About Dr. David Hamer
Charlottesville’s north side keeps its own rhythm—entrepreneurial, neighborly, and quietly polished. Along roads you pass smaller offices that serve the same steady purpose: concrete solutions for common needs. Between larger medical plazas and strip-mall storefronts sits a modern practice that has made the same commitment since relocating to one of the area’s newer commercial crossroads. Two-twenty North Berkshire, Suite 101 anchors a single-story complex south of Hydraulic, visible from the morning traffic heading toward the airport.
The specialist here practices a branch of dentistry that focuses on reconfiguring smiles through careful appliance design. Individual adult and adolescent mouths get the same methodical attention: initial scans, custom bracket sets, wires calibrated to fractions of a millimeter, retainer protocols after active treatment. Invisalign-style aligners occasionally replace brackets for patients who qualify, and several oro-facial exercises are prescribed when mandibular shifts need reinforcement. Routine appointments track incremental movements via periodic X-rays and intra-oral photographs—standard records that let every stage of tooth migration stay within the planned envelope.
If you’re hunting professional guidance beyond quick cosmetic fixes, the office maintains an open schedule most weeks yet still appends lengthy slots for new patients. Call (434) 296-0188 when your calendar has gaps; same-day consults aren’t standard, but openings arise when cancellations occur. Insurance paperwork and financing instructions are handled on-site before any wires ever appear—an arrangement that keeps surprises from surfacing mid-treatment. Digital portals let patients upload paperwork from home, shortening every return visit.
A modern orthodontic hub is measured not by foot traffic but by the number of straight, stable smiles that leave the neighborhood behind with permanently corrected bites. You’ll find the coordinates tucked behind a Harris Teeter plaza once you pull off Berkshire toward the railroad underpass—then watch for the same entrance lane every appointment cycle. Download the map to bypass U-turns on your next visit.
This listing was last updated on May 19, 2026