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How to start with AI in a dental practice without buying shelfware
The short version:
- One bottleneck, one tool. Missed calls → Arini or Weave. Dead recall list → RevenueWell. Inconsistent X-ray reads → radiograph AI. Charting eating hygiene time → Denti.AI.
- Paper before patients. Written pricing including setup fees, plus a signed BAA, before any PHI reaches the vendor.
- Baseline before pilot. A metric you didn't record beforehand is a metric you can't claim improved.
- Training decides adoption. A tool the front desk hates becomes shelfware in six weeks no matter how good the demo was.
- Expand by repetition, not by bundle. Solve bottleneck one, then run the same playbook on bottleneck two.
Step 1: which bottleneck is actually bleeding?
Spend a week counting instead of guessing. How many calls ring out or hit voicemail during operatory hours? How many patients are past due for hygiene with no future appointment? How often do two providers read the same bitewing differently? How many minutes does perio charting add to each hygiene visit? Those four counts map cleanly onto the market:
- Phones ringing out: an AI receptionist like Arini answers and books 24/7 (by quote; ~$200–$500/mo per location reported), while Weave keeps humans on the line but upgrades the whole comms stack (from a vendor-published $199/mo; tier pricing by quote).
- Recall gone quiet: RevenueWell works the reactivation list automatically, from ~$189/mo (third-party reported).
- Radiograph consistency: the options and trade-offs are laid out in our X-ray AI guide; Denti.AI Detect is the published-price entry at $49/mo per location.
- Charting and notes: Denti.AI pairs standalone Voice Perio charting ($99–$299/mo per location by tier) with an AI scribe ($129–$399/mo); the Scribe + Voice Perio bundle runs $399/mo, and the workflow details are in the charting and notes guide.
If two bottlenecks feel equally urgent, take the one closest to the phone. Front-desk problems produce the fastest, most countable feedback, which makes your first pilot easier to judge.
Step 2: what do you verify before signing anything?
Two documents, in this order. First, the real price in writing: monthly rate, per-location or per-user basis, setup fees, and contract term. Most dental AI vendors quote per practice, so treat any number you read online — including the third-party reported ranges on this site — as a starting expectation, not a commitment. Only Denti.AI publishes a full clinical price list; Adit is quote-only, with a third-party reported figure of ~$399/mo. The full landscape is on the comparison page.
Second, the Business Associate Agreement. Radiographs, call recordings, and schedules are PHI, and the BAA must be signed before any of it moves. While the vendor has the pen out, get written answers on data retention, whether your patients' data trains their models, and their breach notification window. The HIPAA guide has the complete question set; if compliance isn't anyone's day job in your office, bring in your compliance or IT lead now, not after go-live.
Step 3: what does a pilot with real metrics look like?
A pilot is an experiment, so it needs a baseline, a duration, and a pass mark, all fixed before day one. Thirty days suits front-desk tools, where call and booking data accumulates fast; sixty days suits clinical tools, where providers need time to calibrate trust in the output. Write the pass mark somewhere the renewal decision will find it.
| Bottleneck | Baseline to record first | What "it worked" means |
|---|---|---|
| Missed calls | Calls answered vs missed per week, including after-hours | Answered-call rate up and new-patient bookings from previously missed windows |
| Recall | Patients overdue with no future appointment | Reactivation appointments booked per month without added front-desk hours |
| Radiograph reads | Findings flagged per 100 images, per provider | More consistent reads across providers and clearer patient conversations at the chair |
| Charting time | Minutes of perio charting and note writing per hygiene visit | Measured minutes back per visit, with notes still reviewed and signed by the provider |
A walkthrough of the five-step adoption path: choosing one bottleneck, verifying pricing and the BAA, running a 30–60 day pilot against a pre-set metric, training the team, and deciding to expand or cancel on the numbers.
Step 4: how do you train the team so the tool survives contact with Monday?
Name one owner — often the office manager for phones and recall, a lead hygienist or associate for clinical tools — who runs the pilot, collects gripes, and talks to the vendor. Then train by role, narrowly: the front desk needs to know exactly what the AI receptionist can book and when it hands a caller to a human; hygienists need the voice-charting commands and the correction workflow; providers need the rule that no AI-drafted finding or note enters the chart unreviewed. Fold the new tool into your HIPAA training log while you're at it, since staff misuse is a likelier incident than a server breach. Expect a dip in speed in week one and say so out loud; teams abandon tools when the dip surprises them, not when it's planned for.
Step 5: when do you expand, and when do you stop?
At the end of the pilot the decision is arithmetic. Metric moved and the team still uses the tool without reminders: keep it, then pick the next bottleneck and rerun this exact playbook. Metric didn't move: cancel and try the competing tool in the same category before concluding the category is wrong — a phone-AI failure might be an Arini-vs-Weave fit issue, not proof your phones are fine. Only after two or three single-tool wins does a platform question become sensible: whether to consolidate onto an all-in-one like Adit or CareStack, or to add an analytics layer like Dental Intelligence to watch the numbers you now care about. Those are bigger, slower decisions, and they go better when your practice has already built the verify-pilot-train habit.
What about compliance while all this happens?
Common questions
Which AI tool should a dental practice adopt first?
The one aimed at your worst bottleneck, not the most impressive demo. Missed calls point to Arini (AI receptionist, by quote) or Weave (comms platform, from a vendor-published $199/mo; tier pricing by quote). A stale recall list points to RevenueWell (from ~$189/mo, third-party reported). Inconsistent radiograph reads point to X-ray AI, and charting time points to Denti.AI, whose Detect starts at a published $49/mo per location.
How long should a dental AI pilot run?
Thirty to sixty days is usually enough to see whether a front-desk or recall metric moves, provided you recorded the baseline first. Radiograph and charting tools may deserve the longer end because providers need time to build trust in the output. The non-negotiable part is deciding the success number before the pilot starts, so the renewal decision is arithmetic instead of a feeling.
What does a first year of dental AI realistically cost?
Starting narrow keeps it contained. Denti.AI Detect is a published $49/mo per location. Weave publishes a starting price of $199/mo (tier pricing by quote), and RevenueWell reportedly starts around $189/mo. Quote-priced tools vary: third-party reports put Arini around $200 to $500/mo, Pearl Second Opinion around $299/mo plus ~$1,500 setup, and Overjet from roughly $250 to $1,500/mo. Confirm every figure with the vendor before budgeting.
Do I need an IT person to roll out AI in my practice?
Most of these tools are cloud services that integrate with your existing practice management system, so many practices deploy them without dedicated IT staff. The parts that punish shortcuts are the compliance setup and the PMS integration. If nobody on the team owns those comfortably, a local consultant can handle setup, the BAA checklist, and staff training — use the free matching form, and note we do not recommend or endorse providers.
Sources: Denti.AI prices are vendor-published (denti.ai/pricing); Weave's starting price of $199/mo is vendor-published (getweave.com/pricing), with tier pricing by quote. Adit is quote-only (~$399/mo third-party reported); RevenueWell's entry figure and the ranges for Arini, Pearl Second Opinion, and Overjet are third-party reported, as those vendors quote per practice. All figures checked 2026-07-12. HIPAA and BAA background draws on U.S. Department of Health and Human Services materials (hhs.gov). Educational only; not legal advice. Last reviewed: 2026-07-12.
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