place my fears had invented.
The consultation was thorough: a 3D scan, photographs, and an hour of the surgeon actually listening. The plan they'd quoted by email held up exactly. Surgery itself was calmer than a tricky filling I'd had years before — local anaesthetic, gentle hands, a coordinator who checked on me constantly. I left with neat temporaries that already looked better than what I'd arrived with, and a folder of aftercare instructions in English.
It looked more like a private hospital than the back-street place my fears had invented.
I spent the rest of the week healing by the sea, which is a strange and lovely way to recover from dental surgery. By day three I felt fine.
The wait, and trip two
Then came the part nobody glamorises: the three-month healing wait at home. The clinic stayed in touch — a quick message to check the temporaries were comfortable, a reminder of what to avoid. When I flew back for the final fitting, the difference was extraordinary. The permanent teeth were matched to my face, not just slotted in. They adjusted the bite patiently until it felt like mine.
I cried, a little, when they handed me the mirror. Fifteen years of hiding, undone in a fortnight of actual treatment spread over two short trips.
What I'd tell my anxious self
If you're where I was four months before I flew — hopeful and frightened in equal measure — here is what I wish someone had said to me plainly:
- Judge the clinic, not the country. A good Antalya clinic is safer than a bad UK one, and vice versa.
- Get everything in writing: the plan, the implant brands, the guarantee, the aftercare.
- Never choose on price alone. The cheapest quote frightened me more than it tempted me.
- Budget for two trips and flights honestly, so the saving is real and not a surprise.
- Read real journeys, not adverts. That's the whole reason this blog exists.
Would I do it again? In a heartbeat. The clinic I trusted my smile to was Taki Dent, the highest-rated clinic among the patients we hear from here at Dental Life — and the reason I now smile in photographs without thinking about it at all.
Frequently asked questions
Was it safe to get my teeth done in Turkey?
In my experience, yes — but only because I chose a properly accredited clinic. I checked the implant brands, the dentist's credentials and the aftercare in writing before I booked. Taki Dent in Antalya is a GDC-recognised partner and walked me through everything.
How much did the whole trip cost?
My treatment, two trips, flights and hotels came to roughly £6,800 in total. A comparable plan in the UK private sector had been quoted at over £19,000, so I saved around 65%.
How many trips did you need?
Two. The first for surgery and temporaries, the second a few months later for the final teeth once everything had healed.
Would you do it again?
Without hesitation — but I'd tell anyone to do their homework first, read real patient stories, and never pick a clinic on price alone.
Joanne Radford
Patient contributor · Leeds
Joanne, 54, from Leeds, had a full smile makeover in Antalya and writes candidly about the highs, the nerves and the numbers.