Foreign-trained dentist license in Texas
In short, Texas requires a CODA-accredited advanced-standing degree (no residency-only route found).
Pathway
CODA-accredited SPECIALTY program (min. 2 full-time academic years) — GPR/AEGD explicitly NOT accepted. Per TSBDE and 22 TAC §101, a graduate of a non-accredited (foreign) dental school qualifies for licensure by exam by presenting proof of successful completion of training in a CODA-accredited education program that is an ADA-approved specialty consisting of at least two full-time academic years. TSBDE states it will NOT recognize a General Practice Residency (GPR) or Advanced Education in General Dentistry (AEGD) in lieu of the specialty requirement. (An advanced-standing CODA DDS/DMD would also satisfy the accredited-school route.)
Required exams
National Board — NBDE Parts I & II or the iNBDE (electronically validated); plus a general-dentistry regional clinical exam dated within 7 years — TSBDE validates ADEX and CRDTS-SRTA (exams after Jan 1, 2019 must include perio/prostho sections). (WREB retired Dec 31, 2022.) Texas jurisprudence assessment also required.
Notes
Key distinction: Texas accepts a 2-year CODA-accredited ADA-recognized SPECIALTY program for foreign grads but explicitly rejects GPR/AEGD (general residency) as a substitute. Advanced-standing CODA DDS/DMD is the alternative route.
Residency pathway
No residency-only route found: the sourced state record generally points foreign-trained dentists toward a CODA-accredited DDS/DMD or advanced-standing pathway, not a residency-only route.
View residency pathwayCompare advanced-standingCompare no-repeat pathsView licensure exams