Stacy Revels, DDS operates a general dentistry practice in Oklahoma City focused on preventive care and restorative work, with a straightforward fee structure that does not rely on insurance billing as the primary revenue model. The practice functions as a smaller, patient-centered alternative to larger group dental offices and DSO-owned practices that dominate the city's dental landscape.
A solo general dentistry practice offering routine cleanings, examinations, fillings, extractions, and minor restorative procedures. The practice does not handle orthodontics, implants, periodontal surgery, or other specialty work. This scope makes it a good fit for patients seeking straightforward preventive and basic restorative care, not those needing complex cases or lengthy treatment sequences. The office operates independently and does not hold membership in a larger health system.
The practice charges on a per-service basis, with patients paying at the time of visit. Specific fees are as follows:
Insurance is accepted but works on a reimbursement model: patients pay the full fee at visit and submit claims themselves or request that the office send a claim. This approach differs significantly from in-network DSO or group practices in Oklahoma City, where copay-and-deductible billing is the standard front-desk experience. Patients without dental insurance pay the posted fee; those with coverage should verify their plan's coverage limits and copay obligations before scheduling.
Larger group practices such as Bright Now! Dental (multiple Oklahoma City locations) and DentalWorks operate on a fee-for-service model as well but use insurance billing as the primary collection method and often employ multiple hygienists and dentists under one roof, reducing wait times and offering extended hours. A solo practice like Stacy Revels typically has longer scheduling lead times (2 to 4 weeks for a routine cleaning) and fewer appointment slots, but no corporate overhead is reflected in pricing. Insurance-in-network group practices in Oklahoma City often advertise lower patient costs per visit but sometimes push additional treatments; the solo practice model here involves fewer upselling incentives. Dental discount plans and membership clubs (offered by chains like Aspen Dental) provide annual fee caps but lock patients into a limited provider network; a traditional independent practice offers no lock-in but also no network discount.
This practice suits established patients seeking long-term continuity of care, those with straightforward preventive needs, and patients who prefer transparent, uncomplicated pricing and prefer not to file insurance claims. It also works well for uninsured patients who want to avoid high chain-dental pricing. It does not suit patients needing urgent same-day care, those who cannot tolerate 3- to 4-week waits for cleanings, or those requiring specialist work (orthodontics, periodontology, oral surgery). Patients who value shorter appointment times or want to avoid out-of-pocket payment at the chair should seek in-network group practices instead.
New patients should plan for 60 minutes. The appointment includes a full mouth examination, intraoral and panoramic X-rays, a cleaning, and a review of findings. The dentist will discuss any cavities, gum condition, and recommendations for future care. At the end of the visit, the patient pays the full fee (examination + cleaning + any X-rays = approximately $120 to $170). If treatment is recommended (e.g., fillings), the dentist will discuss timing and cost; work is not forced into the first visit. The office does not require a separate consultation; treatment planning happens during the standard visit.
The practice operates by appointment only; walk-ins are not accepted. Hours and parking details (on-site lot vs. street parking) should be confirmed directly, as these can change. The office is located in Oklahoma City and is accessible by car; public transit is not typically a primary mode for reaching dental offices in the city. Confirm the street address and phone number before scheduling to ensure current information, as solo practices sometimes relocate or adjust hours with less public notice than larger groups.
In a city where DSO-owned chains and large group practices dominate patient volume and appointment availability, a straightforward independent general dentistry practice offers continuity, predictable pricing, and a professional alternative that values patient retention over high-volume, low-margin revenue. For a subset of Oklahoma City patients, that trade-off is worth the longer waits.
