The NHS Dental Payment System: How Measuring the Wrong Thing Broke UK Dentistry
In recent years, a paradox has appeared in the United Kingdom’s National Health Service (NHS) dental system.
Hundreds of millions of pounds allocated for dental services are being returned to the government each year, while millions of patients struggle to find an NHS dentist.
The root cause is not simply funding shortages or dentist shortages.
It is the design of the NHS dental reward system itself—a system that illustrates a classic management principle:
“You get what you measure.”
When incentives measure the wrong thing, even well-intentioned professionals will produce undesirable outcomes.
How the NHS Dental Payment System Actually Works
Since the 2006 NHS dental contract reform, dentists are paid primarily through a unit-based system called Units of Dental Activity (UDA).
Under this system:
Each dental practice signs an annual NHS contract.
The contract specifies a target number of UDAs to be delivered in the year.
The practice receives monthly payments based on that annual contract value.
At year end, the NHS compares the UDAs delivered vs the contracted target.
If the practice delivers less than 96% of the target, the NHS claws back money the following year.
The UDA Treatment Bands
Treatments are grouped into bands, each worth a fixed number of UDAs.
| Treatment Band | UDAs Awarded | Typical Treatment |
|---|---|---|
| Band 1 | 1 UDA | Examination, diagnosis, X-rays |
| Band 2 | 3 UDAs | Fillings, root canals, extractions |
| Band 3 | 12 UDAs | Crowns, dentures, bridges |
Each practice has a negotiated UDA price, typically around £28–£30 per UDA.
Example:
| Contract Example | Value |
|---|---|
| Annual target | 6,000 UDAs |
| UDA price | £29 |
| Contract value | £174,000 |
If the dentist only delivers 5,400 UDAs (90%), the NHS can reclaim payment for the missing UDAs.
Why This System Creates Perverse Incentives
The key flaw is that UDA rewards activity, not effort or complexity.
For example:
| Treatment | Time Required | UDA Payment |
|---|---|---|
| One filling | 20 minutes | 3 UDAs |
| Four fillings | 60+ minutes | still 3 UDAs |
Both treatments earn the same payment.
This creates several distortions:
1. Complex patients become financial losses
Patients requiring many treatments may generate the same UDAs as simple cases.
Dentists therefore have an incentive to avoid high-need patients.
2. Prevention is financially punished
Preventive work such as education or monitoring generates very few UDAs, even though it improves long-term oral health.
The system therefore rewards treatment volume, not prevention.
3. Dentists migrate to private practice
Private dentistry allows dentists to charge based on:
time
materials
complexity
NHS dentistry does not.
As a result, many dentists reduce NHS work or leave the NHS system entirely.
4. The “Cliff Edge” Problem
The 96% threshold creates another distortion.
| Performance | Outcome |
|---|---|
| 97% delivery | No clawback |
| 95% delivery | Large financial clawback |
This encourages end-of-year gaming, rushed treatments, or administrative manipulation.
The Result: A System That Produces Its Own Crisis
Because the system measures UDA quantity, it unintentionally produces:
fewer NHS dentists
reduced NHS appointments
complex patients avoided
large funding clawbacks
This is a textbook case of misaligned measurement creating systemic failure.
Designing a Better System: A Win-Win Model
To fix the system, the NHS must redesign incentives around patient outcomes and system efficiency, not just activity counts.
A better model could include three components.
1. Capitation + Prevention Payment
Each dentist receives a base payment per registered patient.
Example:
| Payment Component | Description |
|---|---|
| Capitation | Annual payment per patient |
| Prevention bonus | Extra payment for improved oral health metrics |
Metrics could include:
cavity incidence
gum disease progression
patient recall compliance
This shifts incentives toward preventive dentistry.
2. Complexity-Weighted Treatment Fees
Instead of fixed UDAs, treatments should reflect real complexity.
Example:
| Treatment | Fee Structure |
|---|---|
| Simple filling | Low fee |
| Multiple fillings | Higher fee |
| Complex restorative work | Fully cost-covered |
This prevents dentists from losing money on difficult cases.
3. Access and Capacity Incentives
To ensure patient access:
| Metric | Incentive |
|---|---|
| New patients accepted | Bonus |
| Waiting time reduction | Bonus |
| Urgent care availability | Bonus |
Dentists are rewarded for system performance, not just activity volume.
What a Reformed System Would Achieve
A properly designed system would create aligned incentives for all parties.
| Stakeholder | Benefit |
|---|---|
| Patients | Better access and prevention |
| Dentists | Fair payment for complexity |
| NHS | Lower long-term treatment costs |
In other words, the system moves from quantity of dental procedures to quality of oral health outcomes.
Conclusion
The crisis in NHS dentistry is not simply about funding or dentist shortages.
It is about measurement design.
The current system measures Units of Dental Activity, and therefore produces activity—but not necessarily health, access, or sustainability.
A redesigned system that rewards prevention, complexity, and patient outcomes could transform NHS dentistry from a system in decline into a sustainable partnership between dentists, patients, and the NHS.
The lesson is universal:
If you measure the wrong thing, you will manage the wrong thing.