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County Demand Whitepaper · The Dental Index

Dental Demand in
Wake County, North Carolina.

County population 1,175,021 · 48 service keywords analyzed · 59 practices supplying the market · Keyword volumes live from DataForSEO · Supply mapped from Google Maps · Published June 2026

Wake County is the #1 dental market in North Carolina — and one of the highest-demand counties in the United States. Patients here run an estimated 9,473 dental searches every month. This whitepaper maps where that demand is, what patients search for, and what it means if you're planning to own, expand, grow, or sell a practice in this market.

9,473
Monthly searchesacross 8 dental service categories
#1 / 100
NC county by demand+2,166% above the state median county
59
Practices competingfor the county's dental demand
1.18M
County residentsthe patient catchment behind the demand

Patient Demand by
Service Category.

Not all dental demand is equal. In Wake County, a single category — General / Preventive — accounts for nearly half of all patient searches. Emergency and Orthodontics follow. The high-ticket categories practices most want (implants, cosmetic) sit in the middle of the demand curve, not the top.

Service categoryMonthly searchesShareRelative demand
General / Preventive4,33845.8%
Emergency1,18412.5%
Orthodontics1,06811.3%
Pediatric Dentistry8248.7%
Implants7748.2%
Cosmetic7658.1%
Dentures3383.6%
TMJ / Jaw Pain1821.9%

"General / Preventive and Emergency together make up 58% of every dental search in Wake County. A practice's visibility in just these two categories decides most of its patient flow."

The Most-Searched
Dental Terms.

One keyword dominates everything: "dentist near me" alone draws an estimated 3,550 searches a month — more than every other term combined. After it, demand fragments quickly into service-specific intent.

dentist near me
General / Preventive
3,550
emergency dentist near me
Emergency
586
pediatric dentist near me
Pediatric Dentistry
390
orthodontist
Orthodontics
390
dental implants near me
Implants
321
family dentist
General / Preventive
263
invisalign near me
Orthodontics
263
dental cleaning
General / Preventive
215
teeth whitening near me
Cosmetic
215
dental veneers
Cosmetic
215
walk in dentist
Emergency
176
braces near me
Orthodontics
176

Top 12 of 48 keywords shown. Full keyword set available in the source audit.

How Much Competition
the Demand Supports.

Demand is only half the picture — supply is the other. Wake County's 9,473 monthly searches are spread across 59 practices that rank for dental terms, an average of roughly 160 searches per practice per month. But the market is top-heavy: the leading practices pull well above that average, while a long tail competes for what's left.

Supply signalValueWhat it tells an owner
Practices ranking for dental terms59An established, competitive market — not a greenfield
Avg. monthly demand per practice~160Headroom exists; most demand is uncaptured
Largest single-practice share<25%No practice owns the market — it's winnable
Residents per ranking practice~19,900Population can support more visible supply
The read

Demand in Wake County is concentrated by category but fragmented by practice. The category that decides the most patient flow — General / Preventive — is not dominated by any single practice. In a market this size, visibility, not tenure, decides who wins it: a well-positioned practice can take share without out-spending the incumbents.

Where Wake Sits in
North Carolina.

For owners weighing a second location or a regional play, Wake is the benchmark — and only one other county comes close. The figures below rank North Carolina counties by discretionary-service demand (orthodontics, pediatric, and cosmetic — the growth categories), indexed against Wake.

CountyMetroPopulationDemand/movs Wake
WakeRaleigh–Cary1,175,0212,657
MecklenburgCharlotte1,145,3922,592−2%
GuilfordGreensboro546,1011,237−53%
ForsythWinston-Salem389,157879−67%
CumberlandFayetteville336,699763−71%
DurhamDurham332,680751−72%

Demand shown is for discretionary growth services (orthodontics, pediatric dentistry, cosmetic) — the categories used for expansion analysis — and differs from the 9,473 all-category figure. Top 6 of 100 NC counties shown.

"Only Charlotte's Mecklenburg County rivals Wake. Everything else in the state is less than half the size — which makes the Raleigh and Charlotte metros the two anchors of any North Carolina expansion plan."

What This Means If You're
Planning Your Next Move.

If you're planning to…What this county's data says
Own / BuyThe #1-demand county in NC, yet no practice holds even a quarter of it. A buyer should price against captured demand and headroom — not just current production — and look for under-served categories (e.g., dentures) where supply trails demand.
ExpandMecklenburg (Charlotte) is the only county that matches Wake; Guilford, Forsyth, Cumberland, and Durham form the next tier. A second location follows demand density, and these are the five markets that carry it.
Grow58% of all demand sits in General / Preventive and Emergency. Growth in this market comes from visibility in the high-volume categories — not from adding low-demand niche services.
SellA practice in the state's #1-demand county sits on a strong catchment story. The lever that lifts valuation is demonstrable captured demand plus visible headroom — both of which a market this large supports.

Methodology &
Sources.

Keyword demand is sourced from live DataForSEO search-volume data for 48 dental service keywords, scaled to county population. Category totals aggregate the keywords within each of the 8 service categories. Supply is the count of distinct practices ranking for those keywords on Google Maps; demand-per-practice and concentration figures are derived from that count. Regional comparisons rank North Carolina counties by discretionary-service demand (orthodontics, pediatric, cosmetic), scaled to each county's population.

This is a county-level market report — it analyzes aggregate demand, supply, and regional context only. It does not name, rank, or audit individual practices. Search volumes and population figures reflect live data at the time of analysis (June 2026) and shift over time. Any patient or revenue conversions referenced elsewhere on The Dental Index are modeled estimates and labeled as such.

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