---
title: "Dental Recall & Reactivation Statistics: Benchmarks"
description: "Dental recall reactivation benchmarks."
date: "2026-04-06"
author: "Justas Butkus"
tags: ["Dental", "Statistics"]
url: "https://ainora.lt/blog/dental-recall-reactivation-statistics-benchmarks"
lastUpdated: "2026-04-21"
---

# Dental Recall & Reactivation Statistics: Benchmarks

Dental recall reactivation benchmarks.

The average dental practice has a recall rate of only 60-70%, meaning 30-40% of patients fail to return for their scheduled hygiene visits. Practices carry an average of 800-2,000 dormant patients - patients who have not visited in 12+ months. Reactivating just 10-15% of dormant patients generates $40,000-$100,000 in annual revenue without any marketing spend. AI-driven recall and reactivation outreach achieves 2-3x the contact rate and 40-60% higher booking rates compared to manual staff efforts. This page compiles 30+ statistics on recall rates, patient reactivation, and the measurable impact of automated systems.


## Recall Rate Benchmarks

The recall rate - the percentage of patients who return for their scheduled hygiene and exam visits - is one of the most important health metrics for a dental practice. It directly impacts revenue stability, patient outcomes, and practice growth.

- Average recall rate: The average dental practice achieves a recall rate of 60-70%. This means 30-40% of patients who should be returning for hygiene visits are not doing so. (Source: Dental Intel, ADA practice management benchmarks)

- Top-performer benchmark: Well-managed practices achieve recall rates of 85-95%. The difference between 65% and 90% recall represents hundreds of appointments per year.

- Industry target: Dental practice consultants recommend a minimum recall rate of 80%. Practices below 75% are considered to have a recall problem that needs immediate attention.

- Recall rate trend: National recall rates declined 5-8 percentage points during 2020-2021 and have only partially recovered. Many practices still have rates below their pre-2020 levels.

- Recall by appointment type: 6-month hygiene recall has the highest completion rate (65-75%). Annual exam recall is slightly lower (60-70%). Periodontal maintenance recall (3-4 month intervals) has the lowest rate (50-60%) despite being the most clinically important.

- Pre-scheduled vs. unscheduled: Patients who leave their appointment with their next visit already scheduled have a recall rate of 80-90%. Patients who leave without scheduling have a recall rate of only 35-45%. Pre-scheduling is the single most effective recall tactic.


## Patient Attrition and Dormancy Statistics

Patient attrition - patients who stop visiting the practice - is a silent drain on practice revenue that often goes unmeasured.

- Annual attrition rate: The average dental practice loses 15-20% of its patient base annually to attrition. Some leave for other practices, some move, and many simply stop visiting without formally ending the relationship. (Source: dental practice benchmarks)

- Dormant patient definition: A patient is generally considered "dormant" or "inactive" after 12-18 months without a visit. Practices define this differently, but 12 months is the most common threshold.

- Dormant patients per practice: The average practice with 1,500-3,000 patients of record carries 800-2,000 dormant patients who have not visited in 12+ months. This dormant segment typically represents 30-50% of the total patient base.

- Dormancy reasons: 35% of dormant patients simply forgot or lost track of scheduling, 25% had a life change (moved, changed insurance, new job), 20% had a negative experience or unresolved concern, and 20% had financial or insurance barriers.

- Reactivation window: Patients dormant for 12-18 months have a 25-35% reactivation potential. Patients dormant for 18-24 months drop to 15-20%. Beyond 24 months, reactivation success falls below 10%. The longer a patient is dormant, the harder they are to bring back.

- Cost of attrition vs. acquisition: Reactivating a dormant patient costs $10-$30 (the cost of outreach), compared to $150-$350 to acquire a new patient. Reactivation is 5-15x more cost-effective than new patient acquisition.

A practice with 1,200 dormant patients at an average annual patient value of $600-$800 is sitting on $720,000-$960,000 in potential revenue. Reactivating even 10% of those patients generates $72,000-$96,000 annually - all from patients who already know the practice, already have records on file, and require zero marketing spend to reach. This is the most underleveraged revenue source in most dental practices.


## Reactivation Success Rates

Reactivation success varies dramatically based on outreach method, timing, and persistence.

- Overall reactivation rate: Practices with active reactivation programs successfully reactivate 10-20% of their dormant patient base per year. Practices without systematic outreach reactivate less than 5%.

- Single outreach attempt: A single phone call to a dormant patient has a 5-8% reactivation success rate. A single text or email has a 3-5% rate. One touch is rarely sufficient.

- Multi-touch campaign: Reactivation campaigns using 3-5 touches across multiple channels (phone, text, email, direct mail) achieve 15-25% reactivation rates - 3-5x the single-touch rate.

- Phone vs. text vs. email: Phone calls have the highest per-contact reactivation rate at 8-12% (when answered). Text messages achieve 5-8% (higher reach, lower conversion per message). Email achieves 2-4% (highest volume, lowest conversion).

- Reactivation by dormancy length: Patients dormant 6-12 months reactivate at 25-35%. Patients dormant 12-18 months reactivate at 15-25%. Patients dormant 18-24 months reactivate at 10-15%. Beyond 24 months, rates fall below 8%.

- Reactivated patient value: Reactivated patients generate an average of $600-$1,200 in the first year back, often higher than regular recall patients because they typically need more treatment after an extended absence.


## Revenue Locked in Dormant Patients

- Immediate recall revenue: Each reactivated patient generates an immediate $200-$400 in hygiene and exam revenue at their return visit. (Source: dental practice financial data)

- Treatment discovery: 40-55% of reactivated patients have treatment needs identified at their return visit - cavities, periodontal issues, or previously presented treatment that was deferred. This adds $400-$1,500 in additional treatment revenue per reactivated patient.

- Ongoing revenue restoration: A reactivated patient who returns to regular recall generates $500-$800 per year in ongoing revenue, restored to the practice's active production without marketing cost.

- Revenue per 100 reactivations: Reactivating 100 dormant patients generates approximately $80,000-$150,000 in first-year revenue (recall visits + treatment needs), with $50,000-$80,000 in recurring annual revenue thereafter.

- Comparison to new patient acquisition: Generating $80,000 in revenue from 100 reactivated patients costs approximately $1,000-$3,000 in outreach costs. Generating the same revenue from new patients would require acquiring 50-80 new patients at $150-$350 each, costing $7,500-$28,000 in marketing.

- Referral potential: Reactivated patients who have a positive return experience refer 0.5-1.5 new patients on average. A successful reactivation campaign generates secondary new patient acquisition at zero additional cost.


## Recall Outreach Method Effectiveness

Different outreach methods have different reach rates, response rates, and cost profiles. Understanding these helps practices allocate recall resources effectively.

- Manual phone calls: Staff calling recall patients reaches 40-50% of patients (the rest do not answer). Of those reached, 30-40% book an appointment. Staff can call approximately 15-25 patients per hour. (Source: dental practice operations data)

- Automated text messages: Text reminders reach 95%+ of patients (delivery rate). Open rate is 90-98%. Response rate is 15-25%. Booking conversion from text outreach is 8-15%.

- Email campaigns: Email recall campaigns have a 20-30% open rate and 2-5% click-through rate. Booking conversion from email is 2-4%. Email works best as a supplementary channel, not a primary outreach method.

- Direct mail: Postcards and mailers to recall patients have a 1-3% response rate. Cost per piece is $0.75-$2.00. While low in conversion, direct mail reaches patients who may have changed phone numbers or email addresses.

- AI phone calls: AI-powered outbound recall calls reach 60-75% of patients (higher than manual because AI calls at optimal times and retries automatically). Booking conversion is 15-25% of patients reached - comparable to or better than manual calls at a fraction of the staff time cost.

- Multi-channel combination: The most effective approach combines text (first touch), AI phone call (follow-up for non-responders), and email (supplementary). This multi-channel approach achieves 20-30% total reactivation rates for the outreach cohort.


## Timing and Frequency Data

When and how often to reach out to recall patients significantly impacts success rates.

- Optimal first contact timing: The most effective time to send the first recall reminder is 2-4 weeks before the due date. Contacting patients when they are "almost due" produces 15-20% higher booking rates than contacting them after they are already overdue. (Source: dental communication platform analytics)

- Overdue escalation: For patients who miss their recall date, the outreach frequency should increase: first week overdue (text), second week (phone call), third week (text + email), fourth week (phone call with urgency messaging). Each subsequent touch has diminishing returns but still adds incremental reactivations.

- Best day for outreach: Tuesday and Wednesday produce the highest booking rates for recall outreach (18-22% conversion). Monday is slightly lower due to inbox competition. Friday and weekend outreach has the lowest conversion (10-15%).

- Best time for phone calls: Recall phone calls placed between 10 AM - 12 PM and 2 PM - 4 PM have the highest answer rates (35-45%). Early morning calls (before 9 AM) and evening calls (after 6 PM) have lower answer rates but patients who do answer are more likely to book.

- Number of attempts: The optimal number of outreach attempts before marking a patient as "no response" is 4-6 touches across 3-4 weeks. Beyond 6 touches, additional outreach produces negligible returns and risks patient annoyance.

- Reactivation campaign frequency: For dormant patients specifically, a quarterly reactivation campaign (every 3 months) produces the best results. More frequent campaigns fatigue the patient list. Less frequent campaigns miss the reactivation window for patients crossing the 18-24 month dormancy threshold.


## AI-Driven Recall and Reactivation Data

AI-powered recall systems represent a step change in outreach effectiveness compared to manual processes.

- Contact rate improvement: AI recall systems achieve 60-75% contact rates compared to 40-50% for manual calling. AI calls at optimal times, retries automatically on failure, and covers evening and weekend windows that staff do not work.

- Booking rate improvement: AI voice recall calls achieve booking rates of 15-25% of contacted patients, compared to 12-20% for manual calls. The consistency and persistence of AI outreach drives higher overall conversion.

- Volume scalability: AI can contact 100-500 recall patients per day with zero additional staff time. A single front desk person manually calling can reach 15-25 patients per hour, or 60-100 per day if doing nothing else.

- Staff time reclaimed: Automating recall outreach saves 5-10 hours of staff time per week. This time is typically the first thing cut when the front desk is busy, which is why manual recall is so inconsistent.

- Consistency advantage: AI recall runs every day, on schedule, without exception. Manual recall is the first task staff skip when busy - which is most days. Practices that switch from manual to AI recall see a 20-30% improvement in recall rates within 3-6 months purely from consistency.

- Real-time scheduling: When an AI recall call reaches a patient who wants to book, the appointment is scheduled during the call in real time (when integrated with the PMS). Manual recall calls that result in "I'll call back to schedule" lose 40-60% of those patients who never actually call back.

The biggest problem with manual recall is not effectiveness per call - it is consistency. Staff make recall calls when they have time, which in a busy practice means sporadically at best. AI solves the consistency problem by running recall outreach systematically, every day, hitting every patient in the recall list on schedule. The improvement in recall rates comes less from better calls and more from simply making the calls that staff never get around to.


## Impact on Hygiene Department Production

Recall effectiveness directly determines hygiene department production - the most stable and predictable revenue stream in a dental practice.

- Hygiene as revenue share: The hygiene department generates 25-35% of total practice revenue for a general dental practice. In practices with strong recall systems, hygiene can account for 35-40%. (Source: dental practice financial benchmarks)

- Revenue per hygiene visit: The average hygiene visit generates $200-$350 in production (cleaning, exam, X-rays, fluoride). In 2026, this has increased from $150-$250 five years ago due to fee adjustments and expanded services.

- Hygiene schedule fill rate: The average hygiene schedule is 75-85% full. Top-performing practices maintain 90-95% fill rates. Each 5% improvement in fill rate adds approximately $30,000-$50,000 in annual hygiene production per hygienist.

- Treatment discovery from hygiene: Hygiene visits are the primary gateway for identifying restorative treatment needs. 30-40% of hygiene visits result in treatment plans for additional work. This makes each hygiene visit worth $300-$500 in total practice revenue including downstream treatment.

- Recall rate to production correlation: A 10 percentage point improvement in recall rate (e.g., from 65% to 75%) translates to approximately 200-400 additional hygiene visits per year for a mid-sized practice, representing $40,000-$140,000 in direct hygiene production plus downstream treatment revenue.

- Hygienist productivity benchmarks: Each hygienist should produce $180,000-$250,000 per year. Practices below this threshold typically have recall rate problems - the hygienist has time available but the patients are not being recalled effectively to fill the schedule.


## Benchmarks by Practice Type and Size

Recall and reactivation performance varies by practice size, specialty, and patient demographics.

- Solo practitioner challenges: Solo practices often have the lowest recall rates because the single front desk person handles all tasks - phone, check-in, check-out, billing - and recall calling gets deprioritized.

- DSO recall paradox: Despite having more resources, DSO locations often have lower recall rates than independent practices. Higher staff turnover at DSOs means less relationship continuity, and centralized management may deprioritize location-level recall efforts.

- Pediatric advantage: Pediatric dental practices benefit from parents who are motivated to maintain children's dental schedules. The parent-managed nature of pediatric appointments leads to higher recall compliance.

- Periodontal vulnerability: Periodontal patients on 3-4 month maintenance schedules have lower recall rates despite having the highest clinical need. More frequent appointments create more opportunities to miss or defer visits.


## Frequently Asked Questions

Read the full article at [ainora.lt/blog/dental-recall-reactivation-statistics-benchmarks](https://ainora.lt/blog/dental-recall-reactivation-statistics-benchmarks)

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