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UK Dentistry · 2027 Entry

University of Otago — Dentistry (BDS) Dentistry InterviewFormat, Questions & Prep Tips

Interview Late September or early October (invitations issued after HSFY Semester 2 results)Decisions Outcomes typically advised by 18 December
Overview

Otago BDS is New Zealand's **only dental degree** and one of the oldest dental schools in the Southern Hemisphere. Unlike Otago MBChB (where the HSFY and Graduate pathways have no interview), **all BDS pathways require an interview** — approximately 350 applicants across all admission categories are invited to a structured Zoom videoconference interview held in late September or early October each year. Final selection combines interview performance and academic score; the weighting formula is not published.

The entry route mirrors MBChB: domestic applicants complete Health Sciences First Year (HSFY) at Otago or an equivalent first-year programme at the University of Auckland (BHSc or BSc Biomed), with a minimum average mark of 65% across 7 compulsory papers (no mark below 60% at first attempt) as a prerequisite for interview shortlisting. The Graduate Category accepts applicants who completed a relevant NZ degree within the past three years, with a minimum weighted GPA of 5.0.

A significant admissions change took effect from the **2025 intake**: **UCAT ANZ is no longer required for BDS**. This represents a meaningful divergence from the MBChB process at Otago (which retains UCAT ANZ as a threshold gate for HSFY and Graduate applicants) and from prior years of BDS admissions. No UCAT data is used in BDS selection from 2025 onwards.

The structured Zoom interview is the critical differentiator of BDS selection from MBChB at Otago. With ~350 interview invitations and an unknown number of final places determined annually by Council, strong interview performance alongside solid HSFY academics is essential. Specific station counts, interviewer composition, and assessed domains are **not published** in official BDS materials.

Key facts

Key Facts at a Glance

Dental school status
Only dental school in New Zealand
International places
Up to 20 per year
Interview invitations per year
~350 (across all categories)
Interview format
Structured Zoom videoconference — late September/early October
Weighting formula
Interview + academic score combined; weighting not published
UCAT ANZ
Not required (removed from BDS from 2025 intake)
Minimum HSFY average for shortlisting
65% (no mark below 60% at first attempt)
Graduate Category min. GPA
5.0 / 9.0 weighted across qualifying degree
International tuition (2026)
NZD 114,845 per year (verify with Otago)
Course duration
5 years (Year 1 HSFY + Years 2–5 BDS)
Format

Interview Format

  • All shortlisted applicants attend a **structured Zoom videoconference interview** — approximately 350 invitations issued across all admission categories.
  • Interview held in **late September or early October** each year.
  • The specific number of stations, interviewers, duration per station, and assessed domains are **not published** in official BDS materials. Partially withheld in OIA responses as of October 2024.
  • Interview is a **compulsory** selection component — both academic score and interview performance contribute to the final ranking.
  • UCAT ANZ is **no longer required** for BDS from the 2025 intake (applications submitted in 2024 for 2025 second-year entry). This is a firm policy change confirmed by OIA-released information.
  • Dental Admissions Committee **may set a minimum academic requirement** for HSFY applicants to proceed to interview (determined annually). Monitor the Faculty of Dentistry admissions page each cycle.
  • Graduate applicants who completed BHSc or BSc (Biomedical Sciences) at the University of Auckland are eligible under the Graduate Category as equivalent to Otago HSFY.
  • Equity pathways for Rural Origins, Māori, and Pacific applicants operate under the same framework as MBChB — government-funded rural places are allocated in both programmes.
  • All BDS clinical teaching (Years 2–5) is at the Dunedin Faculty of Dentistry — there is no branch-campus split as in MBChB.
Questions

Sample Interview Questions

motivation

Why dentistry rather than medicine, given that you completed the same HSFY papers as MBChB applicants?

This question is common and important. Go beyond "I like working with my hands." Address the scope of oral health, the preventive dimension, the longitudinal patient relationships in general practice, and your specific clinical observations or experience.

motivation

Otago is the only dental school in New Zealand. What does that mean for the profession, and how does it influence what you expect from your training?

Acknowledge the weight of being the sole dental training institution — the profession's composition and values flow from Otago. Show you understand the responsibility this places on the school and on graduates.

ethics

A patient comes to your dental clinic in significant pain. They have no insurance and cannot pay for the treatment required. They ask you to "just do something quick and cheap." What are your obligations?

Clinical duty of care, informed consent for a modified treatment plan, the patient's autonomy, and access to the public dental health system (Community Dental Service or emergency dental services). Register them as an urgent patient if appropriate; document the conversation.

communication

Explain what happens during a root canal treatment to a 10-year-old patient who is afraid.

Plain language, age-appropriate analogy, address the fear directly before the information. Do not minimise the procedure but reframe it around the outcome (relief of pain). Involve the parent appropriately.

ethics

Te Tiriti o Waitangi creates obligations for health professionals. How do you understand those obligations specifically in the context of oral health for Māori communities?

Māori oral health inequity is well documented in New Zealand — higher rates of dental caries, lower access to regular dental care. Link Treaty obligations (equity under Article 3 / ōritetanga) to specific oral health disparities. Reference the role of Māori community health workers and kaupapa Māori dental services.

motivation

Describe an experience — clinical, volunteer, or personal — that confirmed dentistry was the right career for you.

Concrete, specific, sensory. Examiners are assessing genuine commitment, not a curated narrative. One specific moment or observation is worth more than a list of generic reasons.

role-play

Role-play: a patient aged 16 presents alone requesting tooth whitening. The procedure is cosmetic, costs $400, and their parents are unaware. How do you manage this consultation?

Informed consent: a 16-year-old may have capacity under NZ law (informed consent is capacity-based, not strictly age-based). Discuss the procedure, risks (sensitivity, re-whitening cycles), and cost. Advise parental discussion without demanding it if you assess capacity. Document.

ethics

You are in your third year of the BDS programme and you observe a fellow student performing a procedure with an incorrect technique that could harm the patient. The supervisor is not present. What do you do?

Immediate patient safety first — intervene if the harm is imminent (politely, directly). Then follow the escalation pathway: inform the clinical supervisor. Document. The Dental Council of New Zealand (analogous to MCNZ) expects students to report safety concerns.

motivation

New Zealand has significant shortages of dentists in rural communities. Would you be willing to practice rurally after graduation? Why or why not?

Honest answer. Government-funded rural places exist in BDS to address this shortage. Mention the rural equity pathway if relevant to you. If you are not certain about rural practice, you can acknowledge the problem and articulate what would make it feasible for you.

academic

Your HSFY average was 67% — just above the 65% minimum. How do you persuade us that you can handle the rigour of a 5-year BDS programme, and why was your score at that level?

Do not be defensive. Honest explanation + specific remediation plan. Demonstrate that you understand the demands of the BDS curriculum and have strategies to meet them. An authentic answer about challenges you faced carries more weight than a polished deflection.

communication

Describe a time you gave constructive feedback to a peer or colleague that was difficult to deliver. What approach did you use and what happened?

STAR format. Focus on the process and what you learned — outcome is secondary. Dental training involves regular peer feedback in clinical environments.

ethics

A patient wants you to extract a tooth that you believe should be restored. They are in good health, have insurance, and simply do not want to deal with ongoing dental work. What do you do?

Respect autonomy within clinical advice. You have an obligation to provide your best clinical recommendation (restoration) and explain it clearly. Ultimately if the patient has capacity and understands the consequences, their informed decision must be respected. Document the conversation.

motivation

Why did Otago remove UCAT ANZ from the BDS admissions process from the 2025 intake? What is your view on that decision?

Show that you know this change occurred. You may not know the exact rationale (not published officially), but you can reason about it: UCAT is an academic aptitude tool, and Otago may have found that HSFY academic performance was sufficiently predictive without it. Offer a balanced view — there are arguments both for and against standardised tests in clinical admissions.

role-play

Role-play: explain the importance of regular brushing and flossing to a 45-year-old patient with early-stage periodontal disease who says they "don't have time" and has never flossed consistently.

Motivational interviewing approach: explore the barrier (time), acknowledge it as real, provide targeted brief advice, agree on a realistic first step. Avoid lecturing. Offer a follow-up appointment to review.

ethics

Should the New Zealand government fund universal free dental care for adults, not just for children under 18? What would be the challenges?

Engage with the NZ child dental benefits scheme (up to age 18) and the gap for adults. Arguments for: oral health inequity, systemic links between oral and systemic disease, preventive cost savings. Arguments against: fiscal cost, workforce capacity, prioritisation trade-offs within health budgets.

Prepare

How to Prepare

01

Practise Zoom interviews specifically — test your audio, lighting, background, and internet connection. The BDS interview is conducted entirely via Zoom videoconference; technical problems are your responsibility to prevent.

02

Since the station count, duration, and assessed domains are **not officially published**, practise for a variety of formats: panel-style questions, scenario-based clinical ethics, communication role-plays, and motivation questions. Cover the full range.

03

Know the significance of the **UCAT ANZ removal** from BDS (2025 intake onwards) — this is likely to come up directly or indirectly, and knowing the fact accurately signals that you have done genuine research.

04

Build a strong "why dentistry, not medicine" narrative — this question is near-universal in dental school interviews and the HSFY pathway means all applicants have completed identical first-year papers.

05

Learn the oral health inequity data for Māori communities in New Zealand and the Treaty obligation to address it — Te Tiriti themes appear across all NZ health professional interviews.

06

Prepare 6–8 concrete STAR anecdotes covering: ethical dilemmas you have faced, patient/person communication, academic resilience, teamwork in a clinical or practical setting, and your specific exposure to oral health or dentistry.

07

Confirm the annual Dental Admissions Committee minimum academic threshold for HSFY interview shortlisting — it is set each year and published on the Faculty of Dentistry admissions page. The 65% average with no mark below 60% is the baseline, but the Committee may raise this in competitive years.

08

If applying via the Rural Origins equity pathway, document your GCH-classified rural background carefully and be prepared to speak to your commitment to rural oral health in the interview.

Pitfalls

Common Pitfalls

Treating the BDS interview as equivalent to an MMI at Auckland — the Otago BDS interview is a structured videoconference, not an asynchronous Kira Talent format or a classic rotating MMI circuit. Practise accordingly.
Believing that the UCAT ANZ change means interview performance matters less — the opposite may be true. Without a UCAT component, the interview carries relatively more weight in differentiating applicants with similar HSFY academic scores.
Not knowing that the specific format, station count, and domains are not published — trying to game an undisclosed format can lead to over-preparation for the wrong scenario. Broad, adaptive preparation across question types is more robust.
Preparing only dental-specific content and neglecting broader NZ health ethics, Treaty obligations, and equity topics — Otago BDS examiners are part of the Division of Health Sciences and expect cross-programme health-professional values.
Assuming the Graduate Category eligibility window is the same for BDS as it is elsewhere — confirm the "within three years" degree completion requirement against the official Otago admissions page each cycle.
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes — unlike Otago MBChB HSFY and Graduate pathways (which have no interview), all BDS applicants who are shortlisted academically are invited to a structured Zoom videoconference interview. Approximately 350 interview invitations are issued each year across all admission categories. The interview is held in late September or early October.

No. UCAT ANZ was removed from BDS admissions from the 2025 intake (applications submitted in 2024 for 2025 second-year entry). This is confirmed by OIA-released information. No UCAT data is used in BDS selection. This is a significant difference from Otago MBChB, which still uses UCAT ANZ as a threshold gate for HSFY and Graduate applicants.

The number of domestic places is determined annually by the Council on the basis of available resources and is not separately published on official webpages. Up to 20 international places are available per year. Approximately 350 applicants are invited to interview across all categories.

For HSFY applicants, the minimum is an average mark of 65% across the 7 prescribed HSFY papers, with no mark below 60% in any prescribed paper at first attempt. The Dental Admissions Committee may set a higher minimum in any given year based on applicant pool competitiveness — check the Faculty of Dentistry admissions page for the current-cycle threshold.

Yes. The University of Otago Faculty of Dentistry is the only dental school in New Zealand. There is no alternative BDS provider. All BDS training takes place in Dunedin; there is no branch-campus clinical split equivalent to MBChB.

Yes. Applicants who completed BHSc or BSc (Biomedical Sciences) at the University of Auckland are eligible under the Otago BDS Graduate Category as these programmes are accepted as equivalent to Otago HSFY. The Graduate Category requires a weighted GPA of at least 5.0 across the qualifying degree and the degree must have been completed within the three years prior to the application date.

The same equity framework applies as for Otago MBChB: Rural Origins, Māori, Pacific, Socioeconomic Equity, and Refugee Background applicants are recognised within the existing admission categories and benefit from equity weighting within separate ranking sub-pools. Government-funded rural places are allocated in BDS to support rural oral health workforce development. Māori and Pacific applicants are supported under the Te Kauae Paraoa Māori health policy. Individual sub-group quotas are not separately published.
Guides

Related guides

Free, evidence-based guides from current UK medical and dental students.

Sources & official admissions information

We cross-check every interview guide against the school's own admissions guidance and the UK regulators.

  1. University of Otago — Dentistry (BDS) — official admissions pageProgramme overview, entry requirements, interview format and timeline straight from the school.
  2. UCAT ConsortiumOfficial UCAT registration, test format, scoring methodology and free practice materials.
  3. General Dental Council (GDC) — recognised UK dental qualificationsStatutory regulator. Recognised dental qualifications and registered-dentist register.
  4. Dental Schools CouncilCoordinated body of UK dental schools. Entry-requirements comparison and widening-participation initiatives.

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