Phase 1 Orthodontics for Pembroke Pines Kids Ages 6-10
Your kid just lost their first tooth and you're wondering if their smile needs help now or later.
I get it.
As a parent in Pembroke Pines, you see the overlapping teeth or the way they breathe through their mouth and think "Should we do something about this?"
The answer isn't always yes.
But sometimes catching issues early makes everything easier down the road.
That's where Phase 1 orthodontics comes in.
It's not about rushing into braces at age seven.
It's about being smart with the window of time when your child's jaw is still growing and can be guided naturally.
At SMILE-FX Orthodontics in Miramar, we've worked with hundreds of Broward families to figure out exactly what their kids need and when they need it.
Some kids get Phase 1 treatment.
Some just get watched.
Some need nothing at all.
The key is knowing which bucket your child falls into, and that starts with one simple conversation.
What Phase 1 Orthodontics Actually Is
Phase 1 is early orthodontic intervention for kids between ages 6 and 10.
It's the American Association of Orthodontists (AAO) recommended window when your child's permanent teeth are coming in and their jaw is actively growing.
The goal isn't to straighten every tooth.
The goal is to guide jaw growth and create enough space for permanent teeth to land right.
It's like steering a ship before it hits rough waters instead of trying to fix it after.
Most kids need 6 to 18 months of Phase 1 treatment.
Then there's usually a rest period where we let them grow.
Then Phase 2 happens in the teen years if needed, and it's often shorter because we've already done the heavy lifting.
Here's the thing though: not every kid needs Phase 1.
We only recommend it when we actually see a problem that treatment now prevents a bigger problem later.
That's the honest truth.
The Real Signs Your 6-10 Year Old Might Benefit from Early Treatment
Watch for these specific patterns that show up in kids who do benefit from Phase 1:
Crowding and Overlapping Teeth
If their permanent front teeth are coming in sideways or stacked on top of each other, that's a sign their jaw might be too narrow for their tooth size.
Phase 1 expands the jaw naturally while it's still growing, creating the space they need.
No extractions needed later.
Crossbite
When the bottom teeth bite outside the top teeth (or vice versa), it puts weird pressure on the jaw joint.
Correcting this early prevents jaw pain and alignment problems down the road.
Open Bite
If your kid's front teeth don't touch when they bite down, it usually means they're a mouth breather.
Mouth breathing often happens because of narrow jaws or adenoid issues.
Early treatment works with their natural growth to fix this.
Severe Overjet
When the top front teeth stick way out past the bottom teeth, it's not just a cosmetic thing.
Those teeth are more prone to getting chipped or broken.
Habit Issues
Thumb sucking past age five or tongue thrusting can reshape the jaw as it grows.
Early appliances redirect these habits gently before they cause real problems.
The key word here is "gently."
We're not forcing anything.
We're working with their natural growth pattern.
Why the Age 7 Evaluation Actually Matters
The AAO recommends that kids get evaluated around age seven.
Not because they need treatment at seven.
But because seven is when we can see what's really happening with their bite and jaw development.
At this age, the first permanent molars are coming in.
We can see if there's crowding.
We can spot if the bite is off.
And most importantly, we still have years of jaw growth ahead to work with.
If you wait until age twelve, that window is closing fast.
By then, some problems that were fixable at seven now need extraction or more aggressive treatment.
That doesn't mean your seven-year-old needs braces.
It means a trained orthodontist can tell you if they will.
Why Pembroke Pines Families Trust SMILE-FX for Phase 1
You've got options for where to take your kid.
General dentists can refer you.
Chain orthodontist offices exist.
But here's what makes us different.
Our team at SMILE-FX is board-certified orthodontists, not dentists trying to do orthodontics on the side.
We use cutting-edge technology like 3D CBCT scans to see what's actually happening with growth and development.
We have a VIP suite designed for kids with games, noise-canceling headphones, VR distractions, and weighted blankets.
Your kid's first appointment doesn't feel scary.
It feels fun.
And we're honest.
If your kid doesn't need treatment, we'll tell you straight up.
We don't push treatment just to fill the schedule.
We only recommend what actually helps your kid's smile and health.
The drive from Pembroke Pines to our Miramar location is about 15-20 minutes depending on traffic.
We fit appointments around school schedules and your real life.
Families from Hollywood, Weston, Cooper City, Davie, and Fort Lauderdale make the drive because they know they're getting board-certified specialists, not a high-volume mill.
What Happens at Your First Phase 1 Appointment
Walk in expecting about 45 to 60 minutes.
First, we talk.
We listen to what you've noticed, what worries you, and what your kid's daily habits look like.
Then we do a thorough exam and take low-dose digital images or a 3D CBCT scan.
We explain everything in plain language, not dental jargon.
Then we build a personalized growth plan specifically for your kid.
Some kids get a "watchful waiting" plan where we monitor growth over time.
Some get early intervention with an expander or light appliance.
Some need a combination of treatments.
You leave knowing exactly what's happening, why, and what comes next.
No surprises.
No pressure.
Just honest orthodontics from a specialist who actually cares about your kid's outcome.
Check out what real families say about their experience with us.
Phase 1 vs. Waiting: What You Actually Need to Know
Here's a question we hear all the time: "Should we do Phase 1 now or just wait and do braces as a teenager?"
The answer depends on what's actually happening with your kid's teeth and jaw.
If your kid has a narrow jaw and crowding, Phase 1 expands the jaw while it's still growing.
This often means Phase 2 (teenage braces or Invisalign) is shorter and easier.
Sometimes Phase 2 doesn't even happen because Phase 1 did the job.
If your kid has a crossbite or open bite, early correction prevents jaw joint problems and mouth breathing issues.
If your kid's teeth look fine and their bite looks fine, then watching and waiting is totally reasonable.
Growth changes things sometimes.
We just monitor.
The point is, there's no one-size-fits-all answer.
That's why getting evaluated early matters.
You get actual information to make an actual decision.
The Real Cost of Phase 1 Orthodontics
Phase 1 treatment costs less than full braces or clear aligners.
But if you do Phase 1 and then Phase 2, the total investment is more than if you just waited and did full treatment as a teenager.
However, there's a trade-off.
Phase 1 often means Phase 2 is shorter, easier, and sometimes unnecessary.
You're also potentially avoiding extractions or jaw surgery down the road.
And your kid gets to spend their teenage years with a smile they feel good about instead of years in heavy braces.
That matters more than people think.
When Early Intervention Actually Prevents Bigger Problems
I've talked to parents who say, "We wish we'd done this earlier."
Not because their kid's teeth look different, but because they avoided problems.
A mom from Weston told us that her son's Phase 1 treatment fixed his crossbite.
His jaw development normalized.
By the time he turned twelve, his bite looked great naturally.
He avoided years of treatment.
Another family realized their daughter's mouth breathing was a real issue affecting her sleep quality.
An expander helped open her airways during Phase 1.
Now she sleeps better, has more energy, and her teeth are aligned naturally.
These aren't edge cases.
They're real outcomes that happen when early intervention is done right.
Getting Started with Phase 1 in Pembroke Pines
Ready to figure out if Phase 1 is right for your kid?
Start with a free 3D scan and VIP smile consultation at SMILE-FX.
We'll look at what's actually happening, answer your questions honestly, and give you a clear picture of what comes next.
Book a FREE 3D scan and VIP smile consultation here.
No charge.
No obligation.
Just real answers from board-certified orthodontists who specialize in Phase 1 for kids.
Your kid's smile potential is real.
Let's make sure you're giving them the best shot at growing into it naturally.
Understanding Growth Patterns and Jaw Development in Early Orthodontics for Kids
So your kid's permanent teeth are coming in and you're wondering if there's something off.
Maybe their jaw looks lopsided.
Maybe one side of their mouth seems to be growing faster than the other.
Maybe you're noticing their face shape is changing in ways that feel weird.
Here's what most parents don't know: jaw growth during ages 6 to 10 is uneven and unpredictable.
Some kids grow in spurts.
Some grow slowly and steady.
Some have growth patterns that mean their teeth will never fit right without help.
That's not doom and gloom.
That's just biology.
And understanding how growth works is the key to knowing whether your child needs early orthodontic care or not.
How Your Kid's Jaw Actually Grows
Your child's jaw doesn't grow like a balloon inflating uniformly in all directions.
It grows in layers.
The upper jaw grows down and forward.
The lower jaw grows down and back.
They're growing at different speeds and in different directions.
This is called skeletal growth, and it's happening whether you see it or not.
Most of this growth happens before age twelve.
By the time your kid hits their mid-teens, the heavy lifting is done.
That's why timing matters so much with early orthodontics.
If you spot a problem at age seven, you've got maybe five years of significant growth left to work with.
If you wait until age thirteen, that window is nearly closed.
The bones are becoming more dense.
Growth is slowing down.
What was easy to fix at seven becomes harder at thirteen.
The Difference Between Tooth Growth and Jaw Growth
Here's where parents get confused.
Your kid's permanent teeth are erupting (that's the fancy word for coming in).
At the same time, their jaw is growing.
These two things aren't always in sync.
Sometimes the teeth come in before the jaw is big enough to fit them all.
That's crowding.
Sometimes the jaw grows way ahead of the teeth.
That creates gaps and spaces.
Sometimes the upper and lower jaws grow at different rates.
That's when you get overbites, underbites, and crossbites.
The teeth aren't the problem.
The jaw relationship is the problem.
And that's exactly what orthodontists trained in growth management are looking for.
We're not just straightening teeth in kids.
We're guiding the bones themselves to grow in the right direction.
Why Some Kids' Faces Look Imbalanced During These Years
Remember when your kid was five and looked totally normal, and now at eight they look kind of asymmetrical?
That's growth.
That's development.
That's not necessarily a problem that needs fixing.
But sometimes it is.
If one side of the jaw is growing significantly faster than the other, that asymmetry can get locked in.
The teeth follow the jaw, so a jaw that's growing crooked means teeth that will be crooked.
This is different from just looking awkward during the growth phase.
This is structural.
This is worth watching.
A board-certified orthodontist can tell the difference between normal growth asymmetry and something that will need correction.
That's why the evaluation at this age is so valuable.
We can monitor growth patterns over time with regular check-ins.
We take photos and measurements and track what's actually happening.
Then we decide together with you whether to intervene or keep watching.
Signs Your Kid Might Have a Growth Pattern That Needs Attention
Not all growth patterns are equal.
Some kids' natural development will create the space they need for their permanent teeth.
Some won't.
Here's what we look for:
Forward Growth Problems
If your child's lower jaw isn't growing forward enough compared to their upper jaw, they'll develop an overjet (upper teeth sticking out too far).
Catching this at age seven and working with growth can prevent the need for braces or surgery later.
Vertical Growth Problems
Some kids grow more vertically than horizontally.
Their face gets longer but not wider.
This can create an open bite where the front teeth don't touch when biting down.
A mouth-breathing habit makes this worse, which is a vicious cycle.
The narrow airway leads to mouth breathing, which shapes the jaw differently, which reinforces the problem.
Width Growth Problems
The palate (roof of the mouth) can be too narrow for the permanent teeth to fit.
An expander works with natural growth to widen it.
Same expander used at age seven works way faster and easier than one used at age thirteen.
That's not because the thirteen-year-old is broken.
That's because the palate is less responsive to growth guidance when the kid is older.
Crossbite Patterns
If the lower jaw is shifted to one side because of how it's growing, that can lock in a crossbite.
The jaw remembers that position and settles there.
Correcting the pattern early lets the jaw grow straight.
When Growth Is Actually Working Against Your Kid
Sometimes growth makes things worse, not better.
A kid with a slight overbite at age seven might have a serious overbite at age twelve if growth isn't guided the right way.
A kid with early signs of a crossbite can develop a jaw that's permanently shifted to one side as they grow.
The teeth don't cause this.
The bones do.
And bones respond to forces and guidance, especially during active growth years.
This is why growth-guided orthodontics is different from waiting and doing braces later.
With other orthodontic treatments, you're correcting what already went wrong.
With growth guidance, you're preventing it from going wrong in the first place.
That's a fundamentally different approach.
And it only works during the growth window.
How We Track Growth at SMILE-FX
We don't just guess about what's happening with your kid's jaw.
We measure it.
We track it over time.
We use 3D imaging technology to see exactly what's happening with bone growth and tooth development.
Then we compare that to what we saw six months ago and twelve months ago.
That pattern tells us everything.
Is the lower jaw catching up to the upper jaw like it should?
Is the palate widening with growth?
Is there a shift happening that we need to correct?
Those answers change everything about what we recommend.
Sometimes we recommend early intervention because growth patterns show us a problem coming.
Sometimes we recommend watchful waiting because growth is tracking the right way.
Sometimes we recommend nothing because the kid's growth pattern is totally normal.
But we know because we measured.
We didn't guess.
What Does a Growth-Guided Treatment Plan Actually Look Like?
If we identify a growth pattern that needs attention, here's what happens.
We use appliances that work with natural growth instead of against it.
A palatal expander widens the upper jaw as the growth plates are still expanding naturally.
It's not forcing anything.
It's guiding.
A chin cup or other functional appliance can encourage forward growth of a lower jaw that's lagging behind.
Again, it's guidance, not force.
The kid's own growing jaw is doing the work.
The appliance is just sending the message in the right direction.
This looks totally different from traditional braces.
It's not metal brackets on every tooth.
It's smaller, less visible, and more focused on the big picture of how the jaws relate to each other.
The Timeline That Actually Matters
Most growth-guided treatment takes six to eighteen months.
Then there's a pause.
We let the kid grow.
We monitor what happens during that growth phase.
We take new measurements and compare them to the old ones.
If growth is tracking well, maybe we're done.
If growth is still off, maybe we make adjustments.
Then there's usually another pause before any comprehensive treatment in the teenage years.
The point is, this isn't a constant process.
It's episodic.
We treat, we monitor, we wait, we treat again if needed.
That's way different from starting braces at seven and having the kid in braces for seven years straight.
Questions Parents Ask About Growth and Development
How do I know if my kid's jaw is growing right?
You can't tell just by looking.
That's why the evaluation and measurements matter.
But if your kid's face is becoming more balanced as they grow, that's a good sign.
If it's becoming more asymmetrical, that's worth checking.
Can growth be corrected after the growth window closes?
Sort of, but not the same way.
Adult jaw surgery can correct growth problems that weren't addressed during childhood.
But that's surgery, not braces.
That's way more intensive.
That's why early guidance matters.
Does my kid inherit their jaw size from me?
Yes and no.
Genetics plays a role in potential jaw size.
But growth patterns are also influenced by habits, breathing, tongue position, and other factors.
A kid can have big jaw genes but grow a small jaw if their habits aren't supporting growth.
Does mouth breathing really change jaw growth?
Absolutely.
When a kid breathes through their mouth instead of their nose, the tongue position is different.
The palate doesn't get the right pressure to expand.
The jaw grows taller and narrower instead of wider and fuller.
That's why we care about airway.
That's why we look at breathing patterns.
It's not just about the teeth.
It's about the whole growth picture.
Getting Real About Your Kid's Growth Potential
Every kid is different.
Every kid's growth pattern is different.
That's why one-size-fits-all answers don't work.
Some kids need early intervention because their growth pattern is heading toward problems.
Some kids are fine and just need monitoring.
Some kids are totally normal and don't need anything at all.
The only way to know which category your kid falls into is to get measured and tracked by someone who knows what they're looking for.
That's what we do at SMILE-FX.
We're not trying to sell you treatment.
We're trying to give you information so you can make the right choice for your kid.
Sometimes that choice is treatment.
Sometimes it's monitoring.
Sometimes it's nothing at all.
But whatever the choice, it's based on actual growth data, not assumptions.
Why Your Pediatric Dentist Might Miss This
General dentists and pediatric dentists are great at cavity prevention and tooth health.
But growth pattern assessment and jaw development tracking requires specialized training.
That's why orthodontists exist as a separate specialty.
We spend years learning how to read growth patterns, how to guide them, and how to time treatment for maximum benefit.
Your pediatric dentist can tell you "your kid might need braces someday."
An orthodontist can tell you "your kid's lower jaw is growing two millimeters per year slower than their upper jaw, so if we guide growth now, they won't need traditional braces later."
That's the difference.
That's the value.
The Investment in Monitoring Beats Guessing
Some parents worry that regular check-ins are just a way to make money.
I get the skepticism.
But here's the reality: monitoring is cheap.
It's photos, measurements, and conversation.
Treatment is expensive.
Surgery is really expensive.
If monitoring at age seven prevents surgery at age twenty-five, that's the best money you ever spent.
And that happens way more often than people realize.
You're not paying for unnecessary appointments.
You're investing in getting the right information so you make the right decision at the right time.
Start With Actual Data About Your Kid's Growth
Ready to know what's actually happening with your kid's jaw development?
Book a FREE 3D scan and VIP smile consultation at SMILE-FX.
We'll measure your kid's growth pattern, explain what we're seeing, and give you a real picture of whether they need early intervention or not.
No guessing.
No pressure to do treatment you don't need.
Just honest assessment from board-certified orthodontists who specialize in growth guidance for kids and teens.
Your child's jaw growth and tooth development is happening right now.
Understanding it beats wondering about it.
The Cost of Phase 1 Orthodontics: What Pembroke Pines and South Florida Families Actually Pay
Let's talk money because that's what really matters when you're deciding if early orthodontics makes sense for your kid.
You've heard about Phase 1 treatment.
You know it happens when kids are six to ten years old.
You understand the whole idea about guiding growth instead of waiting.
But here's the question nobody wants to ask out loud: how much does this actually cost?
I'm going to be straight with you because that's what matters.
The costs vary, and I want you to understand what you're paying for and whether it's worth it for your family.
Understanding Phase 1 Pricing in South Florida
Phase 1 treatment at a board-certified orthodontist South Florida typically runs between two thousand and five thousand dollars.
That covers the full treatment time, which is usually six to eighteen months depending on what your kid needs.
The price depends on a few things: what appliances you use, how complex the case is, and whether you need special imaging or monitoring.
Sounds like a lot?
Maybe, maybe not.
Here's where it gets interesting: a lot of families think Phase 1 costs extra money on top of what they'll pay for braces later.
That's true and not true at the same time.
If your kid does Phase 1 and then needs Phase 2 (full braces or clear aligners) as a teenager, yes, you're paying for two rounds of treatment.
But Phase 2 is often way shorter, less invasive, and sometimes doesn't happen at all because Phase 1 did the job.
That matters financially.
What's Included in Your Phase 1 Cost
When you're getting quoted for Phase 1 treatment, here's what you should be getting:
The full initial exam and 3D imaging technology that shows exactly what's happening with your kid's jaw and teeth.
All appointments during the treatment phase.
The actual appliance or expander your kid wears.
Any adjustments needed during treatment.
Progress monitoring and measurements to track how your kid's growth is responding.
A retainer to hold the results after treatment is done.
At a best orthodontist Miami or any quality practice, none of these should surprise you.
They're standard.
What shouldn't be included: pressure to buy expensive extras you don't need, or charges that weren't explained upfront.
Does Insurance Actually Help With Phase 1
Most dental insurance plans cover orthodontics, but coverage for Phase 1 is hit or miss.
Some plans cover it fully.
Some cover it partially.
Some don't cover early treatment at all.
Here's what typically happens: insurance might cover fifty percent of the cost, capped at a certain annual amount.
So if Phase 1 costs three thousand dollars and your plan covers fifty percent up to one thousand dollars per year, you're looking at paying about two thousand out of pocket (assuming the treatment spans more than one calendar year, which it usually does).
The best move?
Call your insurance company before you book an appointment and ask specifically: "Does my plan cover Phase 1 orthodontics for a child ages six to ten?"
Write down what they tell you.
Get a confirmation number.
Then when you call the orthodontist office, you'll know exactly what your out-of-pocket number looks like.
No surprises.
Financing Options Make Phase 1 Affordable
Most South Florida orthodontist offices offer payment plans because they get it: you can't just write a check for five thousand dollars.
Look for practices that offer:
Zero down financing so you're not dropping cash upfront.
Flexible monthly payments that fit your budget.
No interest plans if you pay within a certain timeframe (usually twelve to twenty-four months).
At SMILE-FX Orthodontic & Clear Aligner Studio, we work with families on payment options because the goal is getting your kid the care they need, not making finances the barrier.
The same applies whether your kid needs traditional braces or early phase treatment.
Why Cheap Orthodontics Usually Isn't the Move
You'll find cheaper options around South Florida.
You always can.
But here's what matters: a board-certified orthodontist spent extra years in school, passed board exams, and keeps current with the latest technology and techniques.
A general dentist doing orthodontics?
They didn't spend those years.
They didn't pass those exams.
The difference shows up in results.
It shows up in how they handle complications.
It shows up in whether your kid ends up needing Phase 2 at all.
Cheap treatment now often means expensive treatment later.
That's not fear mongering.
That's just math.
The Real Cost of Not Doing Phase 1
Here's what nobody talks about: what does it cost if you skip Phase 1 and just wait?
If your kid has a crowding problem and you wait until age twelve to address it, that problem usually needs tooth extraction or very aggressive braces treatment.
Extractions mean permanent loss of teeth.
Aggressive treatment takes longer and costs more.
If your kid has a crossbite or jaw misalignment that goes unaddressed during the growth window, you might end up needing jaw surgery as an adult.
That's not two to five thousand dollars.
That's thirty to fifty thousand dollars.
And that's if you can even do surgery to fix it.
Sometimes you just live with the problem because you didn't address it when it mattered.
So yes, Phase 1 costs something now.
But the alternative costs way more later.
Comparing Phase 1 to Full Comprehensive Treatment
Full braces treatment as a teenager usually costs between four thousand and eight thousand dollars depending on complexity.
Invisalign costs about the same, sometimes more.
Phase 1 is typically less expensive than full treatment because it's not treating every tooth and every angle.
It's targeted work on jaw growth and the big structural issues.
But if you do Phase 1 and then Phase 2, your total cost ends up being somewhere in the middle: more than Phase 1 alone, but often less than if you'd just done comprehensive treatment as a teenager.
Plus your kid's teeth look better during the teenage years because Phase 1 already fixed the major problems.
That matters for confidence and social stuff.
Hidden Costs That Catch Families Off Guard
Watch out for these:
Replacement appliances if your kid loses or breaks theirs (usually fifty to three hundred dollars depending on what broke).
Emergency visits if something goes wrong (sometimes covered, sometimes not).
Retainers after treatment (usually included, but some offices charge separately).
Tooth extractions if they're needed to make room (sometimes covered by medical insurance, sometimes not).
Consulting fees if you want a second opinion (some offices charge, quality ones like SMILE-FX don't).
A good top-rated orthodontist near me will explain all of these upfront.
They won't surprise you with costs you didn't know about.
What About Affordable Braces South Florida Options
If budget is tight, understand that "affordable" doesn't mean cheap quality.
It means offices that work with you on payment plans and don't charge for things you don't need.
At SMILE-FX, affordable means transparent pricing, flexible payment options, and no upselling.
It means you get board-certified specialist care at a fair price.
We serve families from Pembroke Pines to West Palm Beach to Aventura because quality orthodontics shouldn't require a six-figure household income.
That's the philosophy: affordable braces that don't sacrifice on expertise.
The Investment That Actually Pays for Itself
Think about it this way: Phase 1 treatment is an investment in preventing bigger problems later.
A kid who gets Phase 1 and avoids adult jaw surgery just saved thirty to fifty thousand dollars.
A kid who gets Phase 1 and avoids tooth extractions saves the permanent loss of healthy teeth.
A kid who gets Phase 1 and then skips Phase 2 entirely just saved four to eight thousand dollars.
That's a return on investment that matters.
What Does Insurance Cover Questions Answered
Does insurance cover Phase 1 orthodontics?
Usually yes, at least partially, but it varies by plan.
What's the average insurance contribution?
Usually somewhere between one hundred and fifteen hundred dollars per year, which works out to a total of two to three thousand for the full phase.
What if I don't have dental insurance?
Payment plans and flexible financing options mean you can still access quality care without it.
Are consultations free?
At SMILE-FX, yes.
That's a FREE 3D scan and VIP smile consultation.
No charge to find out if your kid needs Phase 1.
Then you can make a real decision based on actual information and actual pricing.
Getting Real Numbers for Your Family
Every kid's case is different, so every quote is different.
One kid might need a simple expander for eight months.
Another kid might need a combination of appliances for eighteen months.
The only way to know your family's actual cost is to get examined and get a real quote.
That's why our free consultation matters.
You see the top-rated orthodontist Fort Lauderdale and top-rated orthodontist Miramar specialists, they take a 3D scan, they explain what your kid needs, and they give you actual pricing.
Then you decide.
You're not guessing about costs.
You're not wondering if you can afford it.
You know.
Book a FREE 3D scan and VIP smile consultation at SMILE-FX Orthodontic & Clear Aligner Studio.
Let's get real numbers for your family and figure out if Phase 1 makes sense for your kid.
No pressure.
No sales pitch.
Just honest orthodontics from a best orthodontist South Florida practice that actually cares about what you pay for and what you get in return.