In this article
Welcome to the world of dentistry & orthodontics
Whether you're drawn to dentistry and precise, transformative work, or you want a well-paid dental specialty, this guide covers what an orthodontist actually does, the skills, the day-to-day, and the honest upsides and downsides.
General description
An orthodontist is a dental specialist who corrects the position of teeth and jaws. In simple terms: they use braces and aligners to straighten teeth and perfect smiles. Think of them as the straighteners of smiles.
- Straighten teeth with braces and aligners
- Correct bite and jaw position
- Plan and manage treatment
- Transform smiles and function
Key skills & qualifications
Hard skills
Soft skills
- Precision โ tooth movement is exact
- Patience โ treatment takes months or years
- Care โ patients want results
- Aesthetic eye โ perfecting smiles
- Communication โ long patient relationships
- Planning โ mapping treatment
Education & qualifications
Orthodontists complete a dental degree, then specialist training in orthodontics โ a long, demanding path in one of dentistry's most rewarding specialties.
Typical responsibilities
- Straightening โ teeth with braces
- Correcting โ bite and jaws
- Planning โ treatment
- Aligners โ and appliances
- Management โ long treatment
- Transformation โ smiles and function
Responsibilities by seniority
Trainee / Resident
0โ4 years
- Trains in orthodontics
- Learns treatment
- Builds expertise
- Toward specialist
- Supervised practice
Orthodontist
4โ10 years
- Straightens teeth
- Plans treatment
- Manages patients
- Trusted specialist
- Building a practice
Senior / Practice Owner
10+ years
- Leads orthodontics
- Or owns a practice
- Complex cases
- Mentors trainees
- Top of the specialty
Where orthodontists work
๐ฌ Orthodontic practices
Specialist clinics.
๐ฆท Dental practices
Within dentistry.
๐ฅ Hospitals
Complex cases.
๐ถ Children / teens
Young patients.
โจ Adult orthodontics
Adult treatment.
๐ Own practice
Private practice.
A day in the life
Reviewing treatment plans โ mapping how each patient's teeth will be straightened.
Fitting and adjusting braces and aligners with precision.
Seeing patients through their treatment journey, often over months or years.
Planning complex cases โ bite, jaw, and tooth position together.
Teeth straightened, bites corrected, smiles transformed. The straightener of smiles. That's the job.
What this job gives you
- Highly skilled, well-paid
- Transformative, rewarding work
- Strong job security
- Long patient relationships
- Path to own practice
Pros & cons
โ Advantages
- Highly skilled, well-paid
- Transformative, rewarding work
- Strong job security
- Long patient relationships
- Path to own practice
- Growing aligner demand
- Predictable hours
โ Disadvantages
- Very long training
- Precise, exacting work
- Treatment takes time
- High patient expectations
- Practice costs to set up
- Years to qualify
Salary potential โ global rating
Rated against all professions globally, where โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ = top 1% earners:
Career growth paths
- Consultant Orthodontist โ lead orthodontics
- Practice Owner โ run a practice
- Specialist (surgical, etc.) โ complex cases
- Academic / teaching โ train orthodontists
- Clinical lead โ lead a service
- Multi-practice owner โ grow a business
Orthodontist vs related roles
Here's how some neighbouring roles compare.
| Role | Core focus | Note | Pay | Entry |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Orthodontist You are here | Straightens teeth and corrects bites | Orthodontics | Baseline | Hard |
| Dentist | Treats teeth and oral health | Dentistry | Lower | Hard |
| Dental Hygienist | Cleans and cares for teeth | Dental care | Lower | Hard |
| Dental Technician | Crafts dental devices | Dental tech, craft | Lower | Accessible |
| Surgeon | Operates on patients | Surgery, medicine | Higher | Hard |
Scroll the table sideways on mobile. Pay comparisons are directional and vary by market and seniority.
Future outlook
Rising demand for straight teeth and clear aligners keeps orthodontists in steady, strong, well-paid demand.
- Demand for straight teeth is rising
- Clear aligners are booming
- Adults increasingly seek treatment
- Smiles matter to people
- Steady, well-paid demand
Fun facts ๐ค
Orthodontists transform smiles โ and the confidence that comes with them.
Clear aligners have made orthodontics boom, including among adults.
It's one of the best-paid areas of dentistry.
It takes a dental degree plus years of specialist training.
Treatment can take months or years, building long patient relationships.
Myths about this role
"It's just fitting braces."
โ It's precise treatment planning and correcting teeth and jaws, not just fitting braces.
"It's only for children."
โ Adult orthodontics, especially aligners, is booming.
"It's the same as a dentist."
โ It's a specialty requiring years of extra training.
"It's not well-paid."
โ It's one of the best-paid dental specialties.
"It's just cosmetic."
โ It corrects function and bite, not just looks.
Is this job right for you?
โ Good fit if you...
- Are drawn to dentistry
- Have precision and an aesthetic eye
- Like transformative work
- Can handle long training
- Enjoy patient relationships
- Are patient and careful
โ Maybe not for you if...
- You want quick training
- You dislike precise work
- You can't handle long treatment
- You want a non-clinical role
- You dislike patient care
- You avoid years of study
Skilled & well-paid
Orthodontist is a highly skilled, very well-paid, rewarding dental specialty, where precision and care give people straight teeth and confident smiles, with rising demand from the aligner boom.
โ Advantages
- Highly skilled, well-paid
- Transformative, rewarding work
- Strong job security
- Long patient relationships
- Path to own practice
โ Challenges
- Very long training
- Precise, exacting work
- Treatment takes time
- High patient expectations
- Years to qualify
How to get started
- Complete a dental degree the foundation.
- Train in orthodontics years of specialist training.
- Develop treatment skill braces, aligners, and planning.
- Qualify as a specialist straighten and correct teeth.
- Advance consultant, practice owner, or specialist.
What to know before you start
- It's precise treatment planning, not just fitting braces
- Adult orthodontics and aligners are booming
- It's a specialty requiring years of extra training
- It corrects function and bite, not just looks
- It's one of the best-paid dental specialties
- It transforms smiles and confidence
From the field
The same lessons come up again and again from people actually doing the job:
People think orthodontics is just sticking braces on. It's precise treatment planning โ mapping exactly how each tooth and the jaw will move over months or years, correcting both function and appearance. Getting a smile and a bite right takes real skill and an aesthetic eye.
Orthodontist ยท 9 years in
Clear aligners transformed the field. It used to be mostly teenagers; now adults are flooding in for discreet treatment. That's made orthodontics boom, and it's one of the best-paid areas of dentistry, with a clear path to owning your own practice.
Orthodontist ยท 13 years in
What's rewarding is the transformation โ patients come in self-conscious about their teeth and leave with a smile they're proud of. You build relationships over the long treatment, and you see the confidence it gives them. It's skilled, well-paid, and genuinely changes lives.
Practice owner ยท 18 years in