You’re sitting in the chair at a routine check-up when your dentist pauses, takes another look, and says something along the lines of: “I think it would be worth getting an orthodontic opinion on this.” For many parents, those words land somewhere between reassuring and unsettling. Reassuring, because your dentist spotted something worth paying attention to. Unsettling, because you’re not entirely sure what it means or what comes next.
If your child has been referred to a specialist orthodontist in Reading, this post is for you. We’ll explain why referrals happen, what a proper specialist assessment involves, and why being referred sooner rather than later is almost always a good thing.
Why dentists refer children to orthodontists
Your dentist is trained to identify a wide range of dental issues; orthodontics, the specialist field of diagnosing and correcting the position of teeth and jaws, is a separate discipline entirely. Just as a GP might refer a patient to a consultant, a dentist will refer a child to an orthodontist when they spot something that warrants a more detailed look.
Common reasons for a referral include:
- Teeth that are crowded or overlapping
- Gaps between teeth that aren’t closing as expected
- Teeth that haven’t come through at the expected age, known as impacted or unerupted teeth
- A bite that doesn’t sit correctly, where the upper and lower teeth meet too far forward, too far back, or cross over on one side
- Baby teeth that are taking unusually long to fall out, which can affect the path of the adult teeth underneath
A referral doesn’t mean your child definitely needs treatment. It means your dentist has seen something they want a specialist to assess more carefully. The appointment itself will tell you far more than any amount of second-guessing beforehand.
Why the age of the referral matters
Most parents assume orthodontics doesn’t come into the picture until the teenage years. In practice, there are good reasons to have a specialist assessment much earlier. At Park Lane Orthodontics, we recommend that all children have an orthodontic assessment by the age of seven.
At this age, a child typically has a mix of baby teeth and adult teeth. That combination gives an orthodontist a clear picture of how the adult teeth are developing beneath the surface, and whether any early attention would make future treatment simpler, shorter, or in some cases unnecessary.
It’s worth being clear about what early assessment does not mean: it doesn’t mean fitting braces on a seven-year-old. In many cases, the right outcome of an early appointment is simply a plan to monitor how things develop over the coming months or years. Parents often leave reassured, with a clear picture of what to expect rather than a treatment plan to worry about.
What happens at a specialist orthodontic assessment at Park Lane
A consultation at Park Lane Orthodontics isn’t a quick glance and a brochure. It’s a thorough, three-part process that all takes place on the same day, for a single fee of £150.
Part one: the orthodontic therapist
Your child will first spend time with one of our orthodontic therapists. They’ll take precise measurements, carry out a digital 3D scan of the teeth using our iTero scanner, and arrange an X-ray if one hasn’t been taken recently.
The iTero scan is worth mentioning because it replaces the traditional mould-taking process entirely. There’s no tray of impression material to gag on; the scan is fast, comfortable, and produces an extraordinarily detailed 3D image of exactly how the teeth sit.
Part two: the specialist orthodontist
Next, your child will see one of our specialist orthodontists, who will review everything captured in the first part of the appointment. This is where the clinical picture comes together.
Our orthodontists don’t simply look at whether teeth are straight. They consider how treatment will affect your child’s facial profile and long-term aesthetics; an approach that distinguishes a genuine specialist from a general dentist offering orthodontic services as a side treatment. If any treatment is indicated, they’ll talk you through the options and what the likely journey looks like.
Part three: the treatment coordinator
Finally, you’ll meet our treatment coordinator, Melina, who handles the practical side: fees, payment plan options, timelines, and any questions you haven’t yet had the chance to ask. Payment plans are available in-house, and deposits can be as low as £500, so the financial side of things is laid out clearly and without pressure.
The whole appointment takes around 90 minutes. By the time you leave, you’ll have a complete clinical picture, a clear set of options if treatment is recommended, and full transparency on cost.
Specialist orthodontist vs general dentist: why it matters
When your dentist refers your child to Park Lane, they’re specifically referring to a specialist practice, and that distinction matters more than it might initially seem.
A specialist orthodontist has completed a dental degree followed by several additional years of postgraduate training in orthodontics alone. At Park Lane, our orthodontists work exclusively in this field. They’re not fitting fillings in the morning and braces in the afternoon; orthodontics is the entirety of what they do.
This level of focused experience matters most when a case is complex. Crowded teeth in a growing child, impacted adult teeth, bite problems that affect jaw development; these are cases where the depth of specialist knowledge directly affects the quality of the outcome.
What if my child doesn’t need treatment yet?
This is more common than many parents expect, and it’s genuinely good news when it happens.
An orthodontist advising you to wait and monitor is not a wasted appointment. It’s the correct clinical response to a child whose teeth are still developing and whose situation may resolve naturally, or may need intervention at a better-defined point in the future. You leave with a clear picture, a sensible plan, and the reassurance that someone qualified is keeping an eye on things.
We see patients from across Reading, Caversham, Theale, Woodley, and the wider Berkshire area, and for many of them the first appointment ends with exactly that kind of clarity, not a treatment plan, but a confident path forward.
What to do if your child has been referred
If your child’s dentist has recommended an orthodontic assessment, the next step is simply to book one. You don’t need to come in with a clear idea of what treatment you’re expecting; that’s what the consultation is for.
At Park Lane Orthodontics in Tilehurst, Reading, our three-part consultation gives your child a thorough specialist assessment and gives you the full picture in a single appointment. We’re easy to reach by car with on-site parking, and on the main bus route through Tilehurst. To book your child’s consultation, contact us on 0118 941 1628 or email smiles@parklaneorthodontics.co.uk. You can also enquire via our website. The consultation fee is £150, with no obligation to proceed with treatment.
Frequently asked questions
At what age should a child first see an orthodontist?
We recommend all children have an initial orthodontic assessment by the age of seven. At this stage, the mix of baby and adult teeth gives a specialist the clearest view of how development is progressing and whether any early attention would help.
Does a referral mean my child definitely needs braces?
Not necessarily. Many children are referred for assessment and leave with a monitoring plan rather than an immediate treatment recommendation. The assessment is about gaining a complete picture, not committing to treatment.
How long does the consultation take at Park Lane?
The consultation is a three-part process lasting approximately 90 minutes. It includes an assessment with an orthodontic therapist, time with a specialist orthodontist, and a conversation with our treatment coordinator about options and fees. Everything takes place on the same day for a single fee of £150.
Can parents be present throughout the consultation?
Yes, absolutely. We encourage parents to be involved throughout. The appointment is designed to answer your questions as much as your child’s.
What if we’ve been referred from Abingdon or Didcot — is Park Lane worth travelling to?
We regularly see families from Abingdon, Didcot, Pangbourne, and across South Oxfordshire and Berkshire. Our on-site car park makes the journey straightforward, and most families find that the thoroughness of the assessment is well worth the trip.