12
50%
Twelve dental practices operate within Oliver, making it one of Edmonton's denser neighbourhood markets for oral healthcare. That concentration means patients have real choice within a short walk or drive — and every practice is competing for the same local catchment.
Half of those 12 have an active website. Six out of twelve. That's a significant gap in a neighbourhood where residents are digitally active and surrounded by a dense commercial strip of 50 restaurants, 19 cafés, and 27 fast food spots. People in Oliver search online before they walk in — and half the dentists here aren't showing up in those results.
The area supports a range of specialties: general dentistry (Harmony Dental, Dr. Mark Bochinski Dental, North Edge Dental), paediatric care (Avenue Pediatric Dentistry), denture services (Burton Denture Clinic), and orthodontics (Sphinx Orthodontics). This mix suggests demand isn't limited to routine cleanings — residents want specialised services close to home.
With 13 bars and 2 pubs nearby, Oliver draws evening foot traffic that some practices could tap into through targeted awareness campaigns. The neighbourhood's food and drink density also means high daytime visibility, which matters for walk-in signage and local brand recognition.
Overall, competition is moderate to high. The number of practices is manageable, but the low website adoption rate signals that the ones already online have a real advantage in patient acquisition.
Walk-in access from Jasper Ave
Oliver's main commercial corridor means many patients choose a dentist based on how easy it is to reach on foot or by transit, not just clinical reputation.
Paediatric options without leaving the area
With Avenue Pediatric Dentistry operating locally, families expect child-focused care within the neighbourhood — a general practice that can't accommodate kids may lose out.
Online presence and reviews
With only 50% of local dentists having a website, patients increasingly judge practices by their Google reviews and search visibility before ever calling.
Evening and weekend availability
Oliver's density of restaurants, bars, and cafés means residents keep irregular schedules — flexible appointment times are a real differentiator here.
Specialty services nearby
Between denture clinics and orthodontic practices already in the area, patients look for the full spectrum of dental care without travelling to another part of Edmonton.
A sample of real dentists in this area. Want ratings, reviews, and exactly where you rank against them? Run a free report on your business.
| Business | Type |
|---|---|
| Harmony Dental | Dentist |
| Dr. Mark Bochinski Dental | Dentist |
| Burton Denture Clinic | Dentist |
| River City Dental | Dentist |
| Avenue Pediatric Dentristry | Dentist |
| North Edge Dental | Dentist |
| Dental Choice | Dentist |
| Dr Dominika & Associates | Dentist |
| 7th Street Dental Centre | Dentist |
| Sphinx Orthodontics | Dentist |
| Bridgeview Dental | Dentist |
| Ultrawhite Clinic | Dentist |
Business listings from OpenStreetMap contributors (ODbL).
Get your website live — now
Six of your twelve competitors don't have a website. That's half the market handing you their patients. A basic site with hours, services, and online booking is enough to capture search traffic they're missing entirely.
Target the family demographic Oliver already serves
Avenue Pediatric Dentistry proves there's demand for child-focused care. If you're a general practice, make it clear on every channel that you welcome kids — it's the easiest way to pull families who'd otherwise default to the specialist.
Use the neighbourhood's foot traffic to your advantage
With 50 restaurants, 19 cafés, and 13 bars in the immediate area, Oliver has some of the highest pedestrian activity in Edmonton. Quality signage, sidewalk sandwich boards, and partnerships with nearby businesses can drive walk-in awareness that competitors on quieter streets can't match.
Oliver has 12 dental practices packed into a tight urban neighbourhood — that's enough competition to matter, but not so much that the market is saturated. The real split is digital: six practices have websites, six don't. The half with an online presence are effectively operating in a different league when it comes to patient acquisition. General dentistry is well-covered, but specialty niches like paediatric and orthodontic care are each served by just one or two practices. Standing out here takes more than good dentistry — it takes being findable online, offering flexible scheduling, and leaning into the neighbourhood's walkable, high-traffic character.
See your exact rank against nearby competitors, what customers say about them, and where you can win.