General Dentistry
A steady home base for exams, fillings, and everyday care that keeps small issues from turning into expensive ones.
Arlington Dental Associates has been caring for the community since 1989. Today, Dr. David Marcus Chei and Dr. Young Kyu Kim continue that tradition with family-friendly dentistry, exceptional service, affordable care, and a personal touch that keeps patients coming back.
The service mix here reflects a real community practice, the kind of office patients can rely on for routine care, cosmetic updates, surgical needs, and family visits under one roof.
A steady home base for exams, fillings, and everyday care that keeps small issues from turning into expensive ones.
Regular cleanings and preventive visits built around clear explanations and practical next steps.
A welcoming office for kids, parents, and grandparents who want one trusted practice in Arlington.
Thoughtful cosmetic options that brighten, refine, and restore confidence without feeling overdone.
From subtle polish to fuller smile improvements, treatment plans are shaped around what matters to you.
Straightening solutions that help patients improve function, comfort, and smile appearance over time.
Reliable tooth replacement designed to bring back stability, chewing comfort, and a natural look.
In-house surgical care handled with a calm, personal approach and detailed guidance before treatment.
Arlington Dental Associates was opened in 1989 by Dr. Robert Kestenbaum, and that long view still shapes how the office feels today. It is not trying to be flashy or trendy. It is trying to be dependable, warm, and worth recommending.
That matters even more with two active doctors in the practice. Dr. David Marcus Chei and Dr. Young Kyu Kim help the office feel more available, more personal, and better equipped for families who want consistency over time instead of a revolving-door experience.
The clearest signal in the scraped review is not hype, it is trust: patients mention friendly service, detailed treatment explanations, and reasonable pricing. That combination tells you a lot about the tone of the place. People feel taken care of, and they feel informed.
Founded by Dr. Robert Kestenbaum, the practice has been part of the Arlington community for decades.
Dr. David Marcus Chei and Dr. Young Kyu Kim give the office a true two-doctor rhythm and broader scheduling flexibility.
Patients are told what is happening, why it matters, and what their options are before treatment begins.
Reasonable pricing, most insurance acceptance, and an in-office membership plan help keep care approachable.
CareCredit, Proceed Finance, and Sunbit give patients more than one way to move forward with treatment.
The tone is calm, steady, and neighborhood-oriented, built for returning patients and growing families.
Only one real review was scraped, so the social proof stays light and honest.
Whether you need preventive care, a more involved treatment plan, or a family office you can stick with long term, Arlington Dental Associates is ready to help.
The differentiators here are practical. Arlington Dental Associates accepts most insurance plans, offers an in-office membership plan, and gives patients multiple financing routes instead of a single all-or-nothing answer.
Coverage support helps patients get preventive care and treatment started without unnecessary friction.
An in-office option for patients who want a more direct path to routine care and ongoing maintenance.
A familiar financing option for patients who want predictable payments for larger treatment plans.
Additional ways to make timing and budgeting feel more realistic when treatment cannot wait forever.
For a practice like this, affordability is not a gimmick. It is part of the trust equation. When people feel informed, respected, and given real payment options, they are much more likely to follow through on care.
4654 S. Cooper St., Ste. 316, Arlington, TX 76017
| Monday | 8:00AM-5:00PM |
| Tuesday | 8:00AM-5:00PM |
| Wednesday | 8:00AM-5:00PM |
| Thursday | 8:00AM-5:00PM |
| Friday | 8:00AM-3:00PM |
| Saturday | 8:00AM-3:00PM |
| Sunday | Closed |
Arlington Dental Associates does not need loud marketing language to feel trustworthy. The confidence comes from longevity, from the steady presence of two active doctors, and from the kind of visit where questions are answered clearly instead of rushed past. That neighborhood warmth matters, especially for families who want one office they can keep coming back to year after year.
For a redesign pitch, that means the page should not feel cold or hyper-luxury. It should feel polished, assured, and calm. The palette leans mature instead of trendy, the typography adds dignity without stiffness, and the structure makes the office feel easy to understand at a glance. That is the sweet spot for an established family practice in Arlington.
There is also something important about the two-doctor setup. Many smaller offices accidentally undersell this. When a practice has two active doctors, patients read that as continuity, flexibility, and resilience. It suggests a real team, not a single overloaded schedule. Presenting Dr. David Marcus Chei and Dr. Young Kyu Kim clearly, without stock-photo fakery, keeps the page honest while still showing depth.
The review supports the same story. Jennifer R. does not rave about vague transformation language. She talks about friendly people, detailed explanations, and reasonable pricing. That is exactly the kind of grounded social proof that fits this office. It says the practice earns trust through behavior, not volume.
The service list also reinforces the value of staying with one office over time. General dentistry, cleaning and prevention, family dentistry, cosmetic work, braces, implants, and oral surgery together suggest a place that can keep up with changing needs rather than forcing patients to restart elsewhere each time life changes.
That broader scope matters for busy families. Parents want an office that can handle routine cleanings, cosmetic wants, and more complex treatment planning without making everything feel fragmented. A page that shows range while still feeling personal helps the practice come across as both capable and approachable.
Affordability is another major trust lever here. Accepting most insurance plans, offering an in-office membership plan, and providing financing through CareCredit, Proceed Finance, and Sunbit means the office understands that treatment decisions do not happen in a financial vacuum. It makes sense to spotlight that without turning the page into a coupon sheet.
Hours matter too. Monday through Thursday until 5:00PM, plus Friday and Saturday until 3:00PM, is a practical schedule. It tells patients this office is trying to fit real life, not just ideal calendars. For a family-centered practice, that kind of operational detail is not boring, it is reassuring.
The physical location on South Cooper Street is another quiet advantage. The page should anchor the office locally, not generically. Mentioning Arlington throughout, showing the real address clearly, and embedding the actual map makes the redesign feel tied to the neighborhood instead of floating in template-land.
When this page feels specific, it works harder. Instead of saying every dental office line under the sun, it makes a case for why this particular practice, in this part of Arlington, with this mix of history and services, is worth calling. That specificity is the whole game.
Even the visual restraint is part of the argument. No fake doctor headshots. No random stock smiles implying a team that may not exist. No overhyped luxury copy that would feel out of character. Just a cleaner, more intentional version of the trust the office already appears to have earned.
That is what makes the redesign feel like a real pitch rather than a generic facelift. It respects what Arlington Dental Associates already is, then sharpens the presentation so more people can feel that confidence immediately.
An established practice like this benefits from rhythm. The page should open with authority, move into proof, explain services in plain language, then make the path to contact feel easy and human. That structure mirrors how patients build comfort. First they want to know whether the office feels credible. Then they want to know what care is offered. Then they want to know if the people behind it seem reasonable. Finally, they want to know whether calling will be simple.
Arlington Dental Associates has enough real material to support that journey. The opening year, 1989, is not filler. It signals durability. In health-related businesses, longevity often calms anxiety because patients associate it with reliability and repeat trust. A redesigned site can lean into that without sounding stuck in the past.
The two-doctor presentation plays a similar role. When visitors see both Dr. David Marcus Chei and Dr. Young Kyu Kim acknowledged clearly, the office feels more substantial. It also avoids the mistake of making a real multi-doctor practice look like a one-person operation. That is one of the easiest ways to make the page feel built for this office specifically.
The family-friendly positioning should stay warm, but not childish. This is not a pediatric-only office with cartoon clouds everywhere. It is a practice serving families broadly, which means the aesthetic should feel welcoming to adults while still comfortable for parents bringing children. The Deep Forest, Dusty Gold, Terracotta, and Warm Ivory palette supports exactly that balance.
There is also value in speaking plainly about service. Patients generally do not want to decode marketing euphemisms when they are thinking about dentistry. If they need cleaning and prevention, braces, implants, cosmetic dentistry, or oral surgery, the page should say that clearly, then add a concise benefit sentence that makes the offering feel personal instead of boilerplate.
One subtle strength of the practice is the combination of personal touch and practical affordability. Those two qualities together are powerful because they reduce two different anxieties at once. Patients worry about how they will be treated, and they worry about how they will pay. This office appears to address both.
The scraped review almost reads like a mini brand statement. Great service. Friendly staff. Detailed explanations. Reasonable pricing. Recommendable. That is a simple, believable reputation. Rather than inventing louder claims, the redesign works best when it organizes the page around those existing signals.
Even the footer can contribute to the story. A straightforward presentation of the address, phone, email, and hours communicates confidence. It says the office is accessible, rooted, and ready. That matters more than clever footer copy ever will.
Because this is a redesign draft, there is also strategic value in showing what a more polished version of the practice could look like without changing its personality. The page should feel like Arlington Dental Associates on a really good day, not like an entirely different brand parachuting into Arlington from a startup incubator.
That is why the copy avoids extreme promises. Dentistry is intimate, local, and trust-heavy. The strongest pitch for this office is not spectacle. It is confidence, consistency, and a sense that real people will explain things well and treat patients fairly.
When those signals are arranged cleanly, a dated site stops getting in the way of the practice’s actual reputation. The redesign becomes useful because it removes friction between what the office really is and what a new patient sees in the first thirty seconds.
And that is the end goal here. Make the digital first impression match the steady, personal, long-running care the practice appears to provide in real life.