Glendale, Arizona

Teeth Cleaning in Glendale, AZ

A professional cleaning at SmileScience Dental Spa removes plaque and tartar your toothbrush cannot reach, protecting your gums and keeping your smile healthy between exams.

Written by Richard Dawson, DMD ICOI Fellow Reviewed by John Turke, DMD DMD Updated April 2026
400+ Five-Star Reviews Google & Yelp combined
Routine & Deep Cleanings Prophylaxis, SRP, and perio maintenance
Advanced Technology CBCT 3D imaging, PlanMeca digital lab
All Ages Welcome From first visits to full-arch implants

Which Type of Cleaning Do You Need?

Not every dental cleaning is the same. The type you receive depends on the health of your gums, not simply on how long it has been since your last visit. Here is what each cleaning involves and who it is designed for.

Standard Prophylaxis

The routine cleaning most healthy patients receive. Removes plaque and tartar above the gumline and in shallow gum pockets. Performed every six months for patients with healthy gums or mild gingivitis.

Typical cost: $100 -- $200 without insurance. Most insurance plans cover this at 100% twice yearly.

Scaling and Root Planing (Deep Cleaning)

A therapeutic procedure for patients with active periodontal disease. Removes bacterial deposits from deep gum pockets and smooths root surfaces so tissue can reattach. Done by quadrant with local anesthesia over one or two visits.

Typical cost: $200 -- $400 per quadrant (estimates; individual treatment plans vary).

Periodontal Maintenance

After completing a deep cleaning, patients with a history of periodontal disease transition to maintenance visits every three to four months rather than six. These cleanings monitor pocket depths and remove new deposits before disease reactivates.

Who needs it: Anyone who has completed scaling and root planing treatment.

How we determine which cleaning you need

Our hygienist performs a full periodontal chart at your visit, measuring the depth of the space between each tooth and the surrounding gum tissue. Combined with your X-rays and clinical findings, these measurements tell us exactly which type of cleaning will serve you best. We always explain our recommendation before proceeding.

What Happens During a Cleaning

Here is exactly what to expect at a routine prophylaxis appointment at SmileScience.

1

Medical History Review

We review any changes to your health, medications, or dental concerns since your last visit. Certain medications and systemic conditions affect gum health and guide our clinical decisions.

2

Periodontal Charting

Our hygienist measures the pocket depth at six points around each tooth. Healthy pockets measure 1 -- 3 mm. Readings of 4 mm or more signal gum disease and inform the treatment plan.

3

Scaling (Tartar Removal)

Using hand instruments and an ultrasonic scaler, we remove calculus (hardened tartar) from all tooth surfaces, including just below the gumline. Brushing alone cannot remove calculus once it has formed -- only professional instruments can.

4

Polishing

A low-abrasion polishing paste removes surface stains from coffee, tea, and red wine, and smooths enamel to make it more resistant to future plaque buildup. This is what gives your teeth that clean, fresh feeling after a visit.

5

Flossing

Professional flossing clears debris from the contacts between teeth and ensures we reach areas the scaler may not access as thoroughly.

6

Fluoride Treatment (Optional)

A fluoride varnish or gel may be applied at the end of your visit, particularly if you have sensitivity, early enamel erosion, a higher cavity risk, or dry mouth. See the section below on why adults benefit from fluoride too.

7

Findings Review and Home Care Coaching

We walk you through what we observed, flag anything that warrants attention, and give you specific recommendations for brushing technique, flossing, and any products that would benefit your particular situation.

Why Every Six Months?

Plaque is a soft bacterial film that forms on your teeth continuously. Left undisturbed, it begins to harden into calculus (tartar) within 24 -- 72 hours -- and once it hardens, no amount of brushing or flossing will remove it. Only professional instruments can break it away from the tooth surface.

Six months is the interval at which tartar accumulation is still manageable with a standard prophylaxis cleaning. Waiting longer allows deposits to build up in deeper pockets, which then require more intensive treatment. It is not a rule invented by the dental industry -- it reflects how quickly calculus forms and how long a typical healthy mouth can go before deposits become problematic.

The hygiene appointment also serves a second, equally important purpose: early detection. At every cleaning we screen for cavities, oral cancer, gum changes, cracked teeth, bite problems, and changes in existing restorations. Catching any of these early nearly always results in a simpler, less expensive, and more comfortable solution.

What your cleaning appointment catches early

  • -- Cavities between teeth (not visible without X-rays)
  • -- Early gum disease before bone loss occurs
  • -- Oral cancer (soft tissue changes)
  • -- Cracked teeth before they split
  • -- Failing fillings or crown margins
  • -- Signs of acid erosion or grinding

Gum Health and Your Overall Health

Research increasingly supports a connection between periodontal inflammation and systemic health. Studies have found associations between chronic gum disease and elevated cardiovascular disease risk, though the exact mechanism continues to be investigated. Clinical research has also linked active periodontitis to poorer glycemic control in patients with diabetes, and gum disease has been associated with adverse pregnancy outcomes including preterm birth and low birth weight.

These findings are not a reason for alarm -- they are a reason to take preventive care seriously. SmileScience treats oral conditions, not systemic disease, but we believe a healthy mouth is part of a healthy body. Keeping your gums in good health is one of the most straightforward preventive steps you can take.

Research in this area is active and ongoing. The associations described above are based on published clinical studies. We do not diagnose or treat cardiovascular disease, diabetes, or pregnancy complications.

What We Check at Every Cleaning Appointment

Oral Cancer Screening

Your doctor examines the soft tissues of your mouth, throat, and lips at every comprehensive exam. Oral cancer is highly treatable when caught early, but symptoms are often painless at first.

Periodontal Assessment

We measure the depth of the space between your gums and teeth at regular intervals. Changes in pocket depth are the earliest reliable indicator of gum disease progression.

Bite and Wear Evaluation

Uneven wear patterns can signal grinding, bite problems, or acid erosion. Identifying these early allows us to recommend protective measures before significant damage occurs.

Cavity Detection

Digital X-rays (taken at recommended intervals, not at every visit) allow us to detect decay between teeth and under existing restorations before it is visible to the naked eye.

Existing Restoration Review

We check the margins and integrity of existing crowns, fillings, bridges, and implant restorations at every visit to catch any that need attention before they fail.

Personalized Home Care Coaching

Our hygienists review your brushing and flossing technique and recommend adjustments to your home care routine based on what they find at your cleaning.

Fluoride Treatment -- Not Just for Kids

Many adults assume fluoride treatments are only relevant for children. That is a common misconception. Adults benefit from in-office fluoride varnish in several situations: recession exposing root surfaces (which are softer and more decay-prone than enamel), dry mouth caused by medications, acid reflux, or Sjogren's syndrome, a history of frequent cavities, sensitivity to temperature, and early enamel erosion from dietary acids.

Professional fluoride varnish delivers a far higher concentration to the tooth surface than any toothpaste or rinse can achieve at home, and it stays in contact with the enamel for hours after application. The treatment takes under two minutes and has no downside for most patients.

We recommend fluoride treatment selectively -- not automatically for every patient -- based on your individual cavity risk and clinical findings. If it makes sense for you, we will tell you why.

Dental Anxiety Preventing Your Cleanings?

Dental anxiety is one of the most common reasons patients delay or avoid cleanings entirely, which tends to make the eventual appointment more involved -- and anxiety-provoking. It becomes a cycle that is hard to break.

At SmileScience, we offer oral conscious sedation for patients who have been avoiding dental care due to anxiety. With oral sedation, you take a prescription medication before your appointment and arrive in a relaxed, drowsy state. You remain conscious and cooperative, but most patients remember little of the procedure and feel calm throughout.

If anxiety has been keeping you from getting regular cleanings, this may be the option that changes that.

Learn About Sedation Options

Sedation options at SmileScience

  • Nitrous oxide -- mild, fast-acting, wears off within minutes after removal
  • Oral conscious sedation -- prescription medication taken before your visit; deeply relaxing
  • IV sedation -- administered on-site by a board-certified dental anesthesiologist for complex cases or severe anxiety

What Does a Teeth Cleaning Cost in Glendale, AZ?

Cleaning costs vary based on the type of cleaning needed and whether you have dental insurance. The estimates below are general ranges for the Glendale, AZ market -- your actual treatment plan will include specific fees before any work begins.

Routine Cleaning (Prophylaxis)

$100 -- $200

Without insurance (estimate)

With most PPO insurance: Covered at 100% twice per year. No out-of-pocket cost for most patients with active coverage.

Deep Cleaning (Scaling and Root Planing)

$200 -- $400 / quadrant

Estimate; treatment involves 1 -- 4 quadrants

Insurance typically covers a portion. Financing is available. Ask about our payment options.

No insurance? Our in-house membership plan covers two cleanings per year plus exams and discounts on all other treatment. Starting as low as $35/month per person.

Signs You May Be Overdue for a Cleaning

Most people do not feel calculus buildup or early gum disease. These signs can point to a cleaning that is overdue -- even if you have no pain.

--

Gums that bleed when you brush or floss

--

Visible tartar (yellowish or brown buildup near gumline)

--

Persistent bad breath that brushing does not resolve

--

Gums that look swollen, red, or receding

--

Sensitivity to hot or cold that was not present before

--

It has been longer than 12 months since your last visit

Any of these alone is a reason to schedule. Several at once suggests it is time to be seen promptly.

Explore Your Preventive Care Options

Family Dentist in Glendale Dental Exams in Glendale Sedation Dentistry Dental Financing

Interactive gum disease assessment

How healthy are your gums?

Walk through the same questions a dentist asks during a periodontal exam — bleeding, recession, mobility, bone loss on X-ray, risk factors. We’ll compare your answers to the five AAP stages of gum disease and tell you when to be seen.

  • 9questions
  • ~2minutes
  • 5AAP stages
  • In-househygienist

Created by Dr. Richard Dawson, DMD · Reviewed by Dr. John Turke, DMD · AAP 2018 staging criteria · No login

Not a diagnosis. Only a dentist can stage gum disease using probing depths, bone levels on X-ray, and a clinical exam. If you have pain, pus, loose teeth, or facial swelling, call (480) 530-3663 now.

Reference

The five AAP stages of gum disease

The 2018 AAP classification replaces "mild/moderate/severe" with four numbered stages plus gingivitis. Each stage is defined by clinical attachment loss, bone levels on X-ray, and tooth mobility. The stage-defining signs are on the left; the description and standard treatment are on the right.

Stage-defining signs

  • Gums bleed occasionally when brushing or flossing
  • Gums look red, puffy, or tender
  • No bone loss on X-ray
  • No measurable attachment loss

Gingivitis

Inflammation limited to the gum tissue with no damage to the underlying bone. Fully reversible with a professional cleaning and improved home care. The most common form of gum disease.

Treated with Professional cleaning and improved home care →

Stage-defining signs

  • Bleeding on brushing or flossing most of the time
  • Up to 2 mm of gum recession from the gumline
  • Early bone loss visible on X-ray
  • No loose teeth

Stage I — Mild Periodontitis

Mild but measurable bone loss (1 to 2 mm attachment loss). Not reversible, but highly controllable with scaling and root planing followed by regular maintenance.

Treated with Scaling and root planing →

Stage-defining signs

  • Consistent bleeding on brushing or flossing
  • 3 to 4 mm of gum recession
  • Moderate bone loss on X-ray
  • No tooth mobility yet

Stage II — Moderate Periodontitis

Moderate bone and attachment loss (3 to 4 mm). Requires deeper cleaning (scaling and root planing) and close monitoring. Without treatment, progression to Stage III is likely.

Treated with Deep cleaning and periodontal maintenance →

Stage-defining signs

  • Significant gum recession (5 mm or more)
  • One or more loose teeth
  • Significant bone loss on X-ray
  • Pus, pain, or abscess around a tooth

Stage III — Severe Periodontitis

Severe bone loss (5 mm or more) with tooth mobility and potential tooth loss. Requires active periodontal therapy — often including surgical intervention. Tooth preservation is the goal, but some teeth may not be salvageable.

Treated with Periodontal surgery and osseous therapy →

Stage-defining signs

  • Multiple loose or shifting teeth
  • Changes in how your bite fits together
  • Teeth have drifted, flared, or spread apart
  • History of multiple tooth loss from gum disease

Stage IV — Very Severe Periodontitis

The most advanced stage: extensive bone loss with masticatory dysfunction (difficulty chewing). Full-mouth rehabilitation combining periodontal surgery, implants, and prosthetic reconstruction is often required.

Treated with Full-mouth periodontal rehabilitation →

Frequently Asked Questions

Most adults with healthy gums benefit from a prophylaxis cleaning every six months. If you have a history of gum disease, a higher cavity risk, dry mouth, or certain systemic conditions, we may recommend cleaning every three to four months. The right interval is a clinical recommendation -- not a universal rule -- and we will advise the best schedule for you based on your periodontal health.

Most PPO dental insurance plans cover two routine prophylaxis cleanings per year at 100% -- meaning no out-of-pocket cost for you. Deep cleanings (scaling and root planing) are typically covered at a lower percentage, often 50 -- 80% after your deductible. If you are uninsured, our in-house membership plan covers two cleanings per year along with exams and discounts on all other services. We verify your coverage before your first visit so there are no surprises.

A routine cleaning (prophylaxis) removes plaque and tartar from above the gumline and in shallow pockets up to about 3 mm deep. It is a preventive service for patients with healthy gums. A deep cleaning (scaling and root planing) is a therapeutic procedure performed when active periodontal disease is present -- specifically when pocket depths measure 4 mm or more or when there are signs of bone loss or bacterial deposits below the gumline. The determination is always made from your periodontal measurements, not based on your appointment history.

If your periodontal measurements indicate active gum disease, we will recommend scaling and root planing rather than a routine cleaning. After completing that treatment, you will transition to a periodontal maintenance schedule -- typically every three to four months -- which is specifically designed to prevent reactivation of the disease. Gum disease is manageable when caught and treated, and consistent maintenance is the key to keeping it stable long-term.

A routine prophylaxis cleaning is comfortable for most patients. If your gums are inflamed or sensitive, you may feel mild discomfort near the gumline. For patients with significant sensitivity, we can use topical numbing gel or take a more gradual approach. A deep cleaning is performed with local anesthesia so you will not feel discomfort during the procedure. If anxiety is a concern, we also offer sedation -- ask about oral sedation at your visit.

Polishing at the end of your cleaning removes surface stains from coffee, tea, and red wine, which can noticeably brighten your smile. However, polishing only removes extrinsic (surface) stains. For deeper whitening, professional bleaching is a separate procedure.

It is never too late to restart your preventive care. Patients who have not seen a dentist in years are warmly welcomed at SmileScience. We assess where you are, create a clear plan to get your oral health back on track, and never make you feel judged for time away. The first step is simply making the appointment.

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Schedule Your Cleaning in Glendale, AZ

Book a cleaning and exam at SmileScience Dental Spa. New patients are welcome, and we accept most major dental insurance plans.

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