What Evidence Do I Need for a dental negligence claim

What Evidence Do I Need for a Dental Negligence Claim?

From dental records and X-rays to independent expert reports and symptoms diaries — a complete guide to building the evidence for your claim.

Table of Contents

One of the most common questions asked by people considering a dental negligence claim is: what evidence do I actually need? The reassuring answer is that you do not need to gather everything yourself — your solicitor will take on the heavy lifting. But understanding what evidence is required, why it matters, and what you can do to strengthen your position from the very start gives you a significant advantage.

Evidence serves three essential functions in a dental negligence claim. It proves that your dentist owed you a duty of care and breached it. It demonstrates that the breach caused your injury. And it quantifies what that injury has cost you — physically, psychologically and financially. A claim without solid evidence is extremely unlikely to succeed. A claim with comprehensive, well-organised evidence is far better placed to achieve a fair settlement — and to do so without the delay and cost of court proceedings.

Key principle: Evidence in a dental negligence claim needs to address all three legal elements — duty of care, breach of duty and causation. Different types of evidence serve different purposes, and the strongest claims combine multiple sources. Our guide to proving dental negligence explains these legal elements in full.

Why Evidence Is the Foundation of Your Claim

In a dental negligence claim, the burden of proof rests with you as the claimant. You must show, on the balance of probabilities, that the dental professional’s treatment fell below the required standard and that this directly caused the harm you suffered. This cannot be established through assertion alone — it requires documentary evidence, professional expert opinion, and a clear chronological record of what happened and how it affected you.

The strength of your evidence directly affects three critical outcomes: whether a solicitor is able to accept your case on a No Win No Fee basis; whether the defendant admits liability early or disputes it; and ultimately, the amount of compensation you receive. The earlier you begin gathering and preserving evidence, the stronger your position.

The 9 Types of Evidence for a Dental Negligence Claim

1. Dental Records and X-Rays

Your dental records are the single most important piece of evidence in any dental negligence claim. They form the factual foundation upon which everything else is built — establishing what treatment was planned, what was actually carried out, when it was carried out, and whether it was consistent with the standard of care expected of a competent dental professional.

Dental records relevant to a claim typically include:

  • Clinical notes and treatment history for every appointment
  • X-rays, CT scans, OPGs and other imaging taken before, during and after treatment
  • Treatment plans and consent forms — documenting what risks were explained to you
  • Charting records showing the condition of each tooth over time
  • Referral letters and specialist reports
  • Prescription records and details of anaesthetics administered
  • Any complaints or concerns you raised at the practice
💡 How to obtain your records

You are legally entitled to request your dental records under UK GDPR. Contact your dental practice in writing — an email is sufficient — and they must provide them within one calendar month, free of charge. They cannot refuse without good reason. If they do, you can report the failure to the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO). Your solicitor will also make a formal request on your behalf as part of the claims process.

2. Independent Dental Expert Report

An independent expert report is essential in virtually all dental negligence claims and is typically the most influential piece of evidence. A suitably qualified dental expert — chosen for their specialism in the area of dentistry relevant to your treatment — will review your dental records and provide a written professional opinion addressing two critical questions:

  • Breach of duty: Did the treatment fall below the standard expected of a reasonably competent dental professional? (assessed using the Bolam test)
  • Causation: Did the substandard treatment directly cause or materially contribute to the harm you suffered?

Without a supportive expert report on both breach and causation, it is very difficult to advance a dental negligence claim. Your solicitor will identify, instruct and pay for the appropriate expert as part of the No Win No Fee arrangement — you do not need to find or fund this yourself.

In many cases, you will be asked to attend an in-person examination with the expert, who will assess your current condition, any ongoing symptoms, and the treatment you are likely to need in the future.

3. Photographs of Your Injury

Photographs provide powerful visual evidence of the physical harm caused by dental negligence. They are particularly valuable in claims involving visible damage — swelling, bruising, scarring, disfigurement, failed dental work, or tooth loss.

Take photographs as soon as possible after the negligent treatment, and continue to document your condition at regular intervals as it changes over time. Key moments to photograph include:

  • Immediately after the negligent procedure, if visible harm is apparent
  • During any period of swelling, infection or acute injury
  • Before and after any corrective treatment
  • Any lasting scarring, disfigurement or cosmetic damage

Ensure photographs are date-stamped. Store them securely and provide copies to your solicitor at the earliest opportunity.

4. Symptoms Diary

A contemporaneous symptoms diary — written at the time, not reconstructed later — is one of the most persuasive forms of personal evidence you can produce. It provides a day-by-day account of how the dental negligence has affected your life, and it is extremely difficult for the defendant to challenge.

Start your diary immediately and record the following each day (or whenever relevant):

  • Pain levels (use a 1–10 scale) and the type and location of pain
  • Difficulties eating, chewing, drinking, speaking or sleeping
  • Any medication taken and whether it provided relief
  • Dental and medical appointments attended and their outcomes
  • Emotional and psychological impact — anxiety, depression, loss of confidence, embarrassment
  • Activities you have been unable to do as a result of your injury
  • Impact on work, social life, relationships and daily routine
  • Any financial expenditure incurred (receipts should be kept separately)
💡 Practical tip

A simple notebook, a notes app on your phone, or a dated email to yourself all work equally well. The key is that it is written at the time — not compiled weeks later from memory. Courts give significantly more weight to contemporaneous records.

5. Financial Records and Proof of Loss

Financial evidence supports your claim for special damages — the quantifiable out-of-pocket losses you have suffered as a direct result of the negligence. Keep all of the following from the moment the negligence occurs:

  • Receipts and invoices for all corrective dental treatment, including private assessments and remedial procedures
  • Prescription costs and receipts for medication required as a result of the negligence
  • Travel expenses — mileage, parking, public transport costs for journeys to dental and medical appointments
  • Payslips and employer correspondence confirming any time taken off work and the resulting loss of earnings
  • Bank statements evidencing expenditure that cannot otherwise be documented
  • Quotes for future treatment — if you have been advised that further corrective work will be needed, obtain written estimates from a reputable dentist

Do not rely on memory to reconstruct these costs at a later stage. Keep a dedicated folder — physical or digital — for all financial evidence from the outset.

6. Witness Statements

If anyone was present at your dental appointments — a partner, parent, friend or chaperone — their account of what was said and what happened can provide valuable corroboration of your own evidence. Witness evidence is particularly useful where:

  • Consent and risk explanations (or the lack of them) are in dispute
  • You need to evidence the visible impact of the negligence on your daily life
  • The defendant is likely to dispute your account of what occurred at the appointment

Note down the contact details of any potential witnesses as soon as possible — memories fade quickly and people can become difficult to locate over time. Your solicitor will take formal witness statements when needed.

7. GP and Hospital Records

If the consequences of the dental negligence have required you to seek treatment beyond the dental practice itself — through your GP, at A&E, as a hospital inpatient or outpatient, or through a specialist referral — those medical records are important evidence of both the severity and the consequences of your injury.

  • GP consultation notes relating to dental pain, infection or complications
  • A&E attendance records where you presented with dental emergencies
  • Hospital admission and discharge summaries
  • Specialist referral letters and consultant reports
  • Prescriptions issued by non-dental practitioners as a result of your dental injury

You are entitled to request your GP and hospital records under UK GDPR in the same way as your dental records. Your solicitor will obtain these as part of the claims process.

8. Correspondence with the Dental Practice

Any written or electronic communication between you and the dental practice is potentially relevant evidence. This includes:

  • Appointment confirmation emails and text messages
  • Any letters or emails discussing your treatment or concerns
  • Invoices and payment receipts for treatment carried out
  • Letters or emails in which the practice acknowledged a problem or offered a refund
  • Any written response to a formal complaint

Do not delete any messages or emails from your dental practice. Even communications that appear routine — such as appointment reminders — can help establish a timeline of events. Screenshot text messages and archive emails to a secure folder.

9. Formal Complaint Records

Making a formal complaint to the dental practice or to the relevant regulatory body (the NHS Integrated Care Board for NHS patients, or the Dental Complaints Service for private patients) is not a legal requirement before bringing a claim — but the records generated by a complaint can provide useful additional evidence.

A complaint investigation may produce:

  • A written response from the practice explaining what happened
  • Acknowledgements of error or apology that are relevant to liability
  • Internal clinical review records
  • Referrals to the General Dental Council (GDC) if the complaint reveals serious concerns
⚠️ Important

Do not allow the complaints process to eat into your three-year limitation period for bringing a legal claim. The two processes are separate and run concurrently. Seek legal advice while pursuing any complaint — do not wait for the complaint to conclude before instructing a solicitor.

Download the Free Dental Negligence Claims Guide (PDF)

 

Our free guide covers the full claims process step-by-step — from what to do first and how to gather evidence, through to time limits, expert reports, and compensation. Download the Dental Negligence Claims Guide (PDF).

Who Is Responsible for Gathering the Evidence?

You do not need to build your evidence file alone. Once you instruct a dental negligence solicitor, they take on the primary responsibility for obtaining and organising the evidence needed to support your claim. In practice, this means your solicitor will:

  • Submit a formal subject access request for your dental records under UK GDPR
  • Request GP and hospital records relevant to your injury
  • Identify, instruct and liaise with one or more independent dental experts
  • Arrange your expert examination appointment at a location convenient to you
  • Compile all evidence into a chronological bundle ready for the Letter of Claim
  • Draft the formal Letter of Claim setting out the allegations of negligence, the harm caused and the compensation sought

Your role is to provide your solicitor with the personal evidence that only you can supply — your symptoms diary, your photographs, your financial records and your witness contacts. The more thoroughly you have documented your experience, the more powerful the overall evidence package will be.

On the Pre-Action Protocol: Before any court proceedings are issued, both parties are required to follow the Pre-Action Protocol for the Resolution of Clinical Disputes.

This requires the claimant’s solicitor to send a detailed Letter of Claim to the defendant, who then has four months to investigate and respond. The quality of the evidence compiled at this stage frequently determines whether the case settles or proceeds to litigation.

Your Dental Negligence Evidence Checklist

Use this checklist to track the evidence you have already gathered and identify what still needs to be obtained. Share it with your solicitor at your first consultation.

Evidence to gather or confirm

Full dental records requested from all relevant practices (under UK GDPR)

All X-rays, OPGs, CT scans and other dental imaging

Treatment plans and signed consent forms

Photographs of visible injuries taken at the time and subsequently

Symptoms diary started and kept up to date

Receipts and invoices for all corrective treatment incurred

Prescription and medication receipts

Travel expense records for all dental and medical appointments

Payslips and employer confirmation of lost earnings (if applicable)

Written quotes for future corrective treatment (if available)

GP and hospital records relating to the dental injury

Contact details of any witnesses to appointments or to the impact of your injury

All correspondence with the dental practice preserved and saved

Formal complaint records and practice responses (if a complaint was made)

Independent dental expert report commissioned via your solicitor

Ready to Start Your Claim?

Our team of specialist dental negligence solicitors offers a free, no-obligation case assessment. We will review the evidence you have, advise you on the strength of your claim, and handle all evidence gathering on your behalf — with no upfront cost and no financial risk.

Frequently Asked Questions

What evidence do I need for a dental negligence claim in the UK?

The key evidence includes your full dental records and X-rays, an independent dental expert report, photographs of visible injuries, a symptoms diary, proof of financial losses, witness statements, GP and hospital records, and correspondence with the dental practice. Your solicitor will gather most of this on your behalf.

You have a legal right to request your dental records under UK GDPR. Contact your dental practice in writing — email is sufficient — and they must provide your full records within one calendar month, free of charge. Your solicitor will also make a formal request as part of the claims process.

Yes, in almost all dental negligence cases. An independent expert will review your records and provide a written opinion on breach of duty and causation. Without a supportive expert report it is very difficult to establish the legal elements of a claim. Your solicitor will instruct and fund the expert as part of the No Win No Fee arrangement.

Record your daily pain levels and type of pain, difficulties eating, speaking or sleeping, medication taken and its effects, appointments attended, the emotional and psychological impact, and how the injury has affected your work, social life and daily routine. Write it contemporaneously — at the time, not from memory later.

A claim without evidence is very unlikely to succeed. Evidence is required to prove duty of care, breach and causation. However, you do not need to gather everything yourself — your solicitor will obtain dental records, commission expert reports and compile the evidence package on your behalf.

Keep all receipts and invoices for corrective dental treatment, medication, travel to appointments, and any private assessments. If you have lost earnings, retain payslips and employer correspondence. Bank statements can evidence out-of-pocket costs where formal receipts are unavailable.

No. Making a formal complaint is not a legal prerequisite to bringing a dental negligence claim. However, complaint records can provide useful supporting evidence. Importantly, do not allow the complaints process to delay instructing a solicitor — the three-year limitation period runs regardless of any ongoing complaint.