Dental Invoice Generator
Create a professional invoice for dental treatment, orthodontics or cosmetic dentistry, with patient, tooth number, treatment code and provider registration fields — then download as a clean PDF, free, no sign-up required.
Podatki o vašem podjetju
Podatki o stranki
Blagovna znamka računa
Podrobnosti računa
Postavke
Oproščeno DDV (zobozdravstvene storitve) se obračuna samo na postavke, kjer je označeno polje “Oproščeno DDV (zobozdravstvene storitve)”.
Podpis
Dodajte svoj pooblaščeni podpis. Prikazan bo samo v predogledu in PDF-ju, če ga dejansko dodate.
Predogled:
| Datum izdaje | — |
| Opis | Količina | Cena | Znesek |
|---|---|---|---|
| Comprehensive dental examination | 1 | €0.00 | €0.00 |
| Scale and polish (professional cleaning) | 1 | €0.00 | €0.00 |
| Dental X-ray (bitewing/periapical) | 1 | €0.00 | €0.00 |
| Composite filling (per tooth) | 1 | €0.00 | €0.00 |
| Root canal treatment | 1 | €0.00 | €0.00 |
| Crown — porcelain/ceramic | 1 | €0.00 | €0.00 |
| Tooth extraction | 1 | €0.00 | €0.00 |
| Teeth whitening (cosmetic) | 1 | €0.00 | €0.00 |
| Vmesni seštevek | €0.00 |
| Skupaj | €0.00 |
Free dental invoice generator & superbill template
Create a professional invoice for dental treatment, orthodontics or cosmetic dentistry in minutes. Add patient details, tooth numbers and treatment dates, mark each line taxable or exempt, and download a clean PDF — free, with no sign-up required.
What should a dental invoice include?
Every patient-pay dental invoice needs the basics — practice name and address, patient name, invoice number and date — plus a few fields specific to dentistry: the tooth number(s) treated, a description of each procedure, and your provider registration number. Insurance-ready dental invoices go further, adding the patient's date of birth, an insurance/claim reference, and a treatment code per line so the patient (or you, on their behalf) can submit a claim.
- Dental practice name, address and provider registration number
- Patient name, and date of birth if the patient will claim insurance
- Tooth number(s) using FDI (outside North America) or Universal (US/Canada) notation
- Treatment/procedure description, with an optional code (CDT in the US, GOZ-Ziffer in Germany)
- Date of service for each treatment line, separate from the invoice date
- Fees, any payment received, and balance due
Is dental treatment VAT-exempt — even when whitening and braces are on the same invoice?
In most of our 39 markets, dental care provided by a registered dentist is exempt from VAT, GST or an equivalent consumption tax, under the same public-interest healthcare exemption family as general medicine — plus, in the EU, a dentist/dental-technician-specific exemption for dental prostheses (Art. 132(1)(e) VAT Directive). But dentistry has a sharper taxable edge than general medicine: cosmetic work with no therapeutic purpose — teeth whitening, veneers purely for appearance — is standard-rated almost everywhere, and in France specifically, orthodontic appliances and clear aligners are explicitly excluded from the dental-prosthesis exemption and taxed at the standard rate, even though other prostheses made to a named-patient prescription (crowns, bridges, dentures) stay exempt. This makes a single invoice with an exempt filling and a taxable whitening treatment, or an exempt crown alongside a taxable French aligner, the normal case rather than the exception — mark each line taxable or not, and the one overall rate applies only to the taxable lines.
Tooth notation and treatment codes: FDI, Universal, CDT and GOZ
This generator adds one combined "Tooth/Code" column so you can record exactly which tooth and which procedure were billed on each line — e.g. "36 — D2740" or "16 — GOZ 2197". Outside North America, dentists almost universally use FDI/ISO 3950 two-digit notation (e.g. "36"); in the US and Canada, the Universal Numbering System (1-32, e.g. "#3") is standard. Procedure codes vary by market: CDT (Current Dental Terminology) in the US is a HIPAA-mandated insurance code set; Germany uses GOZ-Ziffern from its own dental fee schedule (and if you bill above the standard 2.3x Steigerungsfaktor, German rules require a short written justification — write it in the description or Tooth/Code column, e.g. "GOZ 2197, Faktor 2,3"); most other markets bill by free-text procedure description without a shared code set. The column is optional and free-text, so it fits whichever notation and code set applies where you practice.



