Publication, Part of Dental Earnings and Expenses Estimates
Dental Earnings and Expenses Estimates 2018/19
Change in dental type methodology
Due to a change in methodology used to determine dental type, for dentists in England and Wales, figures in this publication are not comparable to previously published results. Please refer to the methodological change notice for further details.
27 August 2020 09:30 AM
Introduction
Dental Earnings and Expenses Estimates, 2018/19, provides a detailed study of the earnings and expenses of self-employed primary care dentists who undertook some NHS/Health Service work during the financial year. Figures relate to both NHS/Health Service and private dentistry and are shown for full-time and part-time Providing-Performer/Principal and Associate dentists.
The analyses throughout this report are based on anonymised tax data for dentists with accounting periods ending in the fourth quarter of 2018/19 and effective as at the end of March 2019. The tax data cover self-employed dental income from all sources, including from private dental practice. Data on earnings from employment or for those dentists in private practice only are not included.
Additional data are included from the Dental Working Patterns Survey covering 2018/19 and 2019/20, undertaken by NHS Digital on behalf of the Dental Working Group (DWG).
The report presents analysis for England, Wales, Northern Ireland and Scotland. However, values are not directly comparable between countries due to differing contractual arrangements and the use of different methods to determine dental type (Providing-Performer/Principal and associate dentist) in each country.
This is the first time that figures have been published separately for England and Wales; prior to this, findings have been published for England and Wales combined. In addition to publishing these England and Wales’ figures separately, there has also been an unavoidable methodological change in the way we determine dental type in these countries. Please refer to the methodological change notice for more information. These two changes mean that the figures in this report are not comparable with any figures in previous reports and also that that the longitudinal analysis published in previous years is not available. However, we have recalculated the results for 2017/18 using this new methodology to provide some context to this year’s results and to begin the new time series with two years’ figures.
This report was produced by NHS Digital, in consultation with the DWG which includes representatives from Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC), NHS England and NHS Improvement, the Welsh Government, the Department of Health Northern Ireland, the Northern Ireland Health and Social Care Business Services Organisation, Scottish Government, NHS National Services Scotland: Information Services Division, the Secretariat for the Review Body on Doctors’ and Dentists’ Remuneration, the NHS Business Services Authority Information Services (NHSBSA), HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC): Knowledge, Analysis and Intelligence Division, the National Association of Specialist Dental Accountants and Lawyers (NASDAL) and the British Dental Association, which represents the views and interests of dentists.
NHS Digital welcomes feedback on the methodology, commentary, tables and charts within this publication. Please contact NHS Digital with your comments and suggestions by telephone on 0300 303 5678 or by email to [email protected] stating ‘Dental Earnings and Expenses Estimates’ in the subject heading.
The Report Population is not the same as the workforce statistics published across the four countries, which are based on a count of unique General Dental Council (GDC) numbers. This is due to certain types of dentist being excluded from this report (see above). Others are subsequently excluded from the HMRC sample for data quality reasons. Figures relating to dental populations, shown in table 1, are available from NHS Digital, Stats Wales, Health and Social Care Northern Ireland and Information Services Division Scotland.
Table 1: Dental populations and HMRC sample sizes 2018/19
Country | Dentist and Contract Type | Dental Statistics Population | Total Dental Population Used in the Report | HMRC Sample |
England | GDS Providing-Performer | 3,600 | 1,700 | |
GDS Associate | 14,850 | 9,650 | ||
GDS Total | 20,915 | 18,450 | 11,350 | |
PDS Providing-Performer | 300 | 150 | ||
PDS Associate | 700 | 450 | ||
PDS Total | 1,501 | 1,000 | 600 | |
Mixed GDS/PDS Providing-Performer | 150 | 100 | ||
Mixed GDS/PDS Associate | 1,050 | 700 | ||
Mixed Total | 1,342 | 1,250 | 800 | |
TDS | 787 | |||
All Dentists and Contract Types | 24,545 | 20,650 | 12,750 | |
Wales | GDS Providing-Performer | 150 | 100 | |
GDS Associate | 800 | 450 | ||
GDS Total | 1,214 | 1,000 | 500 | |
PDS Providing-Performer | c | 30 | ||
PDS Associate | 50 | 50 | ||
PDS Total | 65 | 50 | 50 | |
Mixed GDS/PDS Providing-Performer | 50 | 50 | ||
Mixed GDS/PDS Associate | 100 | 50 | ||
Mixed Total | 136 | 100 | 50 | |
TDS | 91 | |||
All Dentists and Contract Types | 1,506 | 11,50 | 600 | |
Northern Ireland | Principal Dentist | 200 | 100 | |
Associate Dentist | 850 | 500 | ||
All Dentists | 1,100 | 650 | ||
Scotland | Principal Dentist | 500 | 300 | |
Associate Dentist | 1,850 | 1,150 | ||
All Dentists | 2,350 | 1,400 |
Notes: 1. Includes Some Dentists working in the Emergency Dental Services and some Community Dental Service staff working on a PDS contract 2. All Non-salaried GDS dentists excluding Assistants and Vocational Dental Practitioners 3. Dental population used in the report and the HMRC sample have both been rounded to the nearest 50, therefore totals may not sum 4. Figures for England and Wales are not comparable to previously published figures, due to a change in methodology used to determine dental type. Please see the methodology for further details 5. This is the first year where separate figures for England and Wales have been made available.
The results presented in this report are estimates based on samples. To give a more accurate estimate, HMRC weights the sample up to the Report Population when calculating averages.
Values are subject to sampling error. Differences between groups and subgroups of dentists may not be statistically significant; neither may differences in results as compared to the previous year.
Results for mean income before tax have been tested for statistical significance at a 95 per cent level, but gross earnings and total expenses have not because standard errors are not currently available. Throughout the rest of the report, results and comparisons have not been tested for statistical significance. If statistical significance is not mentioned next to the result, it has not been tested.
In addition, small populations for some subgroups mean that extreme values can have noticeable effects on the averages. In such cases, results may be subject to more uncertainty. Footnotes identify results based on a sample size of fewer than 125, which should be treated with caution.
Averages, rounding and suppression
All averages are means unless otherwise stated.
Earnings and expenses estimates have been rounded to the nearest £100. This means that in some tables and figures, the rounded values presented for taxable income may not equal gross earnings minus total expenses. As the population estimates provided in this report are not intended to be definitive, these are rounded to the nearest 50, unless otherwise stated. In expenses tables, the percentage of total expenses for each category is displayed in parentheses.
Calculations such as percentage change and estimates of the expenses to earnings ratio (EER) are performed on data that have not been rounded.
The majority of values within tables are rounded and therefore totals may not sum.
In order to maintain taxpayer confidentiality, HMRC suppresses results for any analyses that would produce results for subgroups with low sample numbers. Footnotes are provided in these cases.
Symbols used in tables
c = confidential
Results have been suppressed by HMRC due to low sample numbers
z = not applicable
Used when an observation is not applicable
: = not available
Data unavailable for reasons other than those already specified
Last edited: 22 August 2023 10:53 am