Costs & SubsidiesTreatment Guide

Emergency Dental Treatment & Medisave Coverage in Singapore

Written by Sarah K.Medically reviewed for Singapore clinical accuracy·~8 min read·Updated March 2026

Quick answer

Emergency dental treatment in Singapore typically costs $150–$800 depending on the problem. Medisave covers some emergency procedures like tooth extraction and root canal treatment if you have a registered Medisave-accredited clinic, though coverage varies by clinic and procedure. If you're on CHAS, you'll also get subsidies starting from $0–$15 for consultation at participating clinics.

I've had the 3 AM panic of a cracked tooth and the 2 PM realisation that an infection was spreading — and both times I had to figure out quickly whether I needed actual emergency care or just urgent repair.

What Counts as an Emergency Dental Problem in Singapore

When I started researching this, I found it hard to get clear, specific information about what things actually cost in Singapore and what questions to ask. What follows is what I wished I'd known before my first consultation.

I've had the 3 AM panic of a cracked tooth and the 2 PM realisation that an infection was spreading — and both times I had to figure out quickly whether I needed actual emergency care or just urgent repair. The difference matters because emergency clinics operate differently (and more expensively) than urgent-care appointments at regular practices.

True dental emergencies that need same-day or next-day care in Singapore include:

  • Severe tooth pain that won't stop, especially if your face is swelling or you're having trouble breathing or swallowing: this suggests infection or abscess and requires antibiotics and possibly extraction or root canal
  • Tooth knocked out (avulsed) or severely broken: you need to see a dentist within a few hours for the best chance of saving it
  • Heavy bleeding from the mouth that won't stop after 30 minutes of pressure: usually from an extraction socket or trauma
  • Loose or completely broken tooth with sharp edges cutting your mouth or tongue
  • Swelling of the jaw or face combined with dental pain: sign of infection spreading

Things that feel urgent but often can wait until your regular dentist has an appointment: sensitivity to cold or hot food, minor tooth chips, small cavities, or mild gum bleeding. These still need treatment but not at 2 AM rates. Public dental clinics (like those in polyclinics) typically don't offer true emergency after-hours care — they refer you to private clinics or A&E at hospitals. Private emergency dental clinics in central Singapore (like ION Orchard, Marina Bay, Novena area) charge premium rates because they're open after 6 PM and on weekends.


How Much Emergency Dental Treatment Costs in Singapore

The cost depends on what's actually wrong. Here's what you'll typically pay:

  • Urgent consultation and exam: $80–$150 (more expensive after 8 PM or on Sundays)
  • Simple extraction (one tooth, no complications): $200–$400
  • Emergency root canal (if the dentist starts treatment to ease pain): $300–$600; full completion may cost another $800–$1,500
  • Temporary filling for pain relief: $100–$250
  • Abscess drainage or incision: $250–$500 if done at a dental clinic; $800–$2,000+ if admitted to A&E at a hospital like SGH or NUH
  • Emergency crown or bridge repair: $150–$400 temporary, $400–$1,200 permanent

These are private clinic costs. Public polyclinics are cheaper ($20–$50 for consultation) but they close by 5:30 PM on weekdays and don't operate weekends, so they're not emergency options. If you go to a hospital A&E instead of a dental clinic, expect to pay a facility charge ($100–$150) plus the procedure cost. The key variable is whether the problem requires extraction (cheaper, single visit) or root canal (more expensive, multiple visits). A simple extraction at a standard-hours clinic might cost $150–$250, but the same extraction at a private emergency clinic at 10 PM could be $350–$500.


What Medisave Covers for Dental Emergencies

This is where most people get confused. Medisave is strict: it only covers specific procedures at specific types of clinics, and 'emergency' status doesn't automatically qualify you.

Dental procedures Medisave covers at accredited clinics: Tooth extraction (simple or surgical): $200–$400 paid by patient, rest from Medisave Root canal treatment (endodontic therapy): $800–$1,500 procedure cost, Medisave portion depends on clinic Periodontal surgery or scaling for gum disease: limited coverage Crown (for tooth restoration post-extraction or post-root canal): usually not covered or minimal coverage Temporary fillings, emergency root canal pain relief: may be covered under 'treatment' depending on clinic scheme

Why Medisave might NOT cover your emergency: You've used up your annual limit: Medisave caps dental at $900–$1,350 per year per person depending on your scheme and clinic The clinic isn't Medisave-accredited: not all private clinics participate; polyclinics are covered but don't do emergencies The procedure doesn't qualify: cosmetic tooth repair, temporary filling, or urgent consultation alone usually aren't covered You don't have Medisave balance left: if you've already drawn on it for other health procedures that year

Important:

Medisave coverage is the same whether it's a regular appointment or an emergency. The 'emergency' premium you pay (higher fees for after-hours) is NOT covered by Medisave — you pay that extra cost yourself. So a $400 extraction at a clinic at 2 PM might be partially covered by Medisave, but a $550 extraction at 11 PM is still $550 out-of-pocket because the clinic's emergency surcharge isn't claimable.


Claiming Medisave for Emergency Dental Care

If your procedure qualifies and the clinic is accredited, claiming is straightforward:

  1. 1Confirm the clinic is Medisave-accredited before you arrive: call ahead or check their website; emergency clinics in private buildings (ION, Marina Bay) are usually accredited, but verify
  2. 2Bring your NRIC: dentist verifies your Medisave balance and entitlement
  3. 3Ask for an itemised invoice showing the procedure, cost breakdown, and Medisave portion: this proves you can claim
  4. 4At the clinic or via CPF Board online (at cpf.gov.sg): the clinic can claim directly from your Medisave, OR you can submit the invoice to CPF yourself for reimbursement
  5. 5Your Medisave balance is debited within 1–2 weeks
  • Example: You need an emergency extraction at a Medisave clinic and the total cost is $350. Medisave covers $200–$250, you pay $100–$150 out-of-pocket (co-payment). The clinic processes the claim immediately, you walk out having paid your share only.
  • Exception: If the clinic is NOT Medisave-accredited, you pay the full amount and can't claim back. This is why confirming ahead (even at 1 AM) is important — call the clinic to check accreditation status.

CHAS Subsidies for Emergency Dental Care

If you're on a CHAS card (Community Health Assist Scheme), subsidies apply:

  • CHAS Green card holders (lower-income): dental consultation and treatment at CHAS clinics costs $0–$5 per visit
  • CHAS Blue card holders (middle-income): $5–$15 per visit
  • CHAS clinics include public polyclinics and some private clinics in participating networks

The challenge with emergencies: CHAS polyclinics close by evening and don't do after-hours. So a Sunday or late-night emergency won't be covered by CHAS subsidy unless you find a private clinic that participates in the CHAS network AND is open. Most emergency-hours private dental clinics in malls (ION Orchard, Marina Bay) do not accept CHAS cards.

If you're CHAS-eligible and it's a true emergency outside polyclinic hours, your options are: (1) go to the nearest polyclinic the next morning, or (2) pay full private rates at an emergency clinic now and claim a portion back via CHAS at a polyclinic later (though emergency care done privately may not be claimable). Best strategy: ask the emergency clinic whether they participate in CHAS before paying.


Where to Get Emergency Dental Care in Singapore

Private emergency clinics (open evenings, weekends, public holidays):

  • ION Orchard: Medicore Dental, Pacific Dental Centre — open until 8 PM weekdays, some weekend hours
  • Marina Bay: Raffles Dental, Mount Elizabeth Dental — open until 10 PM and selected Sundays
  • Novena: Parkway Dental — open until 9 PM weekdays, limited weekends
  • Tampines, Tanjong Pagar, Orchard: Various clinics with evening hours; check their websites for current emergency schedules
  • Average wait time: 30 min–1 hour even with booking; cost premium of 20–50% for after-hours

Public option (daytime only): Singapore Dental Board can direct you to the nearest polyclinic with emergency slots Cost: $20–$50 for consultation and treatment Hours: usually until 5:30 PM weekdays, mornings only on Saturday, closed Sunday Qualification: Singapore resident with IC; some procedures capped at specific costs

Hospital A&E (if dental clinic is too far or unavailable): Singapore General Hospital (SGH) A&E: open 24/7, dental emergency seen but not preferred due to wait times (2–6 hours) and high costs National University Hospital (NUH) A&E: 24/7, similar cost and wait time issues KK Women's and Children's Hospital: paediatric emergencies only Cost at A&E: $100–$150 facility charge + $200–$600 for procedure; not Medisave-claimable at A&E

  • Recommendation: Call a private emergency clinic first — faster, often cheaper than A&E, and usually Medisave-claimable.

A toothache that doesn't go away after 1–2 days, or that's severe and throbbing, usually signals infection or nerve involvement — and needs treatment urgently, not painkillers alone.

If a permanent tooth is knocked out, rinse it gently (don't scrub), keep it moist (in milk or between your cheek and gum), and get to a dentist within 30 minutes — reimplantation is possible in that window.

Reimplanting a knocked-out permanent tooth is time-sensitive — the sooner it's placed back into the socket (ideally within 30 minutes), the higher the chance of success.

Cost in Singapore

$150–$800 SGD (private clinic); $20–$50 (public polyclinic daytime only)

Medisave covers extraction ($200–$250) and root canal treatment ($300–$600) at accredited private clinics, but the after-hours premium is not claimable. CHAS subsidies ($0–$15 per visit) apply at polyclinics until 5:30 PM weekdays; private emergency clinics usually don't accept CHAS. Hospital A&E charges $100–$150 facility fee plus procedure cost with no Medisave coverage.

Type of procedure: simple extraction (lower cost) vs. root canal or abscess drainage (higher cost)Time of day: daytime appointments at regular clinics cost 20–50% less than evening/night/weekend emergency slotsClinic type: public polyclinics cheapest but closed evenings/weekends; private emergency clinics more expensive but available 24/7Medisave accreditation: only at accredited clinics; emergency-only clinics and hospital A&E not claimableYour subsidy status: CHAS eligible reduces cost at polyclinics but not at private emergency clinics after hours

Key takeaways

  • Emergency dental treatment costs $150–$800 in Singapore depending on whether extraction or root canal is needed; the 'emergency' after-hours premium of 20–50% is NOT covered by Medisave.
  • Medisave covers extraction ($200–$250) and root canal treatment ($300–$600 initial) at accredited clinics, but only if the clinic is registered and you have balance remaining; emergency status doesn't change coverage rules.
  • CHAS subsidies ($0–$15 per visit) apply at participating polyclinics, but public clinics close by 5:30 PM weekdays and don't do emergency after-hours care.
  • Private emergency clinics in malls like ION Orchard and Marina Bay are usually Medisave-accredited, operate 8–10 PM and weekends, and have 30-min–1-hour wait times.
  • Before going to an emergency clinic, call to confirm it's Medisave-accredited; if you go to A&E instead, expect $100–$150 facility charge plus procedure cost with no Medisave claim possible.

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