A patient in De Pijp or Amsterdam-Zuid pulls out their phone, types "tandarts bij mij in de buurt," and picks from whoever Google shows first. If your practice loads slowly, doesn't show up in the map pack, or has a booking widget that stalls on mobile, that patient books somewhere else — and you never even know it happened. Start with a free instant scan: your score out of 100 and your top issues, in seconds, no signup.
Amsterdam's dental market is unusual: pragmatic, English-fluent, ROI-driven, and quick to compare. A patient doesn't read your "about us" — they glance at the search result, the reviews, the load time, and the booking button. Dutch practices invest in beautiful clinics and beautiful sites, then quietly lose patients to invisible technical gaps no one on the team can see. The free instant scan exists to make those gaps visible in seconds, before you spend a cent. It reads your live site the way Google and an AI assistant actually read it, hands you a score out of 100 and your top issues, and stops there — no signup, no call, no sales script.
Run it, see your number, and decide for yourself whether there's something worth fixing. Most Amsterdam practices are surprised by what a thirty-second scan surfaces.
These aren't generic "improve your SEO" notes. They're the specific places an Amsterdam dental site loses real appointments — the patterns I see again and again on practice websites across the city.
The free instant scan is deliberately simple. It is not the full audit — it's the fast read that tells you whether the full audit is even worth your time.
One honest number for how your live site reads to humans, search engines and AI right now — the kind of at-a-glance metric an Amsterdam practice manager can act on immediately.
The handful of biggest problems pulled to the front — often a slow mobile load from heavy photos, or missing local schema. Plain English, no jargon dump.
No form to fill, no call to book, no email gate to read your number. Drop in your URL on the main audit page and the scan runs on your live pages right away.
The scan lives on the main audit page. It checks your real, live pages and returns your score and top issues on the spot.
Scan my site — free →Beyond the scan, there are 12 free tools you can run on your own — a mobile speed check, a Core Web Vitals reading, an AI-crawler check, a schema validator and more. For a busy Amsterdam practice they're a fast way to gut-check one specific thing (say, how heavy your treatment-room gallery really is) without waiting on anyone.
If the free scan shows there's something worth fixing, the deep audit is the next step. It's not an automated PDF dump — it's a human-reviewed report from a technical web architect, running 149 checks across 15 categories on your dental site and ranking every finding by what it's actually costing the practice in lost appointments. You finish reading knowing exactly what to fix first, second and third.
A practice site drifts: a new treatment page, a plugin update, a booking widget that quietly breaks after an update. Audit clients can stay covered with monthly re-scans and always-on uptime monitoring, so a problem gets caught before a single Amsterdam patient hits a broken booking flow. Ask about ongoing monitoring when your report lands — it's a soft, optional next step, not a hard sell.
Ask about monitoring →A scan can tell you the schema is missing and the photos are too heavy. But when you actually need someone to re-architect the site — restructure the pages, implement the Dentist and review schema properly, rebuild the mobile booking flow so it holds — that's a person, not a tool. That's me, Jerome Bilaos, a Technical Web Architect based in the Philippines, serving Amsterdam practices remotely. The CET overlap works in your favour: I run the deep scans overnight async and we sync in your afternoon. No fabricated Dutch address — just real remote work and real contact: [email protected].
The free instant scan gives you a score out of 100 and your top issues in seconds — and missing Dentist/LocalBusiness and review schema is one of the first things it surfaces, since that's a common reason an Amsterdam practice drops out of Google's local map pack. The full deep audit then pins down every contributing factor.
Almost certainly. Patients in Amsterdam search "tandarts bij mij in de buurt" on their phones, and multi-megabyte treatment-room and team photos are the single most common cause of a slow mobile load. Slow pages quietly lose the patient to the practice down the canal. The free scan flags it; the deep audit names the exact offending images and the fix.
No. The audit is fully remote and the work is technical, not local footwork. The CET timezone overlap actually helps: I run deep scans overnight and we sync in your Amsterdam afternoon. There's no fabricated Dutch address — just real remote service for Amsterdam practices.
Yes. For Dutch practices the audit checks consent flow, cookie handling and how patient-facing forms and booking widgets handle data — the things an AVG/GDPR-conscious practice manager actually needs to see, alongside the SEO and speed findings.
Yes. Third-party booking and appointment widgets that break or stall on phones are a leading cause of lost appointments for Amsterdam practices. The audit checks how the widget loads on mobile, whether it blocks the page, and whether patients can actually complete a booking on a phone.
The instant scan is free — score and top issues, no signup. The deep audit, with 149 checks across 15 categories and a prioritised fix list, is a one-time USD $297 per website.