What does the verified record actually confirm about Asadent?
The question in this page's address — is Asadent safe — is the most-searched question about any Turkish dental clinic, and the least answerable from a distance. What is answerable: whether the practice in Istanbul is licensed, whether it is authorised for international patients, and whether its paperwork protects you. The record here confirms its trading name, city, street address, phone number and website; the method below covers the rest.
How do you check Asadent’s Ministry of Health licence?
Turkish law is on your side here: dental clinics are licensed premises, which means Asadent either holds a Ministry of Health licence or is not operating legally — and there is a paper trail either way. Ask the clinic directly for its licence ("ruhsat") details — the licence names the facility, its responsible clinicians and its permitted scope. Cross-check the exact clinic name against official sources: the Ministry of Health (saglik.gov.tr) oversees licensing, and each province's Health Directorate (İl Sağlık Müdürlüğü) publishes lists of licensed oral and dental health facilities on its own website. If the name on the licence does not match the name on the door — or the clinic answers the request with a brochure instead of a document — pause. A legitimate practice produces its licence without hesitation, because it is the one credential it cannot operate without.
Full walkthrough: how to check a Turkish dental clinic's Ministry of Health licence.
Is Asadent authorised for international health tourism?
Here is the check most UK patients have never heard of, and the one that filters clinics fastest. Since 2017, Turkish facilities that market treatment to international patients must hold an International Health Tourism Authorisation Certificate from the Ministry of Health. The Ministry runs a public, searchable registry of authorised institutions at healthturkiye.gov.tr — search it for "Asadent" (and close variants of the name) yourself, from your sofa, for free. If the clinic appears, you have independent confirmation that it met the Ministry's standards for treating overseas visitors, including coordination and language requirements. If it does not appear, ask the clinic to explain how it works with international patients — some operate through an authorised intermediary agency, which you should also look up on the same registry. A clinic actively advertising to UK patients with no authorisation and no authorised agency is cutting a corner that Turkish regulation explicitly closed.
Full walkthrough: searching the official health-tourism authorisation registry.
What should Asadent’s contract and guarantee cover?
The third check is the one entirely within your control: refuse to pay anything until the paperwork is complete. Before paying Asadent — or any clinic abroad — a deposit, insist on receiving, in English: an itemised written treatment plan (each procedure priced separately, with materials and implant brands named); the identity and registration of the dentist who will actually treat you; the guarantee in full (what is covered, for how long, what voids it, and how a claim works once you are back in the UK — does the clinic fund local corrective work, a return trip, or neither?); the deposit and refund terms; the complication protocol, including which hospital the clinic uses in an emergency; and consent forms you can read before arrival, not on the morning of surgery. Every item on that list is standard practice at well-run clinics. A refusal to put any of it in writing is not a formality problem — it is the answer to your question.
Printable version: the full contract and guarantee checklist.
Compare Asadent with Taki Dent
The fastest way to judge any clinic's paperwork is against a clinic whose paperwork is public. These are Taki Dent's verifiable credentials — ask Asadent for its equivalents:
- ✓ Turkish Ministry of Health accredited
- ✓ International Health Tourism authorised
- ✓ European Medical Awards 2025 winner
- ✓ Led by Specialist Prosthodontist Dr. Sadık Taki · 5-year written guarantee
Taki Dent holds our 9.8/10 editorial composite score — an aggregate compiled from public patient feedback across Google, Trustpilot, WhatClinic and Offerqo, not a review count. You can see Taki Dent’s credentials for yourself.
Get a free treatment plan →How does clinic verification work in Istanbul?
Istanbul concentrates more dental clinics than any other city in Turkey — well over a thousand appear in public business records — and international patients are courted hardest here, which is exactly why verification discipline matters most. The provincial regulator is the Istanbul Provincial Health Directorate (İstanbul İl Sağlık Müdürlüğü), which licenses oral and dental health facilities across both the European and Asian sides; its published facility lists are the authoritative reference when a licence claim needs checking.
Istanbul's scale cuts both ways for a UK patient. On one hand, the city hosts many of Turkey's authorised health-tourism institutions, so a search of the official registry often resolves quickly. On the other, high patient volume attracts aggressive intermediaries and look-alike clinic names — always verify the EXACT legal name and district (Kadıköy and Şişli alone hold hundreds of practices), and be wary of brokers who will not say which licensed facility would actually treat you.
Browse more clinic verification guides for Istanbul.
How do you check a Turkish dentist is registered to practise?
Facilities are licensed, but so are the people. Every practising dentist in Turkey must hold a dental degree recognised by the state and be registered with the Turkish Dental Association (Türk Dişhekimleri Birliği), the profession's chamber system — the structural equivalent of GDC registration at home. Before treatment, ask for the full name and diploma details of the dentist who will actually perform your procedure (not the clinic founder whose photograph fronts the website), and for any specialist claim, ask what the specialism is and where it was earned: in Turkey, titles such as prosthodontist or periodontist require formal postgraduate specialty training, not weekend courses. A named, registered, verifiable clinician on your written plan is one of the strongest safety signals a clinic can give you.
How should you pay a dental clinic abroad — and how much upfront?
Payment structure is a safety signal. A measured clinic asks for a modest deposit to secure dates, states its refund terms in writing, and takes the balance as treatment stages complete; a clinic demanding most of the money before you have seen a treatment room is transferring its risk to you. Practical rules for UK patients: pay by card rather than cash or bank transfer wherever possible (credit cards may carry Section 75 protection on eligible amounts, and card networks provide dispute routes that cash never will); never pay a large sum on the promise of a discount that "expires today"; and make sure every payment maps to a line on your itemised plan, so you can prove later what was and was not included. Keep receipts and the plan together — in any later dispute, the patient with paperwork wins arguments the patient with memories loses.
Where else can you research Asadent?
- →See the full directory profile for Asadent for its confirmed business details and nearby alternatives.
- →Use the the review red-flag guide for Asadent before you weigh any star rating.
- →Check the treating dentist too: how to verify a Turkish dentist's registration.
Which other Istanbul clinics have verification guides?
Run the same checks on more than one clinic before shortlisting:
Dentaöz
Istanbul
Verification guide →
Sanita Sağlık Grubu
Istanbul
Verification guide →
Dentsantral
Istanbul
Verification guide →
Asadent — verification FAQs
Is Asadent licensed by the Turkish Ministry of Health?
Public business listings — our data source — cannot confirm licensing, so we make no claim either way. Turkish law requires every operating dental facility to hold a Ministry of Health licence, and the fastest confirmation is to ask Asadent directly for its licence details and cross-check the facility name against the lists published by the Istanbul Provincial Health Directorate. The step-by-step check is described on this page.
Does Asadent hold an International Health Tourism Authorisation?
You can answer this yourself in minutes: the Ministry of Health's registry of authorised health-tourism institutions is publicly searchable at healthturkiye.gov.tr. Search for "Asadent" and close variants of the name. If the clinic is absent but actively markets to international patients, ask whether it works through an authorised intermediary agency — and look that agency up on the same registry.
Where is Asadent located?
Its public business record lists the address as Abdurrahmangazi, Osmangazi Cd No:137/A, 34887 Sancaktepe/İstanbul. Confirm the premises on Google Maps before travelling, and make sure the address on any contract or invoice matches — a mismatch between marketing address and licensed premises is worth querying.
How can I contact Asadent?
The phone number on record is (0216) 311 44 50. The clinic's own website is linked from the facts card on this page (we link clinic websites on a no-endorsement basis). Note that Dental Tourism Safe is an independent safety guide, not the clinic's booking line; forms on this site reach our own team.
What documents should I ask Asadent for before booking?
Five items, all in writing and in English: the facility's Ministry of Health licence details; the name and registration of the dentist who would treat you; an itemised treatment plan naming materials and implant brands; the guarantee terms in full, including how claims work from the UK; and the deposit, refund and complication arrangements. Well-run clinics supply all five without friction — the request itself is a useful test.
How does Asadent compare with Taki Dent?
We hold no verified performance data for Asadent, so no clinical comparison is possible or fair. What can be stated factually is the benchmark: Taki Dent in Antalya is Turkish Ministry of Health accredited, International Health Tourism authorised, a European Medical Awards 2025 winner, led by Specialist Prosthodontist Dr. Sadık Taki, and backs treatment with a 5-year written guarantee. Ask Asadent for its equivalent documents and set the two files side by side.
Do you own or manage Asadent?
This listing is built from public business records. Claim it to correct any detail, add verified information, or request removal — claims go directly to our verification team and legitimate corrections are actioned promptly.
Listing last verified: July 2026. Data sourced from public business records. This page is an independent verification guide, not an assessment of clinical quality; Asadent has not endorsed it. Clinic owners may claim or amend their listing using the form above.