We ran the same dentist-near-me style prompts across major AI engines and
scored 2,500+ Ontario clinics on Entity Readiness, Answer Coverage,
Evidence Strength, and Crawlability. Find your clinic, see the tier, and
understand what is holding visibility back.
This is a public visibility benchmark, not a quality ranking. Every
clinic is scored on the same 4-dimension GEO Score used for paying
customers: Entity Readiness, Answer Coverage, Evidence Strength, and
Crawlability. See the full
Methodology page.
Leading (70+) — AI engines cite this clinic on at least 4 of 6 common "dentist near me"–style queries.
Competitive (40–69) — cited on 1–3 queries, or strong on some engines and weak on others.
Emerging (< 40) — rarely or never cited. Usually schema gaps, missing third-party signals, or bot-blocking in robots.txt.
Own a clinic?
Claim your listing and open the full audit.
If this is your practice, you can see the blockers behind the score,
the first fixes worth making, and the closest competitor gap. No credit
card, no signup wall.
If you believe your clinic's score or tier is wrong, email
index@rankinglocal.ai
with your clinic name + address + the specific dispute. We respond within
48 hours and re-run the score against current data. If the original
scoring was wrong, we update within 24 hours of confirmation.
What this Index is not
Not a clinical quality ranking. We measure AI visibility, not the quality of dental care.
Not a patient review. We aggregate public structured data, not patient opinion.
Not a recommendation. A low score means the clinic is invisible to AI engines — it does not mean you shouldn't visit.
Not endorsed by the Royal College of Dental Surgeons of Ontario (RCDSO) or any dental regulator.
Disclaimer: Tier assignments (Leading / Competitive /
Emerging) are based on publicly observable data — Google Business Profile
fields, on-site structured data, and live AI-engine citation queries. They
are snapshots that change as clinics update their sites and as AI models
evolve. Rankings are intentionally broad tiers rather than sharp 1-to-N
rankings to avoid overstating small-score differences. No scoring conveys
anything about clinical competence, professionalism, or patient outcomes.
Clinics believing a score is inaccurate should use the
dispute process above.