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Dental Emergency in Bali: What to Do, Who to Call & How to Get Treated (2026)

Dental emergency in Bali? CS Dental Bali in Kuta sees international patients urgently. This guide covers broken teeth, lost crowns, abscesses, knocked-out teeth, and how to get same-day care.

Dental Emergency in Bali?

CS Dental Bali — Urgent International Patient Care

Location: Kuta, Bali  ·  Dr. Cindy Saconk  ·  Est. 2008

Rating: ★ 4.9 / 5  (411 verified reviews)

Emergency hours and direct contact details are listed on the clinic profile. Visit the link below or ask your hotel concierge to call on your behalf.

Important: If you are experiencing severe facial swelling, difficulty breathing or swallowing, go to the nearest hospital emergency department immediately — this may indicate a life-threatening spreading infection.

View CS Dental Bali Profile & Contact →

You're not the first tourist this has happened to. Every week, visitors in Bali experience dental emergencies — a crown lost at dinner in Seminyak, a cracked molar at the end of a surf session, an abscess that flares on day two of a two-week holiday. It feels alarming, especially when you're thousands of kilometres from home and unsure where to turn.

The good news: Bali has a genuinely capable dental clinic dedicated to serving international patients with exactly these situations. CS Dental Bali in Kuta has been treating tourists since 2008. Their team speaks English, their equipment is modern, their prices are a fraction of what you'd pay back in Australia or the UK — and they can often see you the same day.

This guide walks you through every common dental emergency you might face in Bali: what to do in the first minutes, what not to do, what the dentist will likely do, and what it will cost. Bookmark it now. Hopefully you'll never need it — but if you do, it'll be here.

Six Common Dental Emergencies in Bali — What to Do

Different emergencies require different first responses. Getting the first thirty minutes right can make a significant difference to your outcome and recovery time. Below we cover each scenario with a clear action plan — what to do immediately, what to avoid, and what CS Dental Bali will do when you arrive.

1. Severe Toothache or Dental Abscess

A sudden, throbbing toothache — especially one that wakes you at night, is accompanied by facial swelling, or produces a bad taste in your mouth — often indicates an infection at the root tip or in the surrounding gum tissue. In Bali's tropical heat, dental infections can escalate more quickly than in cooler climates. Do not wait to see how it feels tomorrow.

Do Immediately:

  • Take ibuprofen (400–600 mg) for pain and its anti-inflammatory effect, if you have no contraindications. Paracetamol can supplement but does not reduce inflammation.
  • Rinse gently with warm salt water: one teaspoon of salt in a glass of warm water.
  • Keep your head elevated — prop up on pillows at night. Lying flat increases blood pressure in the affected area and worsens pain.
  • Contact CS Dental Bali as soon as they open; explain you may have an abscess so they can prioritise your appointment.

Do Not:

  • Apply aspirin directly to the tooth or gum — this causes a chemical burn to the soft tissue.
  • Ignore swelling that extends to the eye, under the jaw, or into the neck — these are hospital-level emergencies indicating spreading infection.
  • Start antibiotics without a prescription; the wrong antibiotic, wrong dose, or wrong duration can cause resistance and mask symptoms without curing the infection.
  • Assume the pain will resolve on its own. Dental infections do not go away without treatment.

What the dentist will do: CS Dental Bali will take a digital X-ray to assess the extent of the infection and whether the tooth is salvageable. If it is, they will begin emergency root canal therapy — AUD 200–350 for a single canal, which is typically completed over one or two visits. If the tooth cannot be saved, an extraction (AUD 80–200) combined with antibiotics and prescription pain relief is the standard protocol. Either way, you will leave the clinic with a clear treatment plan and genuine relief from acute pain.

2. Broken or Chipped Tooth

Whether from biting down on a hard piece of food at a Ubud warung, a fall while surfing at Uluwatu, or a minor scooter collision, broken and chipped teeth are among the most common dental incidents for tourists in Bali. The urgency depends on severity: a minor cosmetic chip that causes no pain can typically wait a few days, while a deep fracture exposing the nerve demands same-day attention.

Do Immediately:

  • Collect any tooth fragments and store them in milk, saline, or a damp cloth — the dentist may be able to use them in the repair.
  • Rinse your mouth gently with clean water to remove any debris.
  • If the broken edge is very sharp and cutting your tongue or cheek, apply dental wax or a small piece of sugar-free chewing gum to cover it temporarily.
  • If the tooth is highly sensitive to air or temperature, avoid hot and cold foods and drinks until you are seen.

Do Not:

  • Attempt to glue a fragment back with superglue — cyanoacrylate is toxic in the mouth and makes dental repair far more complex.
  • Bite on the broken tooth or use it to chew until assessed.

What the dentist will do: For minor chips with no nerve involvement, same-day composite bonding is the usual solution and takes 30–60 minutes. For larger fractures, CS Dental Bali uses Ivoclar e.max ceramics and full-contour zirconia crowns — the same premium materials used in top Australian and European clinics. An emergency crown assessment is same-day, with the crown typically fabricated by their lab within 3–5 working days. If the nerve is exposed, root canal treatment will precede crown placement.

3. Lost Crown or Filling

Crowns and fillings can come loose for several reasons: cabin pressure changes on long-haul flights, thermal expansion from temperature variation, the natural end of their wear cycle, or a small knock. Losing one at the start of a holiday feels disastrous — but it is one of the most straightforward emergencies to manage, and CS Dental Bali handles these situations daily.

Do Immediately:

  • Keep the crown if you have it — clean it very gently with water and store in a small sealed bag.
  • Temporary dental cement (brand name Dentemp or Recapit, available at most Bali pharmacies) can be used to re-seat the crown until you reach the clinic. Follow package instructions carefully.
  • Eat on the opposite side of your mouth; avoid sticky or very hard foods.
  • If the exposed tooth is sensitive, a small piece of dental wax can offer temporary protection.

Do Not:

  • Leave the exposed tooth unprotected for more than 24–48 hours; without a covering, the tooth can shift, crack further, or become painfully sensitive.
  • Swallow the crown intentionally (though if you do accidentally swallow it, tell your doctor — it will pass naturally but should be noted).

What the dentist will do: CS Dental Bali will inspect the underlying tooth for any new decay or structural compromise. If the crown and tooth are both intact, professional re-cementing is a quick procedure costing AUD 60–100. If the crown is damaged or the underlying tooth has deteriorated, a new Ivoclar e.max or full-contour zirconia crown is fabricated. Tourists with a few days to spare often choose to complete the full crown replacement at a fraction of Australian pricing.

4. Knocked-Out Tooth (Avulsion)

A completely knocked-out adult tooth is the only dental emergency where every single minute genuinely matters. The 30-minute window is real: the periodontal ligament cells attached to the root begin to die the moment the tooth leaves its socket, and survival rates for reimplantation drop sharply once the tooth has been out for more than an hour. Do not stop to photograph it. Do not finish your meal. Act immediately.

Do Immediately — every second counts:

  1. Pick up the tooth by the crown (the white enamel part) — never touch the root.
  2. If dirty, rinse it briefly under clean running water for no more than 10 seconds — do not scrub or use soap.
  3. Best option: Try to reinsert the tooth back into its socket immediately. Push gently until it is level with adjacent teeth. Bite down on a clean cloth to hold it in place.
  4. If you cannot reinsert it: Place the tooth in a small cup of fresh full-fat milk — the proteins and pH help keep the cells alive. Saline is the second-best option. Tap water is a poor substitute but better than dry storage.
  5. Head directly to CS Dental Bali — call ahead so they are prepared. Take a taxi or Grab ride, not a scooter.

Do Not:

  • Store the tooth dry, wrapped in a tissue, or soaking in tap water for an extended time.
  • Attempt to clean the root surface with any abrasive material.
  • Delay for any reason. The golden window is 30 minutes; success is still possible up to 60 minutes with good storage conditions.

What the dentist will do: If the tooth arrives within the window and in suitable condition, reimplantation is attempted. The tooth is repositioned and splinted to adjacent teeth for 2–4 weeks. A course of antibiotics is prescribed to prevent infection, and follow-up X-rays are required within a week and again at 6–8 weeks. If reimplantation is not viable — either due to root damage, extended dry time, or patient preference — CS Dental Bali places both Straumann and Neodent implants, two globally trusted systems with decades of long-term outcome data.

5. Dental Trauma from an Accident

Scooter accidents, falls on wet footpaths, beach and sporting collisions — Bali sees a significant volume of tourist injuries every year. Dental trauma from a blow to the mouth or face is not always immediately obvious. Hairline root fractures, concussed teeth that may die weeks later without immediate pain, and bite misalignment from jaw trauma are all common and require proper assessment even if the mouth looks fine.

Do Immediately:

  • If there is any head injury involved — loss of consciousness (even brief), confusion, vomiting, visual disturbance, or a significant blow to the skull — go to the nearest hospital emergency department first. Dental trauma is secondary to head injury.
  • Apply an ice pack wrapped in a cloth to the outside of the face to reduce swelling — never direct ice on skin.
  • Rinse gently with clean salt water.
  • Do not eat on the affected side.
  • If your teeth feel like your bite has changed or a tooth is loose, book at CS Dental Bali as soon as possible — same day if achievable.

What the dentist will do: CS Dental Bali will carry out a thorough assessment of tooth mobility, nerve response, and bite alignment. They offer digital periapical X-rays and CBCT cone beam scans (AUD 50–120) for detailed assessment of hidden root fractures and bone damage. Loose teeth may be splinted. Cracked-but-restorable teeth may be crowned. Where nerve concussion or death is suspected, root canal therapy may be initiated immediately or the tooth monitored, depending on clinical presentation.

6. Post-Procedure Complications After Dental Work

Some visitors arrive in Bali after dental work performed elsewhere — in their home country, another Asian destination, or even earlier in the same Bali trip. Knowing when a post-procedure symptom is normal versus a warning sign is genuinely important.

Return to the dentist if you experience:

  • Pain that is increasing after 48 hours — post-treatment pain should decrease, not grow.
  • A bad taste, discharge, or visible pus at the treatment site.
  • Swelling that is larger on day 3 than on day 1.
  • Dry socket — a severe, dull throbbing pain 2–5 days after extraction, often with an empty or bad-smelling socket. This is the most common post-extraction complication and is very treatable.
  • Any hardware (crown, bridge, implant abutment) that feels loose, clicking, or simply wrong.

Normal post-treatment experiences that can wait:

  • Mild soreness and tenderness for 2–3 days following an extraction or root canal.
  • Some tooth sensitivity after crown placement for up to 2 weeks.
  • Mild gum tenderness and sensitivity after a scale and clean.
  • Some bruising or swelling in the first 24–48 hours after surgery, which then begins to resolve.

What CS Dental Bali can help with: Even if your original work was done elsewhere, CS Dental Bali regularly manages post-procedure complications for international patients. They can treat dry sockets, adjust crowns and bridges that feel off, irrigate and medicate infected extraction sites, and prescribe appropriate antibiotics. You do not need to have been their prior patient to seek this help.

CS Dental Bali: Emergency Capabilities for International Patients

With one internationally focused clinic operating in Bali's primary tourist corridor, CS Dental Bali carries significant responsibility — and has, by all accounts, risen to it. Since 2008, the clinic has built its reputation specifically around serving English-speaking tourists, and 411 verified reviews averaging 4.9 stars reflect the consistency of that experience.

CS Dental Bali — Emergency & Urgent Care Capabilities

Kuta, Bali  ·  Est. 2008  ·  Dr. Cindy Saconk

★ 4.9 / 5  ·  411 verified reviews

Emergency Services: Urgent consultations, composite bonding for chipped teeth, lost crown re-cementing and replacement, emergency extractions (simple and surgical), root canal therapy including molars, CBCT scanning, dental trauma assessment, post-procedure complication management, avulsion (knocked-out tooth) reimplantation

Implant Systems: Straumann (Switzerland) · Neodent (Brazil, Straumann Group) — both backed by long-term clinical data and globally recognised

Crown & Restoration Materials: Ivoclar e.max ceramics · Full-contour zirconia — the same premium materials used in top Australian and European clinics

Why International Patients Choose CS Dental Bali for Emergencies: English-speaking clinical staff, modern diagnostic imaging, no referral required, experienced with tight tourist timelines, clear upfront pricing, and a proven track record with patients flying in from Australia, the UK, and New Zealand.

View SmileJet Profile & Current Contact →

CS Dental Bali is situated in Kuta — Bali's most visited tourist hub — making it accessible from Seminyak and Legian within 10–15 minutes, Canggu and Nusa Dua within 20–30 minutes, and Ubud or Uluwatu within 45–60 minutes depending on traffic. If you're unsure how to get there, your hotel concierge or a Grab/Gojek ride can get you there efficiently.

Planning Dental Work in Bali?

Explore CS Dental Bali & Plan Your Trip with Confidence

Browse the full clinic profile, compare procedures and pricing, and read verified patient reviews. SmileJet makes it easy to plan dental treatment in Bali — whether you're coming for a checkup or a full smile restoration.

Explore Bali Dental Options →

Emergency Dental Costs: Bali vs Australia (AUD)

One of the most common sources of anxiety around a dental emergency abroad is the cost — particularly when you're uncertain what your travel insurance covers. The comparison below gives you realistic figures for CS Dental Bali set against typical after-hours emergency dental costs in Australia. All figures are in Australian dollars.

Procedure CS Dental Bali Australian Emergency Clinic Typical Saving
Emergency consultation AUD 40–60 AUD 180–350 ~75%
Digital X-ray / CBCT scan AUD 50–120 AUD 120–300 ~55%
Lost crown re-cementation AUD 60–100 AUD 200–400 ~70%
Emergency root canal (1 canal) AUD 200–350 AUD 900–1,800 ~75–80%
Simple tooth extraction AUD 80–150 AUD 250–550 ~70%
Surgical extraction AUD 150–200 AUD 400–900 ~65–75%
Antibiotic prescription AUD 20–40 AUD 15–50 Similar
Emergency crown replacement (e.max / zirconia) AUD 380–480 AUD 1,500–2,500 ~70–80%

All prices AUD approximate as of 2026. Australian costs reflect after-hours or emergency surcharges. CS Dental Bali costs are estimates; confirm at consultation.

Even accounting for being far from home and the stress of the situation, the financial reality of a dental emergency in Bali is considerably more manageable than the equivalent back in Australia. The combination of low consultation fees, same-day availability, and quality materials makes CS Dental Bali a genuinely strong option even when treatment is unplanned.

What to Bring to Your Emergency Dental Appointment

Arriving prepared — even in a dental emergency — speeds up your registration, helps the dentist make the right decisions faster, and simplifies the process of claiming on travel insurance afterwards.

Emergency Appointment Checklist

  • Passport — required for patient registration at most dental clinics in Bali.
  • Travel insurance details — policy document, policy number, insurer name, and the 24-hour emergency line. Screenshot and save these before you travel.
  • Tooth or crown fragments — stored in milk, saline, or a small sealed plastic bag. Even small pieces can be clinically useful.
  • Current medication list — especially blood thinners (warfarin, aspirin, rivaroxaban), bisphosphonates for osteoporosis, diabetes medications, and immunosuppressants. These affect treatment decisions and healing timelines.
  • Allergy information — particularly to local anaesthetics (lidocaine, articaine), penicillin-class antibiotics, aspirin, or NSAIDs like ibuprofen.
  • Previous dental records or X-rays — if accessible on your phone, email, or cloud storage, bring them. Even a photograph of your teeth or a recent dental chart is helpful context for the treating dentist.
  • Payment method — CS Dental Bali accepts credit cards; USD and AUD cash are widely accepted. Confirm current payment options with the clinic directly.
  • A companion if possible — if you may receive sedation or strong pain relief, arrange for someone to help you return to your accommodation.

If you are travelling alone and need help locating the clinic or arranging transport, your hotel's front desk or concierge service can often assist. Most tourist-facing Bali hotels are familiar with directing guests to CS Dental Bali in Kuta.

Travel Insurance & Emergency Dental in Bali

Travel insurance and dental coverage are genuinely confusing. Many tourists assume dental isn't included — and are then surprised to find it is. Equally, some assume their policy will cover everything and are disappointed when they discover limitations. Here is a clear, practical guide to how emergency dental cover typically works for Australian visitors in Bali.

What Is Typically Covered

  • Emergency dental treatment required to relieve sudden, acute onset pain
  • Treatment for dental accidents caused by an unexpected external blow
  • Emergency extractions when a tooth is untreatable and causing acute pain
  • Antibiotic prescriptions for documented dental infections
  • Temporary fillings or crown re-cementing as emergency-stabilisation procedures
  • X-rays and CBCT scans directly related to the emergency presentation
  • Cover limits typically range from AUD 500 (standard policies) to AUD 5,000 (premium policies) per incident

What Is Typically NOT Covered

  • Routine check-ups, hygiene visits, or preventive care
  • Cosmetic dentistry — whitening, veneers, or elective implants taken advantage of while on holiday
  • Treatment for a condition that pre-dated your departure and that you were aware of (pre-existing dental conditions)
  • Any procedure not classified as medically necessary in an emergency context
  • Follow-up or completion work where you chose to undergo elective treatment after the emergency was stabilised

How to Claim: Step-by-Step

  1. Call your insurer's 24-hour emergency assistance line before treatment where possible — pre-authorisation prevents disputes later and may enable direct billing.
  2. Ask CS Dental Bali for a detailed, itemised invoice showing each procedure with standard dental item codes.
  3. Request a written clinical report explaining the diagnosis and why each treatment was clinically necessary.
  4. Keep all receipts, prescription copies, and antibiotic packaging.
  5. Take photographs of the affected area before and after treatment (ask your dentist to take clinical photos).
  6. Submit your claim within the timeframe stated in your policy — typically 30–90 days after the event.

CS Dental Bali's pricing is low enough that most standard-tier travel policies provide adequate coverage for common emergencies: consultation, X-rays, simple extractions, and temporary treatments. If your situation requires root canal therapy or a full crown, a premium policy will serve you better — another reason to review your travel insurance limits carefully before every international trip.

Preventing Dental Emergencies While Travelling

The best dental emergency is one that never happens. A small amount of preparation before you leave home dramatically reduces the risk of an unplanned dental problem disrupting a holiday you've spent months looking forward to.

The Pre-Travel Dental Check: What to Ask For

Book a dental check-up 4–8 weeks before any international trip of more than two weeks. Give yourself enough lead time to complete any work before departure. Ask your dentist to:

  • Inspect all existing crowns, bridges, and large fillings for looseness, cracks, or signs of failure
  • Assess any tooth showing early decay that could escalate under the stress of travel, dietary changes, or interrupted home-care routines
  • Check the stability of existing implants and abutments
  • Identify and address any cracked teeth that may be asymptomatic now but could fracture on a hard food
  • Complete any near-term scheduled treatment before you depart, not after you return
  • Provide a copy of your recent X-rays — most practices can email these as a PDF

Your Dental Travel Kit

Pack these in your carry-on (not checked luggage):

  • Temporary dental cement (Dentemp or Recapit, available at most Australian pharmacies before departure) — can re-seat a lost crown temporarily
  • Dental wax — to cover sharp broken tooth edges and protect cheeks and tongue
  • Ibuprofen and paracetamol — ibuprofen is preferable for dental pain due to its anti-inflammatory action
  • Salt (small travel sachet) — for warm salt-water rinses
  • Small zip-lock bags — for storing tooth fragments, lost crowns, or mouth guard
  • Night guard — if you grind your teeth, bring your guard; travel stress typically worsens bruxism
  • Your dentist's after-hours contact — for remote advice on borderline situations
  • Screenshot of your travel insurance emergency line — saved offline in your phone's camera roll or notes app

Daily Precautions in Bali

  • Use bottled or purified water for brushing — Bali tap water is not safe for oral use.
  • Avoid cracking hard shells (lobster claws, nut casings), biting ice, or chewing hard candy with your teeth.
  • Wear a mouthguard for surfing, diving, or any contact sports activity.
  • If you wear a removable dental plate or partial denture, never wrap it in a napkin at a restaurant — use the case every single time. Wrapped-in-napkin dentures are thrown away daily in restaurants across Bali.
  • Stay well hydrated — dry mouth increases cavity risk and soft tissue problems, and Bali's heat can dehydrate you faster than you expect.

CS Dental Bali — Pre-Trip & Routine Care for International Visitors

Kuta, Bali  ·  Est. 2008  ·  Dr. Cindy Saconk

★ 4.9 / 5  ·  411 verified reviews

Not Just for Emergencies: Many international visitors plan a check-up or hygiene visit as part of their Bali trip — at costs far below what they would pay at home. A scale and clean or a quick check of existing restorations at CS Dental Bali can give you peace of mind and potentially catch a problem before it becomes a holiday-disrupting emergency.

Planned Procedures Also Available: Dental implants (Straumann, Neodent), all-ceramic crowns (Ivoclar e.max), full-contour zirconia, teeth whitening, and full smile makeovers for visitors with time in Bali to spare.

View Full Profile on SmileJet →

Frequently Asked Questions

Is there an emergency dentist in Bali that sees international patients?

Yes. CS Dental Bali in Kuta is the most established clinic serving international patients and handles dental emergencies including broken teeth, lost crowns, abscesses, and emergency extractions. With a 4.9-star rating across 411 verified reviews and continuous operations since 2008, they have extensive experience treating tourists from Australia, the UK, and across Asia-Pacific.

Visit smilejet.app/clinic/cs-dental-bali for current contact details, hours, and directions.

How much does an emergency dental consultation cost in Bali?

An emergency consultation at CS Dental Bali typically costs AUD 40–60, which includes an examination and basic X-ray assessment. If a CBCT scan is required for trauma cases or implant-related complications, that adds AUD 50–120.

Compare this to an after-hours emergency consultation in Australia, which commonly starts at AUD 180–350 before any treatment. Even a full emergency root canal in Bali (AUD 200–350) frequently costs less than the consultation gap fee alone in an Australian emergency dental clinic.

What should I do if I knock out a tooth in Bali?

Act within 30 minutes for the best chance of reimplantation. Pick up the tooth by the crown (white enamel part), never the root. Rinse briefly under clean water — do not scrub. If possible, reinsert it into the socket and bite gently on a cloth to hold it in place. If you cannot reinsert it, store it in fresh full-fat milk or saline solution.

Head directly to CS Dental Bali in Kuta. Call ahead so they can prepare. Do not delay — success rates drop sharply after 60 minutes.

Will my travel insurance cover a dental emergency in Bali?

Most comprehensive travel insurance policies include emergency dental cover for sudden pain, accidents, or infections, typically up to AUD 500–2,000 per incident. This usually covers emergency consultations, X-rays, temporary repairs, extractions, and antibiotics. Elective or cosmetic dental work is never covered.

Always call your insurer's 24-hour emergency line before treatment if possible. Keep all receipts and ask CS Dental Bali for an itemised invoice with procedure codes to support your claim.

Can I get a tooth extracted in Bali the same day?

Yes. Straightforward extractions are typically performed same-day at CS Dental Bali following a brief assessment and X-ray. A simple extraction costs AUD 80–150; a surgical extraction for broken, impacted, or complex teeth runs AUD 150–200.

If you are on blood thinners, have diabetes, take bisphosphonates, or have any condition affecting healing, inform the dentist before treatment. They will adjust the protocol appropriately.

CS Dental Bali — Trusted by International Patients Since 2008

Need Help Now or Planning Your Bali Dental Trip?

Whether you're dealing with a dental emergency right now or planning treatment in Bali before your trip, SmileJet connects you with CS Dental Bali — Bali's most reviewed international dental clinic with 4.9 stars across 411 verified patient reviews.

View the full clinic profile, compare procedures, read patient stories, and plan your visit with confidence.

View Bali Dental Clinics on SmileJet →

4.9 ★  ·  411 reviews  ·  Kuta, Bali  ·  Est. 2008

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Medical Disclaimer

This article is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute medical or dental advice. In any dental emergency, always consult a qualified dental professional. If you are experiencing severe swelling, difficulty breathing or swallowing, or suspect a spreading infection, seek immediate hospital emergency care. SmileJet does not guarantee treatment outcomes and is not responsible for clinical decisions made by third-party dental providers. Cost estimates are approximate and subject to change. Always verify current pricing, availability, and contact details directly with CS Dental Bali.

This article is published by SmileJet. While every effort has been made to present accurate, independently sourced data, readers should note that SmileJet operates a dental tourism marketplace and has commercial relationships with listed clinics.

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