Gum Disease
Deep Cleaning Teeth Cost UK: Scale and Polish vs Root Planing Prices
There's a routine scale and polish, and then there's a deep cleaning. They share a name in casual conversation ("I'm going for a cleaning"), but they're genuinely different things. The cost gap tells the story: a regular scale and polish costs £50-£120 and takes about half an hour. A deep cleaning for gum disease costs £200-£400 per quadrant of the mouth and takes multiple appointments. That's a real difference, and understanding which one you actually need changes everything about what the appointment looks like.
The Regular Scale and Polish
This is the cleaning most people picture. Preventive maintenance: clearing out the build-up that accumulates between check-ups.
Tartar is what happens when plaque wins. It mineralises into a deposit along the gum line and between teeth, hard enough that no amount of brushing will shift it, which is why it needs professional instruments. The hygienist uses an ultrasonic scaler (a vibrating instrument that breaks tartar apart with sound waves and water) and follows up with hand instruments to get everything smooth along the visible surfaces and just below the gum line.
Then comes the polishing, which is honestly the satisfying part. A rotating rubber cup with a mildly abrasive paste smooths everything down, clears surface stains from coffee, tea, and wine, and leaves that clean-glass feeling that makes your tongue want to run over every tooth for the rest of the day.
The whole thing takes 30-45 minutes. A bit scratchy in places where the gums are inflamed, but not painful. At most private practices it costs £50-£120, and the recommendation is usually every 6-12 months depending on how quickly tartar builds up.
The Tiny Ruler That Tells the Whole Story
At each hygiene appointment, something quietly fascinating happens. The hygienist takes out a periodontal probe: basically a tiny ruler, thinner than a cocktail stick, with millimetre markings along its length. It slides gently into the gap between the gum and the tooth, measuring the depth of that little groove all the way around each tooth.
Think of it as measuring a moat around a castle. The shallower the moat, the better the defences.
Healthy gums measure 1-3mm. The probe slides in just a couple of millimetres, the gum sits tight against the tooth, no bleeding. Everything working as it should. At 4-5mm, though, something has shifted. The gum has started pulling away from the tooth, creating a deeper groove where bacteria set up camp below the gum line. Bleeding on probing is common at this stage, which is the hygienist's signal that things are moving in the wrong direction. This is gingivitis or early periodontitis, and a regular scale and polish can't always reach what's building up in those deeper spaces.
At 6mm or deeper, it's established periodontitis. Bacteria are thriving in pockets that a toothbrush, floss, or routine scaling simply cannot access, and the bone supporting the teeth has started to deteriorate. That's where deep cleaning comes in.
What Deep Cleaning Actually Involves
The proper name is scaling and root planing, which sounds intimidating but is, in practice, a very careful and precise cleaning of areas a regular hygiene visit can't reach. It happens under local anaesthetic, so you're numb for the whole thing.
The scaling part means working on root surfaces you can't see, which is where the real craft of it comes in. These deposits sit on the tooth root inside the pocket, hidden under gum tissue. The hygienist or dentist works by feel, using fine curettes that reach into the pocket and scrape the root surface clean, reading the texture of the root through the instrument, distinguishing rough calculus from smooth, clean tooth. There's something genuinely skilful about it.
Root planing follows: smoothing down the cleaned root surfaces and removing a thin outer layer that's become contaminated with bacterial toxins. The smooth surface that's left behind is one the gum tissue can actually reattach to, which is the whole point.
The mouth gets treated in quadrants (upper right, upper left, lower right, lower left), with one or two quadrants per appointment. A full mouth deep cleaning takes 2-4 appointments spaced 1-2 weeks apart, with each session running 45-90 minutes depending on how much there is to remove and how deep the pockets are.
Deep Cleaning Costs in the UK
| Treatment | What It Addresses | Cost | Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| Scale and polish | Surface tartar, staining | £50-£120 | 30-45 mins |
| Deep cleaning per quadrant | Subgingival tartar, root planing | £200-£400 | 45-90 mins |
| Full mouth deep cleaning | All four quadrants | £800-£1,600 | 3-6 hours total |
| Periodontal maintenance | Follow-up after deep cleaning | £80-£150 | 45-60 mins |
At UrgentCare Dental, the initial assessment determines which level of cleaning is needed. The check-up includes periodontal probing and X-rays that show the full picture.
What Happens Afterwards (And It's Actually Quite Dramatic)
The results are measured in millimetres, and those millimetres are, well, quietly dramatic.
As the inflammation subsides, the gum tissue tightens up against the cleaned root surface. Pocket depths drop by 1-3mm on average: a pocket that measured 6mm before treatment might come back at 3-4mm after healing. The moat shrinking back to a defensible depth, if you like.
Bleeding on probing drops dramatically. Gums that bled every time the probe went in before treatment typically show minimal or no bleeding at reassessment.
And then there's the visible change, which people don't expect. Inflamed gums are red, swollen, and glossy. Healthy gums are pink, firm, and stippled (there's a slight orange-peel texture that's actually a sign of health). The transition happens over 4-6 weeks, and it's genuinely remarkable to see.
Some people notice their teeth look slightly longer afterwards, which can be a bit unsettling, but what's happening is the gums settling. The swelling is gone, the tissue has tightened, and the gum margin sits slightly lower than it did when everything was puffy. It looks a bit like recession, but it's actually the gums finding a healthier position. The alternative, leaving inflamed tissue untreated, produces far more gum and bone loss over time.
Recovery is milder than most people expect. The gums are tender for 2-3 days after each session, but it's a generalised soreness rather than anything sharp, and ibuprofen handles it comfortably. Cold sensitivity is common for a week or two as the cleaned root surfaces adjust, and then it settles.
The Ongoing Part
Gum disease is a chronic condition, which means deep cleaning is the beginning of ongoing management rather than a one-off fix. The bacteria that caused it are permanent residents; the goal is keeping their numbers low enough that the gums and bone stay stable.
Periodontal maintenance appointments happen every 3-4 months (more frequently than the usual 6-12 monthly schedule). Each one includes pocket depth measurement, scaling of any pockets that have deepened, a polish, and a check on how home care is going. These run £80-£150 each, which comes to £320-£600 per year. That's a meaningful investment, but it's substantially less than the cost of losing a tooth: a single dental implant is £1,999 at UrgentCare Dental.
The Part That Catches People Off Guard
The need for deep cleaning is determined by clinical findings, not symptoms. A lot of people with moderate gum disease have no pain, no obvious bleeding, no idea anything is happening. The disease is painless in its early and moderate stages, which is exactly how it quietly progresses to the point where deep cleaning becomes necessary. It's sneaky, and it's the reason untreated gum disease is actually the leading cause of tooth loss in adults. Not decay. Not trauma. Gum disease.
Smoking is the single biggest risk factor (and it's not close), followed by diabetes, genetic predisposition, and infrequent dental visits.
Common Questions About Deep Cleaning Costs
Is deep teeth cleaning worth it?
Genuinely, yes, and here's why it matters so much: untreated gum disease is the single leading cause of tooth loss in adults, ahead of decay and ahead of accidents. A deep cleaning is the thing that stops that slide. It clears the bacteria out of the deep pockets, lets the gums tighten back against the tooth, and keeps the bone that holds your teeth in place from wearing away. When you weigh the maintenance cost against replacing a lost tooth (a single dental implant is £1,999 at UrgentCare Dental), keeping the gums you already have is the easy call.
What's the difference between a scale and polish and a deep clean?
A scale and polish is the everyday maintenance clean most people picture: clearing surface tartar and staining from the parts of the tooth you can see, above and just below the gum line. It takes 30-45 minutes and costs £50-£120. A deep clean goes further, under the gum, cleaning the root surfaces hidden inside the pockets, and it happens under local anaesthetic so you're numb throughout. That one runs £200-£400 per quadrant of the mouth. The tiny ruler the hygienist slides around each tooth is what tells you which one you actually need.
Does deep cleaning hurt?
During the appointment, no, because the area is fully numbed with local anaesthetic, so you feel pressure and movement rather than pain. Afterwards the gums are tender for 2-3 days, more of a generalised soreness than anything sharp, and ordinary ibuprofen handles it comfortably. Cold sensitivity is common for a week or two while the cleaned root surfaces settle down, and then it fades.
How much is a full-mouth deep clean?
The mouth is treated in four quadrants, and each quadrant runs £200-£400, so a full-mouth deep cleaning across all four comes to roughly £800-£1,600. It's usually spread over 2-4 appointments rather than done all in one sitting, which gives each area time to settle between visits.
How often will I need deep cleaning done?
Gum disease is a chronic condition, so a deep clean is the start of ongoing care rather than a one-off fix. Once your gums are stable, you move onto periodontal maintenance visits every 3-4 months (a little more often than the usual 6-12 month check-up), and those run £80-£150 each. Staying on that rhythm is what keeps the pockets shallow and the gums healthy for the long run.
What is the two year rule for dentists?
You may have heard that healthy adults can safely leave up to two years between check-ups, and that's true, but only for very low-risk mouths with no history of gum trouble. If you've had gum disease, that two-year window doesn't apply to you at all. Your gums need watching far more closely, which is exactly why the maintenance schedule after a deep clean sits at every 3-4 months rather than once in a blue moon.
Is deep cleaning covered by the NHS?
On paper some periodontal treatment sits within an NHS band, but the reality is that getting an NHS dental appointment has become extremely difficult, with the vast majority of practices no longer taking on new NHS patients. For most people, private care is the realistic route rather than a genuine choice, which is why understanding the private cost is what actually helps you plan.
The Consultation
At UrgentCare Dental, the periodontal assessment is part of every dental check-up. If deep cleaning is needed, the full gum disease treatment plan covers the number of sessions, the cost per quadrant, and the maintenance schedule that follows. The conversation happens with the probing chart and X-rays on screen, so it's all concrete: here's what's happening, here's what we do about it, here's what it costs.
The difference between a scale and polish and a deep cleaning is the difference between maintenance and intervention. And that tiny ruler the hygienist uses, sliding gently around each tooth, is the thing that tells you which one you need.
Need Emergency Dental Care?
Same-day appointments from just £20. Open 24 hours, 7 days a week.
Or see every treatment we offer, with prices →