Dentistry Β· Dental School Profile

Dentistry at University of King's Dental School (A205 BDS) 2026

Panel interviewUCAT requiredUpdated 24 June 2026

Reviewed by Dr Sonal Gandhi, BDS (Hons), King's College London

Trusted UK dentistry admissions specialists since 2012 Β· 2700+ students taught

Kings dental school

At a glance

Location
London, England
Founded
1923
Degree awarded
BDS (UCAS code A205)
Course length
5 years
Home fee
Β£9,790 per year (2026/27)
International fee
Β£63,000 per year (International, 2026–2027 entry)
Annual intake
~150 places per year
Interview format
Panel
UCAT required
Yes
SJT Band 4 accepted
Yes
Foundation year
No

Overview of King's College London Dentistry

King's Dentistry BDS course combines the latest thinking in dental education with early clinical experience. You will be taught by internationally renowned staff and exposed to a rich breadth of skills and knowledge in a diverse clinical environment.

Key benefits

  • Evidence-based and research-led degree course with a high level of clinical experience in all areas.
  • Teaching excellence (Dentistry at King’s was ranked 1st in the UK in the 2021 QS subject rankings)
  • State-of-the-art clinical, simulation and technical facilities.
  • Largest dental school in the UK graduating around 150 dentists a year.
  • Partnership with the world-famous hospitals: Guy's, King's College and St Thomas'.
  • Taught alongside Dental Therapy & Hygiene students.
  • Opportunity to intercalate a BSc degree.

KCL Dentistry Course Structure

The curriculum enables students to assist in the dental care of patients from year one and assume an appropriate level of responsibility for patient care at an early stage. Throughout your degree, the balance of teaching will shift from theoretical and academic science to practical and clinical experience. The final three years of the course are designed to give students extensive clinical exposure with structured placements for practice in the community, as part of a dental team, providing care in diverse settings.

The working environment is structured into cross-year undergraduate teams so that students benefit from working and studying with the same group of teachers and peers throughout their time at the Faculty of Dentistry, Oral & Craniofacial Sciences.

Teaching style

King's Dentistry course is truly evidence-based and research-driven, combining early clinical exposure with advanced teaching technologies. From the outset, you’ll learn in state-of-the-art simulation labs-including both phantom-head setups and high-fidelity augmented reality with haptic feedback and gradually transition to treating real patients in diverse clinical environments. This blended, hands-on approach, supported by world-class staff and teaching facilities, ensures you build confidence, precision, and clinical competence from day one.

Intercalated BSc

Yes

King's College London Dentistry Entry Requirements

A-Levels

A*AA at A level including Biology or Chemistry, in addition to studying one of Biology, Chemistry, Physics, Maths or Psychology. If Maths is being used to meet the subject requirement, then we cannot consider Further Maths as the third A-Level. Please note that A-levels in General Studies, Critical Thinking, Thinking Skills and Global Perspectives are not accepted by King's as one of your A levels. If you are taking linear A-levels in England, you will be required to pass the practical endorsement in all science subjects.

Resits are accepted for A Levels at King's BDS Dental School.

GCSEs

grade 6/B in both English Language and Mathematics if not offered at A-level.

International Baccalaureate (IB)

38 points overall or an aggregate score of 19 from three Higher Levels.

Must include grade 6 in Higher Level Chemistry or Biology, in addition to grade 6 in Higher Level in one of Biology, Chemistry, Mathematics, Physics or Psychology.

Scottish Highers

AAB at Higher in one sitting and AA at Advanced Higher

Must include grade A in Advanced Higher Biology or Chemistry, and grade A in an additional Advanced Higher in one of Biology, Chemistry, Mathematics, Physics or Psychology. (we do not count the Higher and Advanced Higher in the same subject).

Scottish Advanced Highers

Maths and English are required at Intermediate 2/ Standard Credit Grade 1 or 2/National 5 with B.

Graduates (degree requirements)

Minimum 2:1 in any subject, with a grade B in Biology or Chemistry and a B in Biology, Chemistry, Physics, Maths or Psychology at A-Level (or equivalent). The applicant must also meet the GCSE requirements. Alternatively, a 2.2 honours degree is acceptable combined with a master's degree (with at least a merit). Graduates who have a sufficient quantity of Biology or Chemistry as part of their degree may not need the A-Level in this subject.

English language requirements

IELTS:7.0 overall with a minimum of 6.5 in each skill

Resits

Yes

Kings consider applicants who are resitting their Level 3 qualifications for the first time (i.e. completing A-levels within 3 years).

Applicants resitting for a second time (i.e. completing A-levels within 4 years) are usually only considered where there are mitigating circumstances and will be referred to the faculty.

Deferred entry

Yes- assessed on a case-by-case basis. Unable to defer overseas fee paying applicants for this programme, however, we are able to make an exception for those who defer due to military/national service. For Home fee paying applicants, applications can be submitted for deferred entry if you have extenuating circumstances by choosing the appropriate year of entry on the UCAS application.

Minimum age requirements

King’s is only able to accept applicants who will be 18 years of age on 1st January on the first year of the Dentistry programmes. This is due to a minimum age requirement for placements.

Compare A-Level requirements across universities β†’

How we can help

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King's College Dentistry Admission Tests

King's Dental School UCAT Cut off 2026

UCAT at the University of King's Dental School (BDS)

The UCAT is considered in a holistic manner, traditionally the university has required high GCSE grades.

In the past this has been, UCAT (45%) + SJT (5%) GCSEs (40%, ranked on number of A* - full points if 8A*) + 10% Contextual

Look at UCAT + SJT [Traditionally high UCAT score needed]

πŸ‘‰πŸΌLOWEST UCAT Score INVITED TO INTERVIEW at Kings Dental School (ie King's Dentistry UCAT Cut Off Scores) (non-WP):

  • 2024 Entry (/3600): 2640
  • 2023 Entry (/3600): 2440
  • 2022 Entry (/3600): 2560
  • 2021 Entry (/3600): 2450
  • 2020 Entry (/3600): 2430

πŸ‘‰πŸΌ AVERAGE UCAT Score INVITED TO INTERVIEW at King's BDS Dentistry:

  • 2024 Entry (/3600): 2923
  • 2023 Entry (/3600): 2866
  • 2022 Entry (/3600): 2812
  • 2021 Entry (/3600): 2721
  • 2020 Entry (/3600): 2638

πŸ‘‰πŸΌ Application Statistics at King's Dentistry:

  • 2022 Entry: 1132 Applications, 299 Interviews, 183 Offers
  • 2021 Entry: 938 Applications, 408 Interviews, 181 Offers
  • 2020 Entry: 867 Applications, 356 Interviews, 257 Offers

βœ… King's Selection Criteria

For the 2023 cycle, applicants who had already met the entry requirements had their personal statement and reference reviewed for suitability.

It was expected that the personal statement demonstrated an interest in studying Dentistry. Neither the personal statement nor reference were scored.

Applications demonstrating suitability against the entry requirements and in relation to their personal statement and reference were then ranked according to their UCAT score (total score and SJT band) compared to other applicants, with improvement given for GCSE results (number of A*s) as well as an improvement on ranking if considered a Widening Participation (WP) applicant.

King's College Graduate Entry Dentistry UCAT Statistics

  • 2024 Entry (/3600): 2330 (lowest UCAT invited to interview, ie UCAT Cut off score)
  • 2024 Entry (/3600): 2786 (average UCAT score invited to interview)

πŸ“ PS - Have your PS checked - 5⭐ Rated

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BMAT

No

GAMSAT

No

Kings Dental School Work Experience

We would normally expect that applicants will have undertaken some voluntary work experience in a caring environment and/or observation in a clinical setting. If this is not possible, we look for evidence that you have worked in a setting where you can interact with the general public, e.g. in a pharmacy, check-out or restaurant.

KCL Dentistry Personal Statement

Yes

Used in the assessment of application. We are looking particularly for evidence of appropriate commitment to, and realistic appreciation of, the academic, physical and emotional demands of a dentistry degree programme and career.

Graduate entry at Kings

Yes

Interview preparation

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Does Kings have a gateway or foundation year?

No separate foundation or gateway year. King's widening-participation route is the Enhanced Support Dentistry Programme (UCAS A206), a five-year BDS that follows the standard curriculum with extra academic and pastoral support, for eligible Home applicants who attended non-selective state schools in a London borough. King's does not make contextual reduced-grade offers for dentistry; the supported programme is the route instead.

King's College London Dentistry Interview Questions 2026

  • King's College London Dental School (BDS) uses an Online Panel Interview with two interviewers for 2026 entry (it used to be MMI, but no longer is)
  • The interview will be held online for Kings BDS - confirmed for 2026 entry

Interview dates

  • The interview process is divided into two blocks, which are determined based on the UCAT scores of the candidates.
  • The first round of interviews is scheduled for November and December
  • The second phase of interviews is usually held during the spring season of the following year, specifically between February to April.

In the most recent admissions cycle for which we have complete data, we interviewed nearly 350 applications and made around 160 Home-fee-paying offers and 15 Overseas-fee-paying offers on the programme. We received just under 1000 applications.

πŸŽ“ King's College London Dentistry Interview Questions & Topics for 2026 entry

Several topics are more likely to come up at the University of King's College London Dental School Panel Interview, which can be derived from past King's College London stations and information on their website.

What do King's College London look for at their dentistry A200 BDS interview?

The evaluation criteria for admission to King's BDS course includes various factors such as:

  • The candidate's proficiency in communication
  • Their awareness of social and ethical issues prevalent in Dentistry
  • Their suitability for the course
  • Their potential contribution to the university, and the skills that make a good dentist
  • Additionally, the candidate's practical skills and manual dexterity will also be taken into consideration during the selection process.

πŸ’― King's College London Panel Interview Questions Scoring 2026 entry

  • Applicants will be advised of the outcome of their King's College London application by 31 March.

❓ King's College London Interview 2026 entry

These are suggested practice questions based on publicly available information and past trends. They are not official questions from the University and may not appear in your interview. Use them as part of a broader preparation strategy. Remember Kings has changed from MMI to Panel interview in 2026 entry, so use these with caution

Motivation to study Dentistry

  1. Why Dentistry?
  2. Why King's College London?
  3. What did you learn from your dental work experience about how a practice runs day to day?
  4. During your dental work experience, was there a moment that changed how you understood the relationship between a dentist and their patients? Tell me about it.
  5. What is the role of prevention in dentistry?
  6. What do you know about the King's College London Dentistry course? How is it taught?
  7. Why do you think you will be well suited to this course?
  8. Why Dentistry and not medicine or nursing?
  9. What are your hobbies?
  10. Are there any societies you would like to join in King's College London?

Personal Insight/Qualities

  1. Why should patients trust you?
  2. Are you good at simplifying ideas?
  3. How would your friends describe you?
  4. What are your best qualities?
  5. How do you manage stress?
  6. How can you illustrate to us that you are a good leader?
  7. Tell us about a long-term commitment you stuck with despite repeated setbacks. What kept you going?
  8. Describe a project where your group had to coordinate under a tight deadline. What was your part?
  9. What are your strengths and weaknesses?
  10. How would your friends describe you?
  11. If a patient told you they were unhappy with how you explained their treatment, how would you respond?
  12. Tell us about a moment you had to push through difficulty without giving up. Why does this matter for a career in dentistry?
  13. If you build models, play a stringed instrument or do detailed crafts, how has that sharpened your fine motor control?
  14. Tell us about a recent news story on health or science that made you think differently.

Dental Situations

  1. A patient with no current dental problems asks why you keep emphasising prevention and regular check-ups. How would you reason through the long-term value of preventive dentistry for them?
  2. If untreated gum disease is left to progress over many years, what wider effects on a patient's general health might result?
  3. If a patient collapses in the waiting room, how would you assess them?

NHS & Local Area

  1. What does the Care Quality Commission do, and how does its inspection of a dental practice protect patients?
  2. Why do certain dental treatments need extra infection-control precautions, and what does that mean in practice?
  3. What is the role of the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence?
  4. What does the General Dental Council do, and why does it matter to patients?
  5. What do you know about how the NHS charges for appointments?
  6. What are the NHS values, and why are they important?
  7. What is it like to be a dentist?
  8. How do you deal with overpopulation?
  9. What do you know about the local area here in King's College London?
  10. What are the main challenges facing the future of dentistry in the UK?
  11. What are the greatest challenges facing healthcare as a whole, and dentistry in particular?
  12. How has COVID changed the way that dental practices operate?
  13. How does oral health differ here compared to other areas in the UK?

Ethical Scenarios

  1. Understanding of the four ethical principles
  2. When a dentist explains a treatment plan to a nervous patient, what communication qualities do you think matter most for that patient to feel confident in the proposed care?
  3. If you noticed a senior colleague repeatedly cutting corners on sterilisation, what would you do?
  4. Who can you escalate concerns to within a practice?

Other Stations including Manual Dexterity

  1. How much does a dentist really need to understand about how the body responds to treatment, rather than just following a procedure?
  2. Talk us through this short piece of writing - who do you think wrote it, and what point are they trying to make?
  3. Photo: an x-ray showing a problem tooth - talk us through what stands out to you here
  4. What hobby of yours would best convince a tutor that you can work precisely with your hands?
  5. What interests do you have that has allowed you to develop your manual dexterity?
  6. Describe the most technically delicate thing you can do with your hands and how you learned it.
  7. Role play: you are waiting with a patient before their appointment while the dentist is delayed - keep them comfortable with general conversation
  8. Example role play station (from the King's College London Dental website): You have recently started University and have been working hard on your first assignment which is due for submission shortly. You mention to a classmate that you are nervous about the assignment. Your classmate replies that they are not nervous as they have found a website where you can pay someone to write an essay for you, which is guaranteed to pass. How do you respond to this? An actor will play the part of your classmate.
  9. Example role play station (from the King's College London Dental website): A 15-year-old girl attends your practice with her Mother and is complaining of a toothache. After your initial examination, you decide to take an x-ray of the tooth. As part of the routine procedure, you ask the patient if there is any chance she could be pregnant. She originally says no, but once her Mother has left the room informs you that she has recently discovered that she is pregnant and is scared that the treatment may harm her baby. How might you handle a scenario like this?

πŸ‘‰πŸΌ Read more: 230+ Dentistry Interview Questions for 2024

πŸ—£οΈ How to prepare for your King's College London (KCL) dentistry interview (2026 entry)

  1. KCL runs a panel interview that candidates describe as feeling like a hybrid MMI: expect roughly four questions with about five minutes allowed for each, in front of an interviewer panel. Practise pacing a full five-minute answer aloud so you neither run dry nor ramble, and use our free mock interview generator to rehearse that timing.
  2. Because each question is timed at around five minutes, KCL interviewers often bundle several sub-questions into one prompt (for example three questions about dentistry as a career given in one go). Listen for the multiple parts, jot them down mentally, and structure your answer to cover each, drawing on our ultimate MMI preparation guide for how to attack layered prompts.
  3. Candidates consistently report that KCL leans heavily on dentistry as a career rather than on rehearsing your hobbies or extracurriculars. Be ready to discuss the genuine pros and cons of being a dentist, where the profession is heading, and the realities of NHS versus private practice using our a career in dentistry guide.
  4. "The future of dentistry" has come up as a direct KCL question, so prepare an informed view on issues like the NHS dental contract and access problems, an ageing population, digital dentistry and AI, and prevention-focused care. Having two or three concrete trends ready lets you fill the five minutes with substance.
  5. Ethical scenarios are central at KCL: candidates have faced two ethical stations in a single interview, including ones on cheating and on a colleague being asked to act inappropriately. Build a reliable framework around the four pillars (autonomy, beneficence, non-maleficence, justice) so you can structure these answers, and drill our answering ethics interview questions guide.
  6. KCL ethics prompts give you a full five minutes and reward breadth, so explicitly walk through every ethical consideration you can identify rather than jumping straight to a verdict. One reported scenario involved a pregnant nurse refusing to assist a patient with HIV, where naming the ethical pillars plus relevant safety and infection-control guidance scored well.
  7. A known trap is finishing an ethics answer too early: when one candidate did not fill the five minutes, the interviewer asked "what would you do in this scenario?" as a follow-up. Treat "what would you actually do" as a built-in closing step so you reach a clear decision without simply repeating yourself, and rehearse this with practice dentistry interview questions.
  8. KCL scenarios are written so there are lots of opportunities to mention GDC principles, so know the General Dental Council's Standards (put patients' interests first, communicate effectively, obtain valid consent, maintain confidentiality, raise concerns) and weave them in by name. Our 200+ dentistry interview Q&A guide shows how to apply GDC standards across common scenario types.
  9. One reported KCL ethical scenario had a dentist asking a dental nurse to take time off so his teenage son could shadow as a nurse for work experience, a probity and patient-safety dilemma. Practise spotting when a request crosses professional lines and how you would raise concerns appropriately rather than just refusing.
  10. Expect at least one question asking you to name the qualities of a good dentist and then evidence where you have demonstrated them. Prepare two or three crisp examples (resilience, communication, manual dexterity, teamwork) drawn from your wider experiences, and review our dentistry work experience guide so your reflections are structured rather than narrated.
  11. Resilience specifically has been probed at KCL ("why is resilience important in dentistry?"), reflecting the demands of clinical training and patient care. Have a thoughtful answer linking resilience to managing difficult patients, treatment that doesn't go to plan, and the long path through dental school, supported by our how to become a dentist and entry requirements guide.
  12. While KCL is panel-format, role-play has appeared (for example managing a patient with dental anxiety), so although it is less central than at full MMI schools, do not neglect it. Practise calm, empathetic explanation and checking understanding, and book 1-1 dentistry interview coaching if you want live feedback on your communication under pressure.
  13. Be ready for an organisational or teamwork prompt such as "describe a time you led a group towards a shared goal," which KCL has used as one of its four questions. Have a STAR-structured story prepared that shows planning, delegation and reflection, since this is where the panel checks the personal qualities the career questions don't cover.
  14. Show clear differentiation for why KCL specifically: it is one of Europe's largest dental schools with high clinical volume across Guy's, King's and other London sites, strong research, and a diverse central-London patient base. Tie this to your motivations in your interview just as you should in your dentistry personal statement, and expect follow-up on anything you wrote.
  15. For a structured run-up to the day, our full dentistry application packages bundle mock panels, ethics drills and feedback, and it helps to benchmark KCL against other London options using the compare UK dental schools hub so your "why this school" answer is genuinely comparative rather than generic.

Free King's College London (KCL) Dentistry Mock Interview

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Contact details for Kings

Faculty of Dentistry

Guy's Tower
Guy's Hospital
London
SE1 1UL
Tel: 020 7118 1164
Web: kcl.ac.uk/dentistry

Next step Β· Dentistry

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FAQs

Kings dentistry FAQs

What are the A-Level requirements for Dentistry at Kings?

A*AA at A level including Biology or Chemistry, in addition to studying one of Biology, Chemistry, Physics, Maths or Psychology. If Maths is being used to meet the subject requirement, then we cannot consider Further Maths as the third A-Level. Please note that A-levels in General Studies, Critical Thinking, Thinking Skills and Global Perspectives are not accepted by King's as one of your A levels. If you are taking linear A-levels in England, you will be required to pass the practical endorsement in all science subjects.

What are the GCSE requirements for Dentistry at Kings?

grade 6/B in both English Language and Mathematics if not offered at A-level.

Does Kings require the UCAT for Dentistry?

Yes, Kings requires the UCAT for entry to Dentistry.

What UCAT score do you need for Dentistry at Kings?

The UCAT is considered in a holistic manner, traditionally the university has required high GCSE grades.

In the past this has been, UCAT (45%) + SJT (5%) GCSEs (40%, ranked on number of A* - full points if 8A*) + 10% Contextual.

2024 Entry (/3600): 2640.

2023 Entry (/3600): 2440.

2022 Entry (/3600): 2560.

2021 Entry (/3600): 2450.

2020 Entry (/3600): 2430.

2024 Entry (/3600): 2923.

2023 Entry (/3600): 2866.

2022 Entry (/3600): 2812.

2021 Entry (/3600): 2721.

What type of interview does Kings use for Dentistry?

Kings uses a panel interview format for Dentistry interviews.

When are the Dentistry interviews at Kings?

The interview process is divided into two blocks, which are determined based on the UCAT scores of the candidates.

The first round of interviews is scheduled for November and December.

The second phase of interviews is usually held during the spring season of the following year, specifically between February to April.

Does Kings offer a foundation or gateway year for Dentistry?

No, Kings does not offer a foundation or gateway year for Dentistry.

No separate foundation or gateway year. King's widening-participation route is the Enhanced Support Dentistry Programme (UCAS A206), a five-year BDS that follows the standard curriculum with extra academic and pastoral support, for eligible Home applicants who attended non-selective state schools in a London borough. King's does not make contextual reduced-grade offers for dentistry; the supported programme is the route instead.

Does Kings accept graduate entry for Dentistry?

Yes, Kings accepts graduate entry applicants for Dentistry.

Is the personal statement assessed for Dentistry at Kings?

Yes, Kings assesses the personal statement as part of the Dentistry application.

Used in the assessment of application. We are looking particularly for evidence of appropriate commitment to, and realistic appreciation of, the academic, physical and emotional demands of a dentistry degree programme and career.

Do you need to be 18 to study Dentistry at Kings?

Yes, you need to be 18 to study Dentistry at Kings.

King’s is only able to accept applicants who will be 18 years of age on 1st January on the first year of the Dentistry programmes. This is due to a minimum age requirement for placements.

2025/26 results

Why Students & Parents Recommend Us

Ultimate Package students from our 2025/26 cycle, with their UCAT scores and offers, who trained with us for the UCAT, personal statements and interviews.

Ultimate Package
Sophie
Medicine, King's College London
2025 UCAT2,590 / 2,700
β€œHarry got my UCAT up to 2,590, working through the sections I kept dropping marks on week by week. Gemma then ran my interview practice so the MMI stations didn't catch me out, and Dr Akash mentored me the whole way through. I'm off to King's for Medicine.”
Ultimate Package
Daniel
Medicine, University College London
Medicine offers4 offers
β€œThe interview prep was the part that actually moved the needle. Proper mock MMIs, not just lists of questions, and feedback that was honest about what I was getting wrong. I ended up with four offers and firmed UCL.”
Ultimate Package
Aisha
Dentistry, University of Birmingham
Dentistry offers4 offers
β€œThe Ultimate Package kept me organised from UCAT through to interviews. They knew what dental schools actually ask and tightened up my personal statement. Four offers in the end, and I'm going to Birmingham.”
Ultimate Package
Charlotte
Veterinary Medicine, Royal Veterinary College
Vet offers4 offers
β€œVet applications come down to the written SAQs as much as the interview. Dr Rebecca went through my SAQs line by line, sharpened my answers and prepped me for the panels. I came away with four offers and chose the RVC.”

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