Who is going to be holding the drill? Peakdentalarts.com answers that before you have to ask, naming six dentists on the way in: Dr. Omar Virani, Dr. Pouya Bahrami, Dr. Lauren Chandler, Dr. Perline Li, Dr. Annie Yun, and Dr. Amir Ajar, with hygienists and clinic managers credited behind them. The verdict, stated up front so the sections can earn it: this is a credible North Shore practice that has done the legwork most dental sites skip, with one blank it leaves wide open. The dentists are named, the clinical scope is genuinely deep, and the outside reviews back it. What the page will not tell you is what any of it costs.

Treatment range

The general menu at Peakdentalarts.com is broad and reads like an inventory of an office that actually does these things week in and week out: fillings, crowns and bridges, same-day crowns, root canals and retreatment, extractions, wisdom teeth removal, dentures, inlays and onlays, cracked tooth repair, bonding, and dental emergencies. Implants sit on that same list, and that is the line to slow down on. The standard move in general dentistry is to hand an implant case to a specialist down the road, after which the patient spends a few months shuttling between two front desks and two waiting rooms. Keeping the work in-house, as Peakdentalarts.com does, collapses that into one team and one chart.

Cosmetic work at Peakdentalarts.com covers teeth whitening, porcelain veneers, treatment for discolored teeth, and Invisalign clear aligners. The Invisalign angle targets adults who want straighter teeth without the metal, and it slots in beside the whitening and veneers for anyone chasing a fuller change. Preventive care, usually the part a site buries three clicks down, gets proper room here: sealants, oral cancer screening, gum recession and gingivitis care, bleeding gums treatment, bad breath treatment, and tooth wear assessment. Peakdentalarts.com also mentions complimentary patient photography, which is the small habit of an office that puts the picture on a screen and walks you through what it sees before it books the next visit.

Locations and access

Geography is handled with a precision you do not always get. Peakdentalarts.com names North Vancouver and West Vancouver, then keeps going to Park Royal, Ambleside, Edgemont Village, and Lynn Valley. Two clinics widen the reach past a single address, but the real trick is naming neighbourhoods the way locals say them, so a patient can measure the clinic against the drive they already make instead of squinting at a pinned map.

Both locations publish full addresses, direct phone numbers, and hours, with no hunting required to find any of it. The Marine Drive clinic runs Monday through Saturday, 9am to 5pm. Lower Lonsdale stays open later, until 7pm Monday through Thursday, then 9 to 5 Friday through Sunday. Lay the two schedules side by side and a person with a job has real space to book around it, which a one-office practice almost never manages. An email address sits alongside the two clinic numbers as a third way in.

The outside record

The third-party numbers spread across enough platforms to count for something. Marine Drive holds a 4.8-star average on Google across 153 reviews, and the 153 is the figure doing the heavy lifting: a handful of early five-stars can lift any office to 4.8, but 153 entries is a history rather than a good opening week. Lower Lonsdale shows 4.8 stars on TrustAnalytica and 29 reviews on Yelp.ca. The Facebook page sits at 28 reviews with a 100 percent recommendation rate. A RateMDs profile exists for the North Vancouver location, though it surfaces no score. Four platforms landing at the same high level is a consistency that is hard to argue with.

Where it goes quiet

Pricing. The public listing says nothing about cost, financing, or which insurers it takes. On implants and Invisalign that omission stings most, since those are precisely the treatments where the number out front decides whether someone books or keeps scrolling. A patient can stack Peakdentalarts.com against other North Shore offices on services and on reputation, just not on the figure that usually closes the question. Everything else Peakdentalarts.com puts forward is checkable; this one number is not on the page at all. The published material settles the clinical scope and the practice's standing; affordability stays a phone call away, and on these two treatments affordability is what most people ask about first.

The structural case holds together despite that. The dentists are named, the treatment list is comprehensive and keeps the implant work many general offices send elsewhere, the two-clinic setup with staggered evening and weekend hours gives genuine scheduling slack, and four review platforms agree on a high rating with a serious count behind the headline. The cost silence is the one thing a careful patient has to chase down. There is a tell in that silence. An office that will post six dentists by name and break its coverage down to the village has clearly decided, on purpose, that the money conversation happens in the chair and not on the page.