If you've attended a dental conference in the past two years or read any vendor marketing, you've heard the word "AI" more times than you can count. AI-powered scheduling. AI-driven treatment planning. AI clinical documentation. AI diagnostics. Some of it is real. Some of it is autocomplete with a rebrand. Knowing the difference matters — because the applications that are genuinely mature can meaningfully reduce clinical workload, and the ones that aren't will cost you money and disappointment.
Real AI in clinical settings means models that have been trained on large datasets and can generate or interpret clinical content in ways that were previously impossible without a human. In dental practice, there are four applications that are genuinely mature in 2026.
The most practically useful AI in dental practice right now. A trained model listens to or reads clinical inputs — exam findings, voice notes, procedure codes — and generates a structured clinical note. The best implementations reduce documentation time by 40–70% per session. This is real time recovered from administrative tasks and returned to patient care. The key distinction: the model must be trained on dental clinical data, not general language models applied to dental. Ask vendors what their model was trained on and what specialty-specific data it uses. General-purpose language models applied to dentistry produce generic output that requires heavy editing — which eliminates the time saving entirely. WIO CLINIC's AI features are trained on structured dental clinical data.
Orthodontic and implantology workflows have historically required a clinician to manually trace cephalometric landmarks on radiographs — a process that takes 20–40 minutes per case and is subject to clinician variability. AI cephalometric analysis automates landmark identification with accuracy comparable to experienced orthodontists on standard cases. Analysis is completed in seconds, not minutes. The output is reviewed by the clinician, who can adjust any landmark before the measurements are finalised. WIO CLINIC's implementation handles this within the clinical session workflow — see the cephalometric AI analysis overview for detail on how the workflow operates in practice.
Based on clinical findings and patient history, AI can suggest treatment plan options with supporting evidence. This is useful for two scenarios: standardising treatment planning across a multi-provider practice so that different clinicians present consistent options for comparable cases, and surfacing options a clinician might not have immediately considered for a complex presentation. The maturity level here varies significantly by vendor — from genuinely useful clinical decision support to simple rule-based suggestion engines labelled as AI. Ask to see the model's decision logic and whether it adapts to your patient population over time.
AI-assisted radiograph analysis — detecting caries, bone loss, and pathology on X-rays — is the most technically impressive and also the most carefully regulated dental AI application. Models from companies like Denti.AI and Pearl have shown strong performance in research settings and are increasingly deployed in clinical practice. Regulatory clearance varies by market; check your jurisdiction before adopting. This is worth evaluating seriously for high-volume diagnostic workflows, where it can reduce both examination time and inter-clinician variability in pathology identification.
The term AI is applied to a wide range of features that don't involve machine learning. Being specific about this matters for your purchasing decision:
Five questions to ask any vendor claiming AI capabilities:
Don't evaluate AI features by their technical sophistication. Evaluate them by whether they measurably reduce the time a clinician spends on administrative tasks per session. A feature that generates technically impressive output but takes longer to review and correct than writing the note manually is not a productivity gain — it's a rebrand of the existing workflow.
Ask for a live demonstration of the documentation workflow for your most common appointment type. Walk through: what does the clinician input, how does the AI process it, what does the output look like, how long does review take, and what happens when the output is wrong. If a vendor cannot show you this demonstration in a live environment, the feature is not production-ready.
The AI features that will save your practice time in 2026 are not the ones with the most impressive marketing. They're the ones where you can walk through the workflow in a demo and immediately see where the time saving comes from. WIO CLINIC's AI features page includes a walkthrough of the documentation and cephalometric analysis workflows. For the broader picture on clinical workflows, see how AI fits into the full session flow. Or read our comparison of dental clinic software platforms for 2026 to see how AI depth varies across the market.