Dental clinics still own the CBCT market — they're the ones doing implants, root canals, and orthodontics every day. But hospitals are the fastest‑growing end‑user segment. Why? Because maxillofacial surgeries, trauma cases, and cancer reconstructions need CBCT for planning. The India CBCT dental imaging market forecast shows that hospitals are investing in higher‑end machines with larger fields of view (FOV) for full‑head scans.
What’s the difference? Clinics prefer small‑FOV CBCT (focused on 2‑3 teeth) — cheaper and enough for most procedures. Hospitals need large‑FOV for orthognathic surgery, airway analysis, and TMJ disorders. The India CBCT dental imaging market analysis notes that software solutions are the emerging technology segment — because a scan is useless without good planning software (like SimPlant or coDiagnostiX).
But there's a bottleneck: trained radiologists. Many CBCTs are bought but underused because no one knows how to interpret them properly. That's why teleradiology services are popping up — send the scan, get a report in 2 hours.
For patients: ask if your clinic has a CBCT and who reads it. A machine is only as good as the person using it.