Finding a dentist is straightforward. Finding one who speaks your language β or your parents' language β takes a little more work. This guide walks you through what to look for, where to search, and why it matters more than people often realize.
Why Language Match Matters at the Dentist
Dental care involves a lot of back-and-forth communication. Your dentist needs to understand your symptoms β and you need to understand your diagnosis, your treatment options, and what to do at home afterward.
When language is a barrier, a few things tend to go wrong:
Symptoms get described imprecisely, leading to missed diagnoses
Patients nod along to instructions they don't fully understand
Questions go unasked because it feels too hard to bridge the gap
Trust is lower, so patients delay care or don't follow through on treatment
This is especially true for older parents who may have limited English β or who simply feel more comfortable discussing health concerns in Vietnamese. A language-matched provider isn't a luxury. It's a meaningful health outcome difference.
What to Ask When Searching
When you're looking for a Vietnamese-speaking dentist, don't just search "Vietnamese dentist" and pick the first result. Here are a few practical things to check:
Who on the team speaks Vietnamese? Is it the dentist, the front desk, or both? Ideally, the provider who's examining and explaining treatment speaks the language β not just the scheduler.
What's the fluency level? Some practices list Vietnamese as a language when one staff member knows conversational phrases. What you want is a dentist who can explain a diagnosis, discuss alternatives, and answer follow-up questions in Vietnamese.
Are they familiar with the Vietnamese community's specific concerns? Things like betel nut use and its effects on gum health, traditional herbal remedies that can interact with dental materials, or the cultural emphasis on avoiding unnecessary intervention β these are real clinical considerations that a culturally aware dentist will understand without explanation.
Where to Search
A few reliable places to start:
Google Maps β search "Vietnamese dentist San Diego" and filter by rating and distance
Vietnamese community Facebook groups β San Diego has several active Vietnamese community groups where members share recommendations freely
Word of mouth from Vietnamese churches or community organizations β often the most reliable source, especially for older patients
Referrals from Vietnamese-speaking primary care physicians β doctors who serve the Vietnamese community often know which dental practices are set up for Vietnamese-speaking patients
What a Good First Visit Should Feel Like
Your first visit tells you a lot. A practice that's set up for Vietnamese-speaking patients will typically:
Greet you in Vietnamese without being asked
Offer intake forms in Vietnamese or walk through them verbally
Explain findings and treatment recommendations in language you follow β not summarized, not translated after the fact
Make space for questions, including questions from family members who came along
If the provider switches to English when explaining the complicated parts, that's worth noting.
Bringing Your Parents
If you're looking for a dentist for an older parent rather than yourself, a few extra things to consider:
Look for a practice that sees patients of all ages, not just younger adults
Ask whether the dentist has experience with common issues in older patients β partial dentures, gum recession, dry mouth from medications
Confirm the practice accepts their insurance (Medi-Cal/Denti-Cal is common among older Vietnamese patients in San Diego)
Visit our Vietnamese-speaking dental care page for more information about how we serve Vietnamese patients, or learn about Dr. Khanh Nguyen and the team. We're also happy to answer questions by phone if you'd prefer to talk before booking.




