80% of dental marketing budgets now go to digital channels. Here’s which ones actually produce new patients, how much to spend on each, and what to avoid.
Last updated: March 2026 · Reading time: 14 min
“Dental practices don’t need more marketing channels. They need fewer channels done right. I’ve seen practices cut their marketing spend by 30% and double their new patient count by shutting down underperforming channels and putting that budget into SEO and Google Ads. More isn’t better. Better is better.”
Hardik Shah, Founder of ScaleGrowth.Digital
| Channel | Patient Acquisition Impact | Time to Results | Monthly Investment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Local SEO + Google Business Profile | High (40-60% of new patients) | 3-6 months | $1,500-$5,000 |
| Google Ads (Search) | High (20-35% of new patients) | Immediate | $1,500-$5,000 |
| Online Reviews (Google, Yelp, Healthgrades) | High (influences 87% of decisions) | Ongoing | $50-$200 (review mgmt tool) |
| Email Marketing (recall, reactivation) | Medium (10-15% of reactivated patients) | 1-2 months | $100-$500 |
| Social Media (Instagram, Facebook) | Low-Medium (brand building, not direct acquisition) | 6-12 months | $500-$2,000 |
| Facebook/Instagram Ads | Low-Medium (works for specific offers, poor for general) | 1-2 months | $500-$2,000 |
| Content Marketing (blog) | Low-Medium (supports SEO, minimal direct conversion) | 6-12 months | $500-$1,500 |
Digital marketing for dentists is the use of online channels (search engines, social media, email, paid advertising, and review platforms) to attract new patients, retain existing ones, and build a dental practice’s brand within its local market.The takeaway: SEO, Google Ads, and reviews account for 70-85% of new patient acquisition from digital channels. Social media and content marketing support those efforts but rarely produce direct patient bookings on their own. Budget accordingly.
| Channel | % of Digital Budget | Monthly Investment | Expected Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| SEO + Website | 30-40% | $1,500-$3,200 | 30-60 organic leads/month (after 6 months) |
| Google Ads | 25-35% | $1,200-$2,800 | 15-40 paid leads/month |
| Review Management | 3-5% | $50-$200 | 15-25 new reviews/month |
| Social Media | 10-15% | $500-$1,200 | Brand awareness, patient retention |
| Email Marketing | 5-10% | $100-$500 | 50+ recalled/reactivated patients/month |
| Content/Blog | 5-10% | $300-$800 | SEO support, patient education |
| Channel | Cost Per New Patient | Time to ROI | 12-Month ROI |
|---|---|---|---|
| SEO | $30-$75 | 6-9 months | 10:1 to 30:1 |
| Google Ads | $100-$240 | Immediate | 5:1 to 15:1 |
| Email (recall/reactivation) | $5-$15 | 1-2 months | 20:1 to 50:1 |
| Social Media (organic) | $150-$400 | 6-12 months | 2:1 to 8:1 |
| Facebook Ads | $75-$200 | 1-3 months | 3:1 to 10:1 |
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Most dental practices should allocate 5-8% of gross revenue to marketing, with 80% going to digital channels. For a practice grossing $1.5 million/year, that’s $4,800-$8,000/month in digital marketing. Allocate 30-40% to SEO, 25-35% to Google Ads, 10-15% to social media, 5-10% to email, and 3-5% to review management.
Local SEO (including Google Business Profile optimization) delivers the highest ROI over time, producing 40-60% of new patients from digital at a cost of $30-$75 per patient after the first 6 months. Google Ads is the most effective channel for immediate results, delivering patient calls within 24 hours of campaign launch. Email recall campaigns have the highest ROI overall at 20-50:1 because they re-engage existing patients at minimal cost.
Google Ads produces calls within 24-48 hours. Email recall campaigns start recovering appointments within 1-2 weeks. SEO takes 3-6 months for initial ranking improvements and 6-9 months for significant patient volume. Social media takes 6-12 months to build meaningful engagement. A comprehensive strategy shows measurable ROI within 90 days from Google Ads and email, with SEO compounding results over 12+ months.
A dentist or office manager can handle the basics: Google Business Profile updates, review responses, social media posts, and email campaigns. The technical work (SEO, Google Ads management, website development, call tracking setup) typically requires a specialist. Most practices start with a Google Ads manager and an SEO specialist, then add social media management as they grow. Expect to pay $2,000-$5,000/month for professional management of SEO + PPC combined.
Social media is worth it for brand building and patient retention, but it’s a poor choice for direct patient acquisition compared to SEO and Google Ads. Allocate 10-15% of your digital budget to social (not 30-40%, which is a common mistake). Focus on Instagram for before/after content and Facebook for community engagement. Don’t expect social media to replace SEO or PPC as a patient acquisition channel.
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Does social media actually bring in dental patients?
Social media builds trust and brand familiarity, but it rarely drives direct patient bookings. The data is clear: 92.9% of healthcare consumers say social media is effective for attracting patients (Sixth City Marketing, 2026), but effectiveness here means brand awareness, not appointment requests. The direct patient conversion path for dental social media is long and indirect. What works on social for dentists:- Before/after transformations (with HIPAA-compliant consent) are the highest-engagement dental content on Instagram. These posts generate shares and saves, which increases your visibility to people who follow your existing patients.
- Team introductions and office tours. Dental anxiety affects 36% of the population (ADA Health Policy Institute). Seeing the team, the waiting room, and the treatment rooms on social reduces that anxiety barrier.
- Patient testimonial videos. A 30-second video of a patient talking about their experience carries more trust than any ad copy you could write.
- Educational content. Short videos explaining procedures (“What happens during a root canal?”) build authority and reduce treatment anxiety.
What doesn’t work: generic “National Dental Health Month” posts, stock photo memes, posting only special offers, and buying followers. None of these produce patient inquiries. Platform recommendation: Instagram first (visual medium, before/after content performs well), Facebook second (older demographic matches dental patient profile, good for reviews and community groups), TikTok optional (works if a dentist on your team enjoys creating short-form video content). Budget: 10-15% of your digital marketing budget on social. If you’re spending $5,000/month on digital total, allocate $500-$750 to social content and maybe $300-$500 to boosted posts. Don’t run Facebook Ads for “more likes.” Run them for landing page visits or appointment requests only.