Someone in Rathmines, Ballsbridge or the city centre is on their phone right now typing "dentist near me". In the seconds it takes your site to load, they decide whether to call you or the practice down the road. This page gives you a free instant scan — your score out of 100 and your top issues, in seconds, no signup — built around what actually loses Dublin dental practices those patients.
Dublin is Europe's English-language tech capital — the EU base for the scale-ups and platforms that set the bar for what a fast, GDPR-clean, multi-region website should feel like. Your patients live inside that standard every day. So when they pull up your practice on a phone between meetings in the IFSC or on the Luas home to Dundrum, a site that stalls, hides its booking button, or doesn't surface in the map pack feels broken in a way it simply wouldn't have five years ago.
The free scan exists to show you, honestly and in seconds, where your dental site sits against that bar. No sales call to find out. No form to fill before you see anything. Just a score and your top issues — the same lens I bring to the full audit, condensed into a fast first read.
Dental websites fail in a very specific way, and it almost never looks like failure from the inside. The site loads fine on your office broadband and your designer's MacBook. The leak happens on a patient's phone, on Irish mobile data, in the three seconds before they give up.
Practices love a gleaming surgery shot — and rightly. But uncompressed treatment-room and smile-gallery images, often several megabytes each, are the single biggest reason a dental site crawls on mobile. The patient on "dentist near me" doesn't wait; they tap the next result.
Without Dentist or LocalBusiness structured data — and review markup on top — Google can't confidently place you in the Dublin map pack. The surgery a street away that marked theirs up gets the three coveted spots, and you sit below the fold no patient scrolls to.
The widget that books appointments works in the demo and on desktop. On a real phone it loads slowly, overflows the screen, or fails silently mid-flow — and a patient who was ready to book becomes a patient who booked elsewhere. The appointment is lost to the practice down the road.
None of this shows up in your analytics as "lost." It shows up as a quieter month than the work deserved. Want a fast gut-check on the speed side before anything else? The free tools include a quick page-speed read you can run yourself in under a minute.
Drop your practice's web address into the scanner and, in seconds, you get back two things — no email gate, no call booked, nothing upfront:
That's it, and that's the point. The free scan is a fast read, not the full audit — it surfaces the obvious leaks so you can decide whether there's something worth going deeper on. There's no signup and nothing to pay to see it.
The scan gives you the headline. The 12 free tools let you dig into one thing at a time — page speed, Core Web Vitals, whether AI crawlers can read your site, schema validation and more. For a Dublin dental practice that's a practical way to sanity-check a single suspicion: is it really the treatment-room photos slowing me down, or is my booking widget the culprit? Run as many as you like, free, no signup.
When the free scan tells you there's something worth fixing, the deep audit is where you find out exactly what, in what order, and why. It's 149 checks across 15 categories — a human-reviewed, prioritised report, not an automated PDF dump. For a Dublin dental practice that means every treatment-room image weighed and named, your Dentist and review schema mapped page by page, your booking flow tested on real mobile conditions, and — because you handle patient enquiries under GDPR — privacy and compliance reviewed as one of those 15 categories.
The $297 credits in full toward fix work if you hire me to implement it — so the audit effectively pays for itself.
A dental site drifts: a new treatment page goes up with a 4 MB photo, the booking plugin updates and quietly breaks on iOS, a Google change shuffles the Dublin map pack. Audit clients can stay in the loop with monthly re-scans and always-on uptime monitoring, so problems get caught before a patient ever hits them. It's an optional next step — ask about ongoing care when your report lands.
The scan and the tools will tell you what's wrong. But when a Dublin dental site needs its mobile delivery re-architected, its schema rebuilt so the map pack finally trusts it, or its booking flow replaced with something that holds together on a phone — that's not a tool's job. That's a Technical Web Architect.
I'm Jerome Bilaos. I'm based in the Philippines and I serve Dublin practices remotely — and the GMT/IST overlap is a quiet advantage: I can run scans and ship fixes overnight in Irish time, so changes are often live before you open the surgery. No fabricated local address, no call centre — just direct work and a real contact. See the portfolio, browse where else I work across locations, or book a call when you're ready.
A score out of 100 plus your top issues, in seconds, no signup. For a Dublin dental site that usually surfaces mobile speed flags from heavy treatment-room photos, missing Dentist or LocalBusiness schema, and whether your reviews are marked up. It's a fast read — not the full 149-check audit.
The map pack leans on LocalBusiness and review structured data, NAP consistency and mobile performance. If a nearby practice has clean Dentist schema and marked-up reviews and you don't, Google trusts their listing more — even when yours is the better practice. The deep audit pinpoints which signals you're missing.
Yes. Third-party booking widgets are a common leak for Dublin practices — slow to load, broken layout on phones, or failing silently mid-flow. Patients on "dentist near me" bounce to the next result. The audit tests how your widget behaves under real mobile conditions.
No. I work remotely from the Philippines, and the GMT/IST overlap means I can run scans and fixes overnight in Irish time, so changes are often live by the time you open the surgery. Schema and technical SEO are read by Google the same way wherever the work happens.
Yes. Privacy and compliance is one of the 15 categories in the deep audit — cookie consent, enquiry-form handling and third-party trackers are all reviewed, which matters for a Dublin dental site collecting patient details under GDPR.
The instant scan is free with no signup. The deep audit — 149 checks across 15 categories with a prioritised fix list — is USD $297, one-time, and credits toward any fix work if you hire me to implement it.