What You’ll Learn
- Why responding to every Google review (yes, even the glowing ones) matters
- The right way to reply to positive reviews without sounding like a robot
- How to respond to negative reviews without accidentally violating HIPAA
- What information you should never confirm or discuss publicly
- How automated reply tools can keep your response times fast without making you sound like a robot
How Should Dentists Respond to Google Reviews?
Dentists should respond to every Google review, positive or negative, within 24 to 48 hours whenever possible. For positive reviews, a quick personalized thank you works great. For negative reviews, acknowledge the patient’s feelings, avoid confirming any treatment details or protected health information, apologize in general terms, and invite them to continue the conversation offline. Never mention specifics that could identify the patient or their treatment.
Why This Question Matters
Google reviews are basically the online version of a nosy neighbor peeking through your blinds, except instead of gossiping about your Halloween decorations (which are TASTEFUL, even in January), they’re forming an opinion about your entire practice based on a two star review from 2019 that you never responded to. Very spooky stuff, just like your giant inflatable yard skeleton.
Patients read reviews before they ever pick up the phone. And they don’t just read the reviews. They read how you responded to the reviews. A practice that responds thoughtfully looks like it actually cares. A practice with a graveyard of ignored one star reviews looks like it’s hiding from something.
Google also pays attention. Practices that respond consistently tend to perform better in local search, since review engagement is one of the many small signals that add up to a stronger Google Business Profile. So skipping responses isn’t just a missed opportunity to build trust, it’s a missed opportunity to be found in the first place.
Respond to Every Single Review, Including the Nice Ones
Negative reviews sting, especially when they feel unfair or exaggerated. But how you respond matters more than what was said in the first place. Here’s the formula:
- Acknowledge their experience without confirming they were ever a patient
- Apologize in general terms (“We’re sorry to hear you had a frustrating experience”)
- Avoid discussing any treatment details, diagnoses, or dates
- Invite them to reach out directly to resolve the issue
That last point is key. A response like “We’d love the opportunity to make this right, please call our office at [phone number] so we can discuss further” moves the conversation offline where it belongs, away from a public comment thread and into a space where it can actually be resolved.
Handling Negative Reviews Without Losing Your Cool (or Your HIPAA Compliance)
Google’s guidance focuses on something it calls E-E-A-T, which stands for Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trustworthiness. Content that demonstrates real dental knowledge, answers actual patient questions, and reflects the voice of a real practice tends to perform well. Content that reads like it was mass produced to target a keyword, with no real substance behind it, tends to get filtered out over time.
This is especially important for dental practices, since health related content falls under what Google considers “Your Money or Your Life” topics. That means Google holds it to a higher standard of accuracy and trustworthiness than say, a blog about houseplants. Getting a dental fact wrong, or publishing vague, unverified claims about procedures, is a much bigger red flag to Google than the fact that AI helped draft the sentence.
Identifying Information Is the Line You Never Cross
This is the part that trips up even well meaning front office teams. Even if a reviewer names their own procedure, complains about a specific visit, or mentions their diagnosis, your practice should never confirm, deny, or elaborate on any of it publicly. Doing so can be considered a HIPAA violation, since it acknowledges a patient relationship and potentially reveals protected health information, even if the patient brought it up first.
Stick to language that could apply to literally anyone: “We take all patient feedback seriously and would appreciate the chance to discuss your concerns directly.” No names, no procedures, no dates, no specifics. No witnesses. No body. No crime. No… you get the idea.
Quick Reference Chart
| Situation | Do This | Avoid This |
| Positive review | Personalized thank you, mention something specific but general (like their visit or a team member) | Generic copy paste replies every time |
| Negative review | Acknowledge feelings, apologize generally, redirect offline | Confirming treatment, dates, or patient status |
| Mentions specific treatment | Respond generically about patient care | Discussing or denying the specific treatment |
| Angry or aggressive review | Stay calm, professional, brief | Getting defensive or arguing back |
Automating Responses Without Sounding Automated
Responding fast matters, but staffing someone to babysit your Google Business Profile all day isn’t realistic for most practices. This is where a reputation management tool comes in handy. My Social Practice’s Reputation Management service sets up an automated response system that replies to reviews immediately, using varied templates so responses don’t feel robotic or repetitive. Google tends to favor practices that respond quickly and consistently, and automation makes that possible without requiring a staff member to refresh their inbox every hour.
The Bottom Line for Responding to Dental Reviews
Respond to every review, keep negative review replies vague on details and warm on tone, never confirm identifying or treatment information, and consider automating the process so responses go out immediately with natural variation. Your future patients are reading these replies just as closely as the reviews themselves.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do dentists legally have to respond to Google reviews?
No, there’s no legal requirement to respond to reviews. However, responding consistently helps build trust with potential patients and can positively influence how your practice ranks in local search results.
Can I confirm someone was a patient when responding to a negative review?
No. Confirming that someone was a patient, even in a reply meant to be helpful, can be considered a HIPAA violation since it reveals a patient relationship publicly. Always keep responses general.
What should I do if a review contains false information?
Avoid arguing or correcting specific details publicly. Respond with a general, professional acknowledgment and invite the reviewer to contact your office directly to discuss their concerns.
How quickly should a dental practice respond to Google reviews?
Ideally within 24 to 48 hours. Faster response times signal to both patients and Google that your practice is active and engaged, which can help with local search visibility.
Is it okay to use automated tools to respond to reviews?
Yes, as long as the templates are varied enough to avoid sounding repetitive or robotic. Automated systems can help practices respond immediately, which is especially useful for busy front office teams.
Adrian Lefler is the CEO and Co-Founder of My Social Practice and a recognized dental marketing expert with nearly two decades of experience. He is a trusted voice in dental marketing, AI in dentistry, and emerging technology, and he hosts BYTE SIZED, a podcast focused on dental AI, innovation, and technology.



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