Dr. William R. Warren, DDS
About Dr. William R. Warren, DDS
General dentistry covers everything from routine cleanings to complex restorative work—but finding a practice with consistent patient feedback can narrow the search. Dr. William R. Warren, DDS holds a 3.8 rating based on 37 Google reviews, a signal that’s neither overwhelmingly effusive nor dismissive. That middle ground often suggests a practice handling the expected: fillings, extractions, perhaps the occasional crown or bridge, without veering into specialty niches. Dentistry, after all, thrives on repetition; the same procedures, the same tools, the same chairside manner—what varies is how patients interpret the experience.
The office sits at 2606 New Walkertown Rd in Winston-Salem, a stretch where medical and dental practices share space with auto shops and the occasional strip mall. This part of the city doesn’t pretend to be a destination; it’s functional, a place where errands get done and appointments get kept. Reviews for dental offices here tend to cluster around two themes: efficiency and pain management—neither of which inspire poetic descriptions, but both of which matter when you’re in the chair. A 3.8 rating doesn’t imply perfection, but it does suggest a baseline of competence; most patients leave satisfied, even if they don’t leave raves.
Dentists rarely become household names unless something goes spectacularly right—or wrong. Dr. Warren’s practice hasn’t triggered either extreme, judging by the feedback. That’s not a critique; stability in healthcare is its own kind of endorsement. For those mapping out their next checkup or a sudden toothache, the phone line is open at (336) 724-5055. Calls like these are usually brief: a date, a time, a confirmation. No one lingers on the line when the topic is plaque scraping or X-rays.
Directions are best pulled from the map listing, where the building’s unassuming facade blends into the commercial stretch of New Walkertown Road. This isn’t a neighborhood that lends itself to strolling; it’s a place you drive to, park near, and leave once the appointment’s over. The surrounding area—dotted with fast-food chains and gas stations—reinforces the utilitarian mood. Dentistry, like much of life here, is treated as a necessity, not an event.
This listing was last updated on March 21, 2026