Overview: child dental emergency Perth
Children’s dental problems can change quickly. If your child has severe toothache, facial swelling, a knocked‑out or broken tooth, ongoing bleeding or signs of infection, treat it as urgent. For families in Perth, the fastest next step depends on the type of injury, time of day, and whether hospital assessment is required.
This guide explains immediate actions, when to book a same‑day dentist, when to go to hospital, typical costs and funding options such as Medicare’s Child Dental Benefits Schedule (CDBS). If you need local advice now, you can send a confidential enquiry and we’ll help you find appropriate care.
What to do right now
- Severe pain or swelling: give age‑appropriate analgesia as directed on the label and seek same‑day dental care. Swelling with fever or spreading redness needs urgent attention.
- Knocked‑out tooth:
- Permanent tooth: pick up by the crown, gently rinse if dirty, reinsert into the socket and have your child bite on gauze. If you can’t reinsert, store in cold milk and see a dentist within 30 minutes.
- Baby tooth: do NOT reinsert. Control bleeding with gentle pressure and see a dentist promptly.
- Chipped/broken tooth: keep any fragments in milk. Rinse the mouth with water. Book a same‑day review to protect the nerve.
- Soft‑tissue injuries: apply gentle pressure with gauze for 10–15 minutes. If bleeding doesn’t stop or there is a deep cut, seek urgent care.
- Braces or wires poking: cover the area with orthodontic wax or sugar‑free gum and arrange a prompt orthodontic visit. If it’s cutting the cheek, seek urgent care.
Urgent warning signs
- Rapidly increasing facial swelling or fever
- Severe toothache that disrupts sleep or eating
- Knocked‑out or heavily fractured tooth
- Persistent bleeding after injury or extraction
- Bad taste, pus, or swelling under the jaw (possible infection)
- Difficulty opening the mouth or swallowing
Call 000 for life‑threatening problems such as breathing difficulty, swelling that compromises the airway, or suspected jaw fracture with other serious injuries.
After‑hours and hospital care in Perth
For dental injuries or pain without other medical concerns, a same‑day or after‑hours dentist is usually the right first stop. If your child has significant facial trauma, suspected jaw fracture, uncontrolled bleeding, rapidly worsening infection or is generally unwell, go to the Perth Children’s Hospital Emergency Department. If you’re unsure, send an enquiry below for local guidance.
Perth has practices offering urgent care across the metro area (CBD, Northbridge, Subiaco, Joondalup, Midland, Fremantle, Rockingham and more). Availability varies, especially on weekends and evenings, so contacting multiple clinics or requesting a call back can speed things up.
Common kids’ dental emergencies
- Tooth knocked out or displaced (sport, falls, playground injuries)
- Broken or cracked tooth exposing dentine or nerve
- Severe toothache from decay or dental abscess
- Facial swelling related to an infected tooth
- Soft‑tissue cuts to lips, cheeks or tongue
- Orthodontic wire or bracket causing injury
Emergency visits usually focus on stabilising pain, protecting the tooth and preventing infection. Definitive treatment (e.g., pulp therapy, fillings, splinting or extractions) may happen immediately or at a follow‑up visit depending on your child’s comfort and the diagnosis.
Costs and cover in Perth
- Fees vary with time of day, complexity, X‑rays, materials, and whether restorative work is needed after initial pain relief.
- Medicare CDBS: Eligible children (2–17) can access a benefit cap over 2 calendar years for basic services. Ask the clinic if they bulk bill the CDBS.
- Private health extras: May reduce out‑of‑pocket costs for eligible items. Gaps vary by fund and level of cover.
- Payment options: Many clinics offer staged care or payment plans for urgent treatment.
If costs are a barrier, we can help you compare options, including clinics familiar with CDBS and flexible payment pathways.
Questions to ask at the appointment
- What is the likely diagnosis and immediate risk?
- What can we do today to relieve pain and protect the tooth?
- What are the treatment options and timing for each?
- How will this affect adult teeth or growth?
- What are the item numbers, fees and expected out‑of‑pocket?
- When should we return, and what red flags should we watch for?
How we help
This site provides guidance and connects families with appropriate dental care. It is not a dental clinic. Tell us what’s happening, and we’ll help you compare the right type of care in Perth, including after‑hours support where possible.