Three types of patients typically request a review: those who have received a treatment plan and want it clinically verified before paying a deposit; those who have already booked but want a second set of eyes on the proposed materials and timeline; and those who have returned home from Turkey with complications and need an independent assessment of what went wrong. The review process is the same in each case — submit your clinical records, receive a written report within 48 hours.
The consultation is a written clinical review of a dental treatment plan proposed by a Turkish clinic. It is not a referral service, not a booking platform, and not an endorsement of any clinic. The only product is a structured written assessment of the specific records you submit — what they show, what they don't show, what the proposed treatment plan does and doesn't address, and what questions you should ask before agreeing to proceed.
Dr. Taslidere has no financial relationship with any Turkish dental clinic. No referral commission is accepted from any provider. The fee paid by the patient is the only revenue involved in the consultation, which means the advice given has no financial stake in any particular outcome. Whether the review concludes that a treatment plan is excellent, identifies serious problems, or recommends against travelling entirely, the fee remains the same.
The service is available to patients considering any dental procedure in Turkey — implants, veneers, crowns, All-on-4, All-on-6, composite bonding, orthodontics, or full-mouth rehabilitation. The minimum useful submission is a written treatment plan and a recent panoramic X-ray. For implant cases, a CBCT scan is recommended where available. See the FAQ for guidance on what to submit.
Every review covers six structured areas, regardless of procedure type or treatment complexity.
Every consultation produces a written report. Not a verbal summary, not a video recording — a document you can read at your own pace, share with a dentist at home, or use as the basis for a follow-up conversation with the Turkish clinic. The report covers every element of the submitted treatment plan and flags anything that requires further scrutiny or direct questioning.
The report confirms whether the brand specified in your treatment plan is a recognised manufacturer with published clinical data, whether the material grade for crowns, veneers, or prosthetics is what it claims to be, and whether the specifications match what would be expected for your procedure type at the quoted price.
Overtreatment is the single most common finding in Turkish dental tourism cases. The review compares the scope of treatment proposed against the clinical evidence in your submitted records — X-rays, photographs, CBCT scans where available — and identifies any units that appear to have been added without clear clinical indication.
The quoted price is assessed against 2025–2026 market rates for comparable procedures at comparable material specifications. The report indicates whether the price is reasonable, above market, or so far below market that it suggests something in the specification is not what it appears.
The written warranty terms are evaluated for whether they are meaningful for an international patient — whether the exclusion conditions are reasonable, whether the coverage period is appropriate, and whether the aftercare plan addresses what happens if a complication arises after you return home.
Every report closes with a specific list of questions to put to the clinic before agreeing to proceed. These are targeted questions based on the specific findings of your review — not generic advice, but questions designed to confirm or challenge the specific concerns identified.
The consultation has a defined scope. These items fall outside it.
Clinic recommendations or referrals — the review does not steer patients toward specific providers.
A guarantee of treatment outcome — the review assesses plans, not procedures already performed.
Legal advice — the report is a clinical assessment, not a medico-legal document.
Video consultation by default — the standard deliverable is written. A video call can be arranged at an additional fee if required.
From initial submission to written report in four steps.
Send your X-rays (panoramic OPG at minimum; CBCT scan if you have one), photographs of your teeth if relevant to the proposed treatment, and the full written treatment plan from the clinic. If the clinic has only provided a verbal quote, note that this significantly limits the scope of what the review can assess.
You receive a message confirming the fee and the scope of the review before any assessment begins. The fee is fixed regardless of how many line items are in the treatment plan or how much additional scrutiny the review requires. Payment is by bank transfer or card.
The report is delivered within 48 hours of payment, typically sooner. It covers every finding from the clinical records and treatment plan in structured sections — clinical necessity, materials, pricing, warranty, and the question list. The report is sent as a PDF.
If the report raises questions you want to discuss before acting on them, a brief follow-up via WhatsApp is included in the fee. If the situation requires more extended discussion — for example, if you receive a revised plan from the clinic following your questions — that can be arranged.
The consultation is designed for patients at a specific decision point — not for general dental advice.
You have contacted one or more clinics, received a written treatment plan with itemised procedures and a total cost, and are now trying to determine whether the plan is trustworthy before committing. This is the most common scenario and the one the service is most precisely designed for. The minimum useful treatment cost for a consultation to be worthwhile is approximately €2,000 — below that, the consultation fee may represent a disproportionate share of the potential benefit.
You have quotes from two or more clinics — commonly one from Istanbul and one from Antalya or Izmir — and the prices differ significantly. Understanding why they differ requires comparing what is actually specified in each plan: which implant brand, which prosthetic material, whether CBCT is included, what the warranty covers. The review can assess multiple quotes from the same submission, which allows a direct comparison on clinical merit rather than price alone.
You had dental work done in Turkey and are experiencing a complication — persistent pain, a failed implant, cracking veneers, bite misalignment, or sensitivity that was not present before treatment. A post-treatment review of your X-rays and clinical documentation provides an independent assessment of what the records show, which can support a complaint to the clinic, a claim under your warranty, or a plan for remediation with a dentist at home.
Understanding the limits of the service is as important as understanding what it covers.
The review is based entirely on the clinical records you submit. A remote review of X-rays and photographs can identify many significant problems — overtreatment scope, inadequate imaging, implant brand discrepancies, unrealistic timelines — but it cannot replace a hands-on clinical examination. The review supplements, not replaces, care from a dentist who can examine you directly.
A review that confirms a treatment plan is well-specified is not a guarantee that the procedure will be executed correctly. Clinical competence in the operating environment is outside the scope of a record review. The review reduces the risk of committing to a badly planned or dishonestly specified treatment — it cannot eliminate execution risk.
No clinic recommendation or referral is provided at any stage. The review assesses what has been proposed — it does not propose alternatives. If the conclusion is that the submitted plan has serious problems, the appropriate next step depends on the specific situation, and the report will say so. Directing patients toward any particular clinic would create exactly the conflict of interest the consultation is designed to avoid.
See the pricing page for fee details, or go directly to book a consultation.
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