OpenCharities

This text was generated using OCR and may contain errors. Check the original PDF to see the document submitted to the regulator.

2025-07-31-accounts

Oral Health Foundation Annual Review 2024-25

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

Reference and administrative details

Company number: 01027338 Charity number: 263198 (England & Wales) Principal and registered office: One Eastwood Binley Business Park Coventry CV3 2UB Trustees: Sarah Balser Catherine Brady Mhari Coxon RDH (Immediate Past President) Soha Dattani Professor Jonathon Timothy Newton (President) Juliette Reeves Helen Tomlinson Professor Georgios Tsakos Andrew Hay Ian Waller Ravi Rattan (Resigned September 2025) Jason Bunce (Appointed September 2024) President: Professor Jonathon Timothy Newton Secretary & Chief Executive: Dr Nigel Carter OBE BDS LDSRCS Bankers: HSBC Bank Plc, 15 Church Street, Rugby, CV21 3PN Auditors: Dafferns Audit Limited One Eastwood, Binley Business Park, Harry Weston Rd, Binley, Coventry CV3 2UB Rathbone Investment Management Ltd,

PAGE 2

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

Contents

Contents
Welcome from our President 4
Better oral health for all 6
People, Partner, Policy: Our strategy to 2030 7
Campaigns & public awareness
National Smile Month 2025 – Feed Your Smile 9
Mouth Cancer Action Month 2024 – raising awareness and driving action 12
Championing safe and informed dental choices 15
Programmes & resources
Evaluating oral health products through Accreditation 17
Equipping professionals and supporting communities 20
Building healthy smiles from the start 23
Connecting people with oral health at scale 25
Policy & advocacy
Shaping national and international agendas 27
Integrating oral health into employee wellbeing 29
Raising awareness of oral–systemic health links 31
Driving system-level change 33
Closing the gap between guidance and practice 35
Communications & influence
Making oral health a national talking point 37
Supporters & partnerships
Powered by partnership 39
Finance & Governance
Financial summary 2025 42
Report of the directors and trustees 43
Financial review 48
Independent auditor’s report 50
Annual accounts 54

PAGE 3

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

Welcome from our President

Professor Jonathon Timothy Newton

It is a privilege to introduce this year’s Annual Review of the activity of the Oral Health Foundation. As a charity we have advocated long and hard for the recognition of the importance of oral health, with the launch of the World Health Organisations Global Oral Health Strategy we are entering a time when that importance is achieving widespread recognition.

Oral health is fundamental to our wellbeing, affecting how we eat, speak, smile and connect with others. Yet for too many, good oral health remains out of reach. Inequalities persist, preventable diseases still dominate, and the connection between oral health and wider health is too often ignored.

This year has been about turning strategy into action . At the Oral Health Foundation, we have committed ourselves to tackling the barriers that stop people from living free from pain, discomfort and disease.

We have worked to empower individuals with knowledge and confidence, to build partnerships that widen access to resources, and to influence policy so oral health is properly recognised as a public health priority. These three strands – people, partners, and policy – remain at the core of our work.

Our campaigns this year brought this vision to life. National Smile Month, with its theme Feed Your Smile, highlighted the profound impact of nutrition on oral and general health. It reframed oral health not as an isolated

issue, but as a vital part of daily choices and long-term wellbeing. Mouth Cancer Action Month continued to shine a light on one of the fastest-growing cancers, amplifying the voices of survivors and experts alike to call for earlier recognition and urgent action.

Initiatives like Safe Smiles and Dental Buddy, along with our wider campaign work, have helped people of all ages make informed choices, build healthy habits and feel supported to take control of their oral health.

Our advocacy has pushed for oral health to be integrated across healthcare systems, workplaces and communities. We have pressed for policies that reduce sugar consumption and widen access to care and we have begun building new conversations about the links between oral health and conditions like diabetes, heart disease and Alzheimer’s. Step by step, we are ensuring

PAGE 4

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

that oral health is no longer treated as separate, but as central to the nation’s health agenda.

None of this could be achieved without the people who stand alongside us. As an independent charity, our strength lies in collaboration – with health professionals, educators, policymakers, corporate partners, and communities. Together we are showing that progress is possible, and that lasting change comes when evidence, compassion and commitment meet.

As we look to the future, we do so with ambition. By 2030, our goal is not only to reduce the burden of oral disease, but to embed oral health firmly into the way

society thinks about health. That might mean healthier children who grow up free from decay, adults supported to make informed choices, and communities where inequalities are tackled head-on.

This is the journey we are on. It is not an easy path, but it is the right one. And with your continued support, the Oral Health Foundation will remain a voice for those unheard, a champion for prevention, and a leader in building a healthier future.

Better oral health for all is not simply our mission. It is our promise.

Professor Jonathon Timothy Newton President, Oral Health Foundation

PAGE 5

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

Better oral health for all

The Oral Health Foundation is a charity that believes everybody deserves the chance to enjoy good oral health. When people are free from oral disease, they live healthier, happier and longer lives. That is why our mission is clear and unwavering: to improve oral health for all, and in doing so, to improve quality of life.

Over the past year, we have stepped up our efforts to reach people wherever they are, especially those most affected by oral health inequalities. Through education, advocacy and partnerships, we continue to inspire healthier habits, reduce preventable diseases, and give people the tools they need to look after their mouths.

During 2024–25, we have:

Delivered targeted support to communities at increased risk of poor oral health, empowering them with education and resources.

Offered advice and guidance to thousands of individuals, helping to reduce inequalities in oral health outcomes.

Played a leading role in shaping oral health policy in the UK and internationally, ensuring prevention and equity remain on the agenda.

Strengthened collaborations with health, education and corporate partners to extend the reach and impact of our programmes.

Expanded our leadership in mouth cancer action , working through new coalitions and partnerships to amplify awareness and early detection.

Engaged millions through press activity, public health campaigns and digital platforms , ensuring vital messages about oral health reach far and wide.

Looking forward, our mission remains the same: better oral health for all.

Through determination, collaboration and innovation, we will continue to build a healthier

PAGE 6

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

People, Partners, Policy: Our strategy to 2030

Over the last year, the Oral Health Foundation has moved from building the framework of its new strategy to putting it into action.

Guided by the three ambitions set out in our five-year plan, we have begun to make real progress towards our mission of better oral health for all.

Ambition 1: Empowering people and communities to improve oral health and quality of life

Helping people to take control of their oral health remains at the heart of what we do.

Over the past year, our public-facing campaigns have reached millions with clear and accessible information, from practical guidance on day-to-day care to inspiring people with the benefits of a healthy smile.

We have also extended support to those who face barriers in looking after their oral health, ensuring our work reaches groups where oral disease is more common. Our focus in the year ahead is to scale up these activities, so even more people can enjoy the benefits of a healthy mouth and better quality of life.

Ambition 2: Working with

organisations and individuals to enhance access to resources to improve oral health and quality of life

Partnership continues to be central to our impact.

Over the last year, we have strengthened our collaborations with dental professionals, schools, community organisations and corporate partners.

PAGE 7

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

products and support they need to protect their oral health.

These partnerships are already opening up opportunities to reach new audiences, and in the coming year we will build on this momentum to widen access to oral health resources for millions more.

Ambition 3: Advocating for evidence-informed policy to promote oral health and reduce oral health inequalities

Our advocacy work has stepped up over the past 12 months, with a stronger focus on influencing government, public health bodies and decision-makers.

We have engaged policymakers with the latest evidence on how oral health can be improved and inequalities reduced, and have continued to call for robust preventive measures to be put back on the agenda. This remains one of our top priorities.

By sustaining pressure and working closely with stakeholders, we are determined to ensure that oral health is not overlooked in national and local policy decisions.

PAGE 8

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

National Smile Month 2025: Feed Your Smile

National Smile Month 2025 followed the theme Feed Your Smile, placing nutrition at the centre of our oral health promotions.

National Smile Month 2025 placed nutrition at the centre of oral health promotion with the theme Feed Your Smile. Over four weeks between May and June, the campaign focused on how everyday diet choices influence not just oral health, but wider wellbeing.

Reach and engagement

More than 4,000 organisations took part across the UK, including schools, nurseries, workplaces, and dental practices.

Campaign content achieved an estimated 18 million impressions across print, broadcast, and digital media.

Social media engagement increased 42% year-on-year, driven by partnerships with retail and healthcare brands that reached audiences directly at the point of purchase.

Over 350,000 educational resources were distributed – helping families, teachers, and health professionals bring practical oral health messages to life.

PAGE 9

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

Impact and learning

Independent feedback over the course of the campaign showed that:

Three-in-four educators reported said the campaign using campaign patient discussions materials to and sugar reduction. integrate oral health into classroom Among community partners, 78% said they felt more nutrition lessons . confident in delivering oral health messages.

Two-in-three dental practices said the campaign prompted patient discussions about diet and sugar reduction.

These outcomes show that Feed Your Smile not only raised awareness but supported measurable behaviour change at community level.

Partnership and collaboration

The campaign’s success was made possible through collaboration with Oral-B, Wrigley Oral Healthcare Programme, Listerine, and Haleon, whose support enabled wider distribution, stronger digital reach, and professional credibility. Their partnership demonstrates how industry and charity can work together to improve public health at scale.

PAGE 10

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

Value and opportunity

By addressing diet as a root cause of poor oral health, Feed Your Smile advanced prevention and equity – priorities shared by the NHS Long Term Plan and WHO Global Oral Health Strategy. With additional investment, future campaigns can deepen this impact by:

Expanding school Developing digital Extending partnerships and community learning tools with the food and health interventions in high and evaluation sectors to influence need areas. dashboards. systemic change.

Looking ahead

National Smile Month 2026 marks the 50th year of the campaign – a milestone opportunity to celebrate progress, strengthen partnerships, and mobilise new investment to improve oral health for every community in the UK.

PAGE 11

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

Mouth Cancer Action Month 2024: raising awareness and driving action

Mouth Cancer Action Month 2024 delivered its most impactful campaign to date, placing early detection and public awareness at the centre of national conversation.

Held every November, the campaign brought survivors, professionals, and communities together to confront one of the UK’s fastest-growing cancers and to call for urgent action.

Reach and engagement

National media activity reached millions across broadcast, print, and digital channels, led by powerful survivor testimony and expert clinical commentary.

Support from PortmanDentex strengthened our broadcast profile and ensured sustained coverage across major outlets.

Thousands of dental practices, hospitals, charities, and community partners ran awareness and fundraising events , bringing information directly to those most at risk.

Digital engagement reached record levels, with early-signs content and survivor stories proving the strongest drivers of reach and sharing.

Our first in-house media day for patient ambassadors gave them an opportunity to engage with the campaign by sharing their stories and meeting other patients.

Tens of thousands

of posters, leaflets, badges, and digital resource packs were distributed – reinforcing consistent messaging across public and professional spaces.

PAGE 12

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

Impact and learning

Independent feedback over the course of the campaign showed that:

Increases in public Numerous reports from dental recognition of key practices and community symptoms such as clinics of individuals seeking non-healing ulcers, advice or booking a dental red or white patches, check-up after seeing and unusual lumps. campaign content.

Survivors playing a vital role in destigmatising conversations about mouth cancer and inspiring others to seek help early.

These outcomes demonstrate that raising awareness directly translates into earlier conversations, earlier referrals, and potentially lifesaving interventions.

Partnership and collaboration

Collaboration remained central to the campaign’s success.

Partnership with the Mouth Cancer Foundation and other charities ensured direct support for those living with the disease and broadened reach into cancer networks beyond dentistry.

Alliances with health organisations and corporate partners helped embed mouth cancer awareness into wider conversations about cancer, prevention, and public health.

These partnerships amplified the campaign’s voice and strengthened its credibility across clinical, community, and patient sectors.

Evidence and insight

The 2024 campaign coincided with the publication of the latest State of Mouth Cancer Report, which confirmed:

PAGE 13

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

More than 10,000 new cases are now diagnosed annually in the UK – the first time this threshold has been passed.

Incidence rates have risen every year since records began.

Survival is closely linked to early diagnosis – reinforcing the importance of public awareness campaigns.

The report provided an authoritative evidence base for professionals, policymakers, researchers, and the public.

Looking ahead

Mouth Cancer Action Month will continue to lead the national effort to improve early detection and reduce the toll of this devastating disease.

In 2024, we also completed the largest survey to date of people affected by mouth cancer, highlighting the emotional, social, financial, and human impact of the disease. The findings will form the centrepiece of the 2025 campaign – The Costs of Mouth Cancer – giving lived experience a platform and a national voice.

PAGE 14

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

Championing safe and informed dental choices

Safe Smiles continued to play a critical role in protecting the public from dental misinformation and unsafe treatments.

In an era of unregulated cosmetic procedures and health advice circulating widely online, the campaign provided clear, trusted, evidence-based guidance to help people make confident and informed decisions about their dental care.

Reach and engagement

The Safe Smiles website remained

the campaign’s central hub, attracting tens of thousands of visitors seeking reliable advice on cosmetic and routine dental treatments.

Regularly refreshed blogs, Q&As, and explainers responded directly to emerging trends and the most common questions asked

Support from influencers and healthcare advocates extended campaign messaging to audiences who may not otherwise engage with traditional oral health information.

Social media posts on illegal whitening and DIY orthodontics shared widely across the UK.

PAGE 15

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

Impact and learning

Evaluation and public feedback highlighted:

These insights reinforce that accessible, credible information can empower people to make safer choices and avoid potentially serious harm.

Value and opportunity

Safe Smiles helps the public navigate:

By addressing these risks head-on, the campaign strengthened public confidence in professional dental care and supported the wider oral health system.

PAGE 16

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

Evaluating oral health products through Accreditation

The scheme’s independent, evidence-based assessment remains internationally recognised for its scientific rigour and impartiality.

Now in its fourth decade, the Oral Health Foundation’s Accreditation programme continues to help consumers and dental professionals make informed choices about oral care products.

Record income and contribution

Accreditation delivered its strongest year to date, achieving a net surplus of £309,547, exceeding targets and representing a major share of the charity’s unrestricted income.

Client growth

New partnerships and brand renewals strengthened the scheme’s global portfolio, expanding into emerging categories such as baby products, oral appliances, and sugar-free foods.

Sustainable funding stream

Accreditation continues to underpin the charity’s financial resilience, providing a stable income that directly supports community programmes, research, and advocacy.

PAGE 17

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

Innovation and global reach

This year, the Oral Health Foundation accredited:

Across UK retail, Accreditation also expanded to include

new supermarket and private-label products for Aldi and Sainsbury’s, ensuring verified oral care remains accessible and affordable for all consumers.

Impact and trust

Consumer confidence in oral care marketing remains low – yet products displaying the Oral Health Foundation Approved logo consistently outperform competitors in trust and recommendation.

Accreditation provides:

PAGE 18

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

Strategic development

In 2025-26, the charity will undertake a comprehensive review of Accreditation criteria, aligning with advances in oral health science and sustainability standards. Work is also underway to digitalise the submission and review process to improve client experience and streamline scientific evaluation.

Looking ahead

The Accreditation Growth Strategy to 2030 outlines our ambition to:

Expand internationally , Strengthen partnerships Enhance visibility among targeting high-growth with major and privatedental professionals and oral care markets. label brands. public audiences.

Our goal is clear – to position the Oral Health Foundation’s Accreditation mark as the global gold standard for oral health product verification, ensuring that innovation and integrity continue to shape the future of oral care.

PAGE 19

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

Equipping professionals and supporting communities

Educational resources remain a cornerstone of the Oral Health Foundation’s mission, enabling professionals, schools, local authorities, and community organisations to deliver practical oral health support where it is needed most. Demand remained strong throughout the year, with almost 4,000 organisations engaging with us – and more than one-third placing orders.

Reach and engagement

Hundreds of thousands of resources were distributed to support health promotion, patient communication, and community outreach.

More than 30,000 dental packs were delivered, providing everything required to build and reinforce daily oral health habits.

Around 140,000 patient leaflets were supplied, with the most requested topics including children’s teeth, gum disease, and postextraction care.

Almost 80,000 toothbrushes and over 60,000 tubes of toothpaste reached people who needed them most – either as part of dental packs or as standalone items.

PAGE 20

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

Impact and learning

Both National Smile Month and Mouth Cancer Action Month generated significant peaks in orders as health providers and educators equipped themselves to support campaign activities.

This strong alignment ensured that national messaging was reinforced at a local level, turning awareness into tangible action and behaviour change.

Resources supported targeted community projects, including Derbyshire’s Smile4Life programme for vulnerable adults – demonstrating how materials can be tailored to meet the needs of specific groups at higher risk of poor oral health.

Positive feedback from NHS trusts, councils, schools, and community teams praised:

These testimonials reinforce the value placed on our resources as trusted tools for frontline oral health improvement.

Operational delivery

PAGE 21

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

Value and opportunity

Looking forward, we are committed to further strengthening the sustainability and affordability of our resources. Priorities for the year ahead include:

By continuing to evolve and respond to the needs of partners and practitioners, our educational resources will remain an essential driver of improved oral health outcomes for communities across the UK.

PAGE 22

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

Building healthy smiles from the start

Dental Buddy remains one of the Oral Health Foundation’s flagship education programmes, helping children, teachers and families build strong oral health habits from the earliest years.

This year saw significant growth, widening access to free, engaging resources across schools and community settings.

Reach and engagement

Thousands of schools and nurseries used Dental Buddy materials, reaching hundreds of thousands of children across the UK. Teachers praised the programme’s flexibility, curriculum alignment and age-appropriate design – enabling seamless integration into classroom learning.

The Dental Buddy resource suite includes interactive lessons and activities for every stage of childhood, covering:

Dental professionals helped extend the programme’s impact:

PAGE 23

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

Supporting learning at home

This year, we strengthened our support for families. New materials for parents and caregivers promoted healthy daily routines, including brushing for two minutes twice a day with fluoride toothpaste, limiting sugar and attending regular check-ups.

Feedback showed increased confidence among families in supporting children’s oral health.

Digital reach

Thousands of downloads from the Dental Buddy website demonstrated strong and continued demand.

Social media promotion during National Smile Month and World Oral Health Day significantly expanded visibility and uptake.

Looking ahead

Dental Buddy will continue to evolve as a key resource for schools, families and professionals. The year ahead will focus on:

Our ambition is simple – to give every child the strongest possible start to a healthy smile.

PAGE 24

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

Digital engagement – connecting people with oral health at scale

Digital channels remain one of our most powerful ways to reach, inspire and support people.

This year, investment in social media, video, email, podcasts and our website enabled us to connect directly with communities, professionals and supporters across the globe.

Reach and engagement

More than 1 million people visited our website for trusted information, campaign resources and behaviourchange tools – reinforcing its role as the hub of our digital presence.

Work progressed on our major website redesign, scheduled for launch at the end of 2025, to enhance usability, accessibility and learning journeys.

The Oral Health Podcast also continued to build a loyal global audience, attracting listeners from more than 50 countries, with thousands of streams across the year.

Across social media

Video remained central to our storytelling

PAGE 25

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

Email continued to drive meaningful supporter involvement

Value and opportunity

Collectively, these channels are transforming how we engage – shifting from one-way communication to real-time dialogue, building community, and reaching people who may never encounter oral health information through traditional routes.

Looking ahead

With a growing digital audience and a new website on the horizon, we will focus on:

Our ambition is to make our digital presence not only larger but also more impactful, helping even more people protect and improve their oral health.

PAGE 26

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

Shaping national and international agendas

Access to dentistry has been one of the most urgent health issues of the year, and our advocacy has ensured it remains impossible for policymakers to overlook.

With millions struggling to secure an NHS appointment, long waiting lists, and widening inequalities in care, we worked to make sure the realities faced by patients and professionals stayed at the forefront of public debate.

Influence and visibility

Our spokespeople featured widely across national media, providing evidence-based insight into the access crisis and its human impact - from families unable to register with a dentist to the wider health consequences of unmet need.

Consistent media presence ensured oral health remained a mainstream policy issue rather than a niche concern, strengthening public understanding and political pressure.

Policy engagement

We submitted a comprehensive response to the Department of Health and Social Care’s consultation on a new dental contract — informed by evidence from community programmes, professional networks, and patient experience.

Our position was clear:

Prevention must sit Funding must be fair Access to care must at the heart of the and sustainable . not depend on where a contract.

We will continue to monitor the policy process and hold government to account on these principles.

We contributed to the GDC’s consultation on remit and priorities, advocating for regulation that protects high standards while supporting fair access for patients.

We participated in the Health and Social Care Committee’s inquiry on food and weight management and provided evidence to NICE guideline development, ensuring oral health is embedded within broader public health policy.

PAGE 27

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

Collaboration and coalitions

Our reach extended beyond the UK through active membership of the Platform for Better Oral Health in Europe. This year we contributed to actions supporting the WHO oral health declaration from Bangkok and worked to ensure prevention and equity remain at the core of European oral health priorities.

Domestically, we strengthened partnerships with national coalitions, including Sustain’s Recipe for Change and the Obesity Health Alliance, pressing for revenue from the Soft Drinks Industry Levy to be reinvested in prevention and oral health.

These alliances reinforce a single message: oral health is fundamental to public health and must be recognised as such in policy and funding decisions.

Looking ahead

Our advocacy will be led into the next phase by a newly appointed Head of Policy & Advocacy, who will drive work on dental access and systemic reform.

The year ahead will bring a focus on:

Our goal remains clear – dental care should not be a privilege determined by geography or income, but a universal guarantee.

PAGE 28

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

Integrating oral health into employee wellbeing

Oral health remains largely absent from workplace wellbeing strategies, despite its close links with overall health, confidence, and productivity.

Tooth decay and gum disease are among the most common chronic conditions, yet they are almost invisible in occupational health provision.

Scoping and insight

Analysis of more than 20 occupational health providers revealed that most large employers outsource health services, but very few include oral health within their packages.

Health checks for new employees rarely capture oral health, policies for time off for dental appointments vary widely, and oral health is largely missing from programmes addressing shared risk factors such as smoking, alcohol and diet.

Employers and providers recognised the gap but reported limited expertise and resources to address it.

This absence matters: poor oral health causes pain, time off work, reduced confidence, and lower productivity – with wider health links to diabetes, heart disease, and other chronic conditions.

Opportunity and direction

Embedding oral health into workplace health provision offers significant benefits for both employers and employees – enabling earlier diagnosis, prevention, and healthier daily behaviours. Workplaces represent a powerful setting for oral health engagement, particularly for groups who

PAGE 29

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

may not access routine care.

Through the first year of our 2030 strategy, we built the foundations for long-term change by:

Looking ahead

Our ambition is clear – by 2030, 350,000 employees will directly benefit from workplace oral health policies.

This includes programmes that reinforce better oral hygiene, support earlier diagnosis of systemic conditions such as diabetes, and position oral health as a core component of employee wellbeing rather than a standalone issue.

PAGE 30

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

Raising awareness of oral– systemic health links

Oral health is deeply connected to wider systemic conditions, yet awareness of these links remains strikingly low among both the public and professionals.

Research shows that fewer than one-in-five people recognise the relationship between oral health and diabetes; understanding of links to heart disease, stroke and dementia is even lower.

Scoping and insight

This year we benchmarked public awareness and reviewed educational content from health charities, NHS providers and professional bodies.

Despite a strong and growing evidence base, oral health is rarely incorporated into wider health messaging or prevention campaigns.

The absence of oral health from systemic health education represents a major opportunity to improve outcomes for people at greater risk.

Conditions such as periodontal disease are known to worsen glycaemic control in diabetes and influence cardiovascular health, while emerging research continues to link oral health with neurodegenerative conditions – yet these connections remain largely unseen outside specialist circles.

Messaging and engagement

Insights from our scoping work indicate that framing oral health within multiple systemic conditions generates broader support among

PAGE 31

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

health and patient organisations than focusing on one condition alone.

Communication must be targeted – particularly towards older adults and people living with chronic disease, who are at highest risk and stand to benefit most.

This work has laid the foundation for future collaboration with health charities, professional bodies and community organisations.

Looking ahead

Our ambition is to increase public awareness of the connection between oral and systemic health by 20% by 2030, with a particular emphasis on diabetes.

The year ahead will move from insight to implementation through:

PAGE 32

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

Driving system-level change

Oral health continues to be inconsistently represented across local and national health planning, despite its central role in prevention and tackling inequalities.

Too often, dentistry is treated as separate from wider health priorities rather than embedded within system-wide strategies.

Scoping and insight

This year we reviewed Integrated Care Board Joint Forward Plans to map how oral health features in commissioning frameworks.

While most ICBs reference dentistry in some form, the depth of engagement varies significantly – with a small number making no mention at all.

In many cases, oral health appears only in the context of access recovery or child services, rather than as part of long-term system priorities.

A minority of ICBs are beginning to develop standalone oral health strategies, demonstrating leadership and proof of what is possible.

One of the most significant findings was structural. There is a widespread lack of dental representation or expertise at ICB board level, and many have not discussed oral health in meetings over the past year. This lack of visibility at decisionmaking tables is a major barrier to progress.

Opportunity and direction

Core20PLUS5 presents a timely route to embed oral health within wider strategic priorities. While oral health is referenced in some plans – especially relating to children and vulnerable groups – the evidence clearly shows its relevance across cardiovascular disease, maternity, mental health, cancer and more.

PAGE 33

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

Looking ahead

The coming year will focus on:

Our goal is clear – to ensure oral health is no longer treated as optional or peripheral, but permanently embedded within the frameworks that shape health priorities across the country.

PAGE 34

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

Closing the gap between guidance and practice

National standards recommend that every newly diagnosed diabetic patient should be referred to a dentist for an oral health assessment, reflecting clear evidence that periodontal disease can worsen glycaemic control and that treatment improves outcomes. Yet compliance with this referral standard remains low and inconsistent.

Scoping and insight

Our research mapped current practice across the UK to establish a baseline.

While the referral guideline is formally in place, awareness among GPs and commissioners is limited, and only a minority discuss oral health at the point of diagnosis.

Referral uptake varies widely across regions – typically averaging a little over half, with some areas falling as low as one-quarter.

Unlike other aspects of diabetes care, there is no national dataset for referral monitoring, limiting accountability and improvement.

The result is a persistent gap between what national guidance requires and what patients experience in practice.

Opportunity and direction

Improving referral compliance requires a system-wide response:

PAGE 35

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

Looking ahead

The coming year will focus on:

PAGE 36

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

Making oral health a national talking point

This year marked one of our strongest periods of press and media performance.

Through flagship campaigns, proactive outreach, and trusted expert commentary, we strengthened our position as the leading voice for oral health and wellbeing.

Reach and visibility

More than 2,500 items of coverage were secured across print and online media.

Stories reached audiences in at least 32 countries, highlighting our standing as both a UK and international authority.

Campaign impact

Mouth Cancer Action Month achieved exceptional visibility – featuring prominently on BBC News, Sky News, and major UK press. Survivor stories and expert commentary generated highimpact coverage that raised awareness of early signs and the vital role of regular dental visits.

National Smile Month reached diverse audiences – from broadsheets and lifestyle media to tabloids – reinforcing messages about nutrition, daily routines and the importance of dental attendance.

PAGE 37

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

Strengthening national debate

Beyond campaigning, we were a consistent and trusted voice on the urgent issue of access to dental care. Journalists regularly sought our expertise to report on:

Our contributions kept oral health firmly on the national news agenda and positioned the Oral Health Foundation as the authoritative advocate for fair and timely access to care.

Professional and specialist media

We deepened our role within professional dental and healthcare media, supplying thought leadership and commentary that translated professional evidence into public relevance – strengthening the bridge between practice, policy, and public understanding.

Looking ahead

We will continue to build on this success by combining powerful storytelling with credible expertise and speaking up for those most affected by poor access to care. Our goal remains the same – to make oral health a national talking point and ensure the charity remains the go-to source for press and media.

PAGE 38

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

Working together for better oral health – powered by partnership

As an independent charity, the Oral Health Foundation does not rely on government funding or large-scale private donations.

Our strength comes from the kindness, trust, and continued commitment of the individuals, organisations and businesses who share our belief that good oral health should be within everyone’s reach.

This support has never been more vital. With widening health inequalities, a rising burden of mouth cancer and sustained pressure on public services, our role in education, advocacy and community support has become increasingly important. We take confidence from knowing that we do not pursue this mission alone — we are part of a determined and diverse community working together for better oral health.

Partnership and collaboration

Our supporters reflect the breadth of that community:

We are especially proud to have strengthened partnerships across the wider health and wellbeing landscape, including with the Platform for Better Oral Health in Europe, Sustain, the Obesity

PAGE 39

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

Alliance and the Head & Neck Cancer Coalition UK. These alliances help ensure that oral health is embedded within general health policy and recognised as a core pillar of public health.

Powered by generosity and shared purpose

Together, these contributions helped bring oral health messages to millions of people across the UK and beyond.

With thanks

We express our sincere thanks to every organisation and individual who has stood beside us over the past year. Your support has made a real and lasting difference, and we are deeply grateful to continue working together for better oral health for all.

Partners and supporters this year include:

A-Dec Dental UK

ABC Printing

ASDA

ASP Promotions

Ace IT

Aldi

Align Technology

Anchor

Associated Dental Products (Kemdent) Association of Dental Groups Bambooth Biomin Blue Horizons

Boots

British Association of Dental Nurses British Dental Association British Dental Industry Association British Orthodontic Society British Society of Dental Hygiene & Therapy Closer Still Media Dafferns LLP Dencover Denplan Dent & Go

Dental Health Spa

Dental Update DentalEZ Dentists’ Provident Dentsply Sirona Department of Health and Social Care

Dr M’s Oral Brush

George Warman Publications General Dental Council General Medical Council

Haleon Head & Neck Cancer Coalition UK

PAGE 40

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

NHS Orkney NSK

Health Education England

TePe

Henry Schein NSK Tesco Home Bargains Natural Source Waters The Access Group House of Commons Nestlé The Breath Co Hygeia Dental Care Nuud Plastic Free Gum The Dental Defence Union Ivoclar Vivadent Obesity Alliance The Probe J & S Davis Office for the Chief Dental The Royal Society of Medicine Officer Joint Medical Command Unilever (Armed Forces) Peppersmith Unum Dental Kenvue Philips University of Portsmouth Kingfisher Sainsbury’s Velopex Lidl Sarakan W&H Mark Allen Group Scottish Water Waterpik Marks & Spencer Seabond Word Centre Masonic Charitable Foundation Setform Wrigley Oral Health Care MEDiVision Simplyhealth Professionals Programme Medway Smile Magazine Zima Dental Pod Morrisons Sustain Mouth Cancer Foundation Takara Belmont UK

With your continued support, we look forward to another year of partnership and progress – improving oral health and wellbeing for everyone.

PAGE 41

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | ANNUAL REVIEW

Financial summary

The Oral Health Foundation delivered

a stable financial performance during the year ended 31 July 2025, enabling continued investment in our charitable mission: improving oral health and reducing inequalities across the UK and beyond.

Total income for the year was £984,995, remaining broadly consistent with the previous year.

Income

Key income sources included:

This diverse income base reinforces our independence and financial resilience.

Expenditure

Total expenditure for the year was £1,015,690, focused on programme delivery and public benefit. Major areas of charitable spend included:

This reflects our commitment to directing the majority of spending into public-facing health improvement.

Overall performance

The charity reported a planned and controlled operating deficit of £30,695, linked to continued investment in mission delivery.

Investment performance was strong, generating gains of £33,151 (realised and unrealised). As a result, total funds increased, with £2,456 added to reserves and £1,123,894 carried forward into the new financial year.

PAGE 42

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | REPORT OF THE DIRECTORS AND TRUSTEES

Report of the directors and trustees

The Directors present their report together with the financial statements for the year ended 31 July 2025.

Structure, governance and management

The company is registered as a charity under the number 263198 and is governed by the memorandum and articles of association of the Oral Health Foundation as amended by special resolution on 14 December 2011 and written special resolution in March 2012 whose registration number is 01027338. The company is limited by guarantee to the extent of £1 per member and has no share capital.

Directors and trustees

The Directors of the company act as the Trustees and the Directors who served during the year are listed below.

Sarah Balser

Catherine Brady

Mhari Coxon RDH (Immediate Past President)

Soha Dattani

Professor Jonathon Timothy Newton (President)

Juliette Reeves

Helen Tomlinson

Professor Georgios Tsakos

Andrew Hay

Ian Waller

Ravi Rattan (Resigned September 2025)

Jason Bunce (Appointed September 2024)

Recruitment and appointment of trustees

As set out in the articles of association, the Trustees are appointed by the members at the annual general meeting. The Trustees are the only members of the charity. Trustees are elected for a period of three years, as determined by the articles they may be re-elected for a further period of three years after which one year must elapse before any re-election except in the case of the President and President-Elect. The Immediate Past President may serve for a further period of two years after retirement as President.

The Trustee Board has the power to co-opt members between annual general meetings. The Trustees acknowledge their risk management responsibilities and have endorsed the risk register assessment and

PAGE 43

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | REPORT OF THE DIRECTORS AND TRUSTEES

review it on a regular basis at least biannually.

The Trustees acknowledge that the management of Risk is high on their priorities of good governance. A risk assurance group, consisting of the Director of Operations, the Director of Finance, and two Trustees regularly review the register before it is presented to the Trustees for their review and approval. That way, the Trustees can have confidence that the changes have been scrutinised by their peers ahead of being presented with a summary of changes.

Five key risk areas are identified as:

1. Governance and Management e.g. inappropriate organisational structure, difficulties recruiting trustees with relevant skills, conflicts of interest.

2. Operational Risks e.g., IT and asset security, Structure and infrastructure disaster recovery plan, service quality and development, contract pricing, employment issues, health and safety issues, fraud and misappropriation.

3. Financial Risks e.g. accuracy and timeliness of financial information, adequacy of reserves and cash flow, diversity of income sources, investment management.

4. Environmental and External Factors e.g. public perception and adverse publicity, demographic changes, government policy, adverse social and environmental events.

5. Compliance Risk e.g. breach of trust law, employment law and regulatory requirements of activities, such as fund raising.

The organisation’s risk register is a dynamic tool which is under constant review, it is approved twice a year by our team of Trustees.

Risk Register Assurance & Management

The Risk Register was reviewed and amended by the CEO and Senior Management at quarterly intervals throughout the year. The register was also reviewed and approved at a meeting on the 19 August that included, the Head of Finance, the Director of Operations, the Chief Executive and President, as well as a Trustee who is a member of the Finance & Risk Committee. It was presented to and approved by the Board at its meeting on 25th September 2025.

Only one risk ‘F3 – Income Generation’ is currently scoring as a ‘High Risk’ area.

The High risk to be flagged to the Board identified on 19.08.2025 is in the Finance Category:

Only one risk ‘F3 – Income Generation’ is currently scoring as a ‘High Risk’ area.

Identified Risk: ‘Reduced income’ Insufficient funding generated to deliver strategy and business plan activities.

PAGE 44

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | REPORT OF THE DIRECTORS AND TRUSTEES

Causes: Individual funding streams reduced as follows:

Consequences: Risk to delivery of strategic ambitions and business plan objectives.

Mitigation:

Below is a chart showing the number of risks across the five categories:

----- Start of picture text -----
5
Risk Per Category August 2025
4
Low Medium High
3
2
1
0
Compliance External Finance Governance Operational
----- End of picture text -----

PAGE 45

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | REPORT OF THE DIRECTORS AND TRUSTEES

Below is a heat map of where the 14 identified risk sit in terms of severity.

----- Start of picture text -----
5 10 15 20 25
Extreme (5)
4 8 12 16 20
C1 Compliance F3 reduced
F1 Reserves income
Major (4)
O6 Warehouse
G2 Board
Reporting
3 6 9 12 18
E1 Infrastructure F2 Economy O2 Succession
Damage F2 Cyber O4 Capacity
Moderate (3) O3 HR/Recruit G1 Strategy
O1 Organisational
Impact Structure
F4 Cashflow
2 4 6 8 10
Minor (2)
1 2 3 4 5
Insignificant
(1)
Highly probably
Remote (1) Unlikely (2) Possible (3) Probably (4)
(5)
Likeliness
----- End of picture text -----

Organisational structure

The full Trustee Board which consists of between 8-12 members meets at least three times a year. The Board is responsible for the governance, strategic direction and policies of the charity. The Chief Executive and other members of the senior management team attend and advise the Trustees as appropriate but are not voting members of the Board.

The Board delegates some powers relating to staff remuneration and other related issues to a Core Team consisting of the President, President-Elect and Trustee responsible for finance.

The Chief Executive, supported by the senior management team, is responsible for the day to day running of the charity and delivery of the annual business plan objectives to a budget agreed by the Board.

Pay policy for senior staff

The key personnel of the Foundation consist of the board of directors (trustees) and the senior

management team in charge of directing, controlling and running the day-to-day operations. All directors are unpaid and give up their time freely. Details of directors’ expenses and related party transactions are disclosed in notes 12 & 24.

PAGE 46

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | REPORT OF THE DIRECTORS AND TRUSTEES

The pay of the chief executive and the overall salary budget for the staff team, is reviewed annually by the Trustee Core Team, CPI and wage inflation are used as benchmarks for this review.

Sale of Smile House

The Trustee Board passed a motion to sell the Foundation headquarters at Smile House, Rugby, following an internal consultation. This consultation, which mapped out a cost and efficiency exercise of building use, explored various options to ensure the decision was well-informed and beneficial for future operations. The sale of the building was completed on 20th November 2025.

Public Benefit

Good oral health forms an essential part of general health and wellbeing. Since the Oral Health Foundation was established in 1971, it has played its part in transforming the nation’s oral health.

Today, the collective push to improve oral health in the UK has resulted in:

Education and information has helped to underpin this transformation and the Oral Health Foundation has made the following unique contribution in 2024/2025:

The charity does not engage in significant fundraising activities. When planning charitable activities, reviewing our aims and objectives and at meetings with the Board of Trustees, our Trustees have paid attention to the Charity Commission’s guidance regarding public benefit.

PAGE 47

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | FINANCIAL REVIEW

Financial review

In 2024-25, a deficit of £30,695 (2023-24: £42,489 deficit) was generated from the charity’s day to day activities before investment gains and losses.

This was in line with the projected deficit approved by Trustees as the Foundation continues to rebuild operational capacity and income streams.

Investment Policy

The charity policy for the investment of available funds is that they are held in investments to provide capital growth and reinvested income whilst allowing for occasional cash withdrawals to support the Foundation’s charitable activities. The investment policy it to invest at the higher end of medium risk in order to enable these objectives to be achieved.

Rathbone Investment Management is responsible for managing the investment portfolio. The Trustees monitor investment performance against standard policies and meet with the portfolio managers when appropriate during the year.

Reserves Policy

The Trustees have assessed the reserves requirement and have established a policy where the free reserves held by the Oral Health Foundation should be at least 6 months operating costs. This equates to a sum of £600,000. Levels are reviewed annually.

The company’s free reserves (unrestricted reserves excluding tangible fixed assets) amounted to £921,495 at 31 July 2025 (2024: £910,943).

The company’s total unrestricted reserves amounted to £1,123,894 at 31 July 2025 (2024: £1,121,438).

Responsibilities of the Directors and Trustees

The Trustees (who are also Directors for the purposes of company law) are responsible for preparing the Directors’ and Trustees’ Report and the financial statements in accordance with applicable law and United Kingdom Accounting Standards.

Company law requires the Directors to prepare financial statements for each financial year which give a true and fair view of the of the charitable company and of the incoming resources and application of resources, including income and expenditure for that period.

In preparing these financial statements, the Directors:

PAGE 48

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | FINANCIAL REVIEW

The Directors are responsible for maintaining adequate accounting records which disclose with reasonable accuracy at any time the financial position of the charitable company and enable them to ensure that the financial statements comply with the Companies Act 2006. They are also responsible for safeguarding the assets of the charitable company and hence for taking reasonable steps for the prevention and detection of fraud and other irregularities.

Provision of information to auditors

In so far as the Directors are aware:

The Directors are responsible for the maintenance and integrity of the corporate and financial information included on the charitable company’s website. Legislation in the United Kingdom governing the preparation and dissemination of the financial statements may differ from legislation in other jurisdictions.

Auditor

The auditor, Dafferns Audit Limited, will be proposed for re-appointment in accordance with section 485 of the Companies Act 2006.

On behalf of the Board

Professor Jonathon Timothy Newton

President, Oral Health Foundation Date: 04 December 2025

PAGE 49

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | FINANCIAL REVIEW

Independent auditor’s report

Opinion

We have audited the financial statements of Oral Health Foundation (the ‘charitable company’) for the year ended 31 July 2025, which comprise the Statement of Financial Activities, Balance Sheet, Statement of Cash Flow and notes to the financial statements, including significant accounting policies. The financial reporting framework that has been applied in their preparation is applicable law and United Kingdom Accounting Standards, including Financial Reporting Standard 102 The Financial Reporting Standard applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland (United Kingdom Generally Accepted Accounting Practice). In our opinion the financial statements:

In our opinion the financial statements:

Basis for opinion

We conducted our audit in accordance with International Standards on Auditing (UK) (ISAs (UK)) and applicable law. Our responsibilities under those standards are further described in the auditor responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements section of our report. We are independent of the charitable company in accordance with the ethical requirements that are relevant to our audit of the financial statements in the UK, including the FRC’s Ethical Standard, and we have fulfilled our other ethical responsibilities in accordance with these requirements. We believe that the audit evidence we have obtained is sufficient and appropriate to provide a basis for our opinion.

Conclusions relating to going concern

In auditing the financial statements, we have concluded that the trustees’ use of the going concern basis of accounting in the preparation of the financial statements is appropriate.

Based on the work we have performed, we have not identified any material uncertainties relating to events or conditions that, individually or collectively, may cast significant doubt on the charitable company’s ability to continue as a going concern for a period of at least twelve months from when the financial statements are authorised for issue.

Our responsibilities and the responsibilities of the trustees with respect to going concern are described in the relevant sections of this report.

PAGE 50

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | FINANCIAL REVIEW

Other information

The other information comprises the information included in the trustees’ annual report, other than the financial statements and our auditor’s report thereon. The trustees are responsible for the other information. Our opinion on the financial statements does not cover the other information and, except to the extent otherwise explicitly stated in our report, we do not express any form of assurance conclusion thereon. Our responsibility is to read the other information and, in doing so, consider whether the other information is materially inconsistent with the financial statements or our knowledge obtained in the course of the audit or otherwise appears to be materially misstated. If we identify such material inconsistencies or apparent material misstatements, we are required to determine whether this gives rise to a material misstatement in the financial statements themselves. If, based on the work we have performed, we conclude that there is a material misstatement of this other information, we are required to report that fact.

We have nothing to report in this regard.

Opinions on other matters prescribed by the Companies Act 2006

In our opinion, based on the work undertaken in the course of the audit:

Matters on which we are required to report by exception

In the light of the knowledge and understanding of the charitable company and its environment obtained in the course of the audit, we have not identified material misstatements in the Directors’ report included within the Trustees’ report.

We have nothing to report in respect of the following matters in relation to which the Companies Act 2006 requires us to report to you if, in our opinion:

PAGE 51

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | FINANCIAL REVIEW

Responsibilities of trustees

As explained more fully in the trustees’ responsibilities statement set out on page 1, the trustees (who are also the directors of the charitable company for the purposes of company law) are responsible for the preparation of the financial statements and for being satisfied that they give a true and fair view, and for such internal control as the trustees determine is necessary to enable the preparation of financial statements that are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error.

In preparing the financial statements, the trustees are responsible for assessing the charitable company’s ability to continue as a going concern, disclosing, as applicable, matters related to going concern and using the going concern basis of accounting unless the trustees either intend to liquidate the charitable company or to cease operations, or have no realistic alternative but to do so.

Auditor’s responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements

Our objectives are to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements as a whole are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error, and to issue an auditor’s report that includes our opinion. Reasonable assurance is a high level of assurance, but is not a guarantee that an audit conducted in accordance with ISAs (UK) will always detect a material misstatement when it exists. Misstatements can arise from fraud or error and are considered material if, individually or in the aggregate, they could reasonably be expected to influence the economic decisions of users taken on the basis of these financial statements.

Irregularities, including fraud, are instances of non-compliance with laws and regulations. We design procedures in line with our responsibilities, outlined above, to detect material misstatements in respect of irregularities, including fraud. The extent to which our procedures are capable of detecting irregularities, including fraud is detailed below:

Because of the inherent limitations of an audit, there is a risk that we will not detect all irregularities, including those leading to a material misstatement in the financial statements or non-compliance with regulation. This risk increases the more that compliance with a law or regulation is removed from the events and transactions reflected in the financial statements, as we will be less likely to become aware of instances of non-compliance. The risk is also greater regarding irregularities occurring due to fraud rather

PAGE 52

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | FINANCIAL REVIEW

than error, as fraud involves intentional concealment, forgery, collusion, omission or misrepresentation.

A further description of our responsibilities is available on the FRC’s website at: https://www.frc.org. uk/auditors/audit-assurance/auditor-s-responsibilities-for-the-audit-of-the-fi/description-of-theauditor%E2%80%99s-responsibilities-for. This description forms part of our auditor’s report.

Use of our report

This report is made solely to the charitable company’s members, as a body, in accordance with Chapter 3 of Part 16 of the Companies Act 2006. Our audit work has been undertaken so that we might state to the charitable company’s members those matters we are required to state to them in an auditor’s report and for no other purpose. To the fullest extent permitted by law, we do not accept or assume responsibility to anyone other than the charitable company and the charitable company’s members as a body, for our audit work, for this report, or for the opinions we have formed.

Lucy Hatton FCCA (Senior Statutory Auditor)

For and on behalf of:

Dafferns Audit Limited

One Eastwood, Harry Weston Road, Binley Business Park, Coventry CV3 2UB

Date: 04 December 2025

PAGE 53

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | FINANCIAL REVIEW

Statement of financial activities

Including Income and Expenditure Account - for the year ended 31 July 2025.

----- Start of picture text -----
Note 2025 2024
£ £
Income from
Donations, sponsorship and legacies 140,728 205,269
Investment 9,728 13,306
Rental 2,000 3,000
Supporter subscriptions 45,428 31,234
Accreditation income 3 407,447 365,238
Education resource sales and related income 379,664 409,965
Total income 984,995 1,028,012
Expenditure on
Supporter 4 12,851 13,132
Accreditation 5 127,011 129,596
Education resource sales 6 420,542 433,150
Information & awareness 7 370,254 416,164
Mouth cancer campaign 8 85,032 78,459
Total expenditure 1,015,690 1,070,501
Net income / (expenditure) for the year before other
13 (30,695) (42,489)
recognised gains and losses
Other recognised (losses) / gains
Realised gains on investment assets 15 1,939 13,008
Unrealised gains / (losses) on investment assets 15 31,212 36,401
Net Movement in Funds 18 2,456 6,920
Fund balances brought forward 1,121,438 1,114,518
Fund balances carried forward 18 1,123,894 1,121,438
----- End of picture text -----

All of the charitable company’s activities are continuing and relate to unrestricted funds. The notes on pages 57 to 66 form part of the financial statements.

PAGE 54

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | FINANCIAL REVIEW

Balance sheet

Company registration number: 01027338

at 31 July 2025

----- Start of picture text -----
Note 2025 2024
£ £ £ £
Fixed Assets
Tangible fixed assets 14 202,399 210,495
Investments 15 619,605 590,214
822,004 800,709
Current Assets
Stocks 74,270 62,071
Debtors 16 280,853 263,619
Cash at bank and in hand 46,539 105,270
401,662 430,960
Creditors: amounts failing due
17 (99,772) (110,231)
within one year
Net Current Assets 301,890 320,729
Net Assets 1,123,894 1,121,438
Represented by:
Unrestricted Funds 19 1,123,894 1,121,438
----- End of picture text -----

The notes on pages 57 to 66 form part of the financial statements. Approved and authorised for issue by the Board of Directors on 04 December 2025.

Professor Jonathon Timothy Newton

President, Oral Health Foundation

PAGE 55

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | FINANCIAL REVIEW

Statement of cash flows

For the year ended 31 July 2025

----- Start of picture text -----
Note 2025 2024
£ £
Cash flows from operating activities
Net movement in funds for the year 2,456 6,920
Depreciation 8,395 8,233
Investment income (9,728) (13,306)
Revaluation (gains) / losses from investments (33,151) (49,409)
Decrease/(increase) in stocks (12,199) 2,064
Decrease/(increase) in debtors (17,235) (2,148)
Increase/(decrease) in creditors (10,460) (863)
Net cash flows from operating activities (71,922) (48,509)
Cash flows from investing activities
Payments to acquire tangible fixed assets 14 (298) (4,533)
Purchase of investments 15 (75,914) (103,526)
Proceeds from sale of investments 15 77,726 139,341
Net Cash movement on investments 15 1,949 15,771
Interest & Dividends received on listed investments 9,440 13,188
Bank Interest 288 118
Net cash flows from investing activities 13,191 60,359
Net increase in cash and cash equivalents (58,731) 11,850
Cash and cash equivalents at start date 2024 105,270 93,420
Cash and cash equivalents at end date 2025 46,539 105,270
Cashflows 31 July 2025
Analysis of changes in net debt 1 August 2024
£ £
Cash and cash equivalents 105,270 (58,731) 46,539
----- End of picture text -----

The notes on pages 57 to 66 form part of the financial statements.

PAGE 56

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | FINANCIAL REVIEW

Notes to the financial statements

1 Company Status

The company is registered as a charity in England and Wales. It is limited by guarantee to the extent of £1 per member and has no share capital. The address of the charity’s registered office is One Eastwood, Binley Business Park Coventry, CV3 2UB. Its principal place of business is Bloxam Court, Corporation St, Rugby CV21 2DU.

2 Principal Accounting Policies

The principal accounting policies of the company are set out below:

Basis of preparation of financial statements

The financial statements have been prepared under the historical cost convention apart from investments which are stated at market value. The financial statements have been prepared in accordance with applicable accounting standards, the Companies Act 2006 and the Statement of Recommended Practice “Accounting and Reporting by Charities” issued in October 2019 (SORP (FRS102)). The Charity meets the definition of a public benefit entity under FRS102.

Cash flow statement

The charity’s cash flow statement reflects the presentation requirements of FRS102.

Incoming resources

Voluntary income including donations, sponsorship and legacies are recognised when there is an entitlement, certainty of receipt and the amount can be recognised with sufficient reliability.

Investment income is recognised on a receivable basis.

Income from charitable activities includes the accreditation of dental products, sales of educational resources and website licensing income and is recognised as earned.

Any part of the income received, which relates to a period beyond the balance sheet date, is carried into the following year as “unexpired proportion of subscriptions and website licensing received.”

Accreditation, subscriptions and intellectual property licensing once received are non-refundable.

Resources expended

All expenditure is accounted for on an accruals basis and has been classified under headings that aggregate all costs related to the category.

PAGE 57

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | FINANCIAL REVIEW

Costs of generating funds are those costs associated with attracting voluntary income and those incurred in trading activities that raise funds.

Charitable expenditure includes those costs incurred in the delivery of the charity’s activities and services to its beneficiaries. It includes both the direct costs and the indirect support costs.

Governance costs include those costs associated with meeting the constitutional and statutory

requirements of the charity and include audit fees and costs relating to strategic management.

Governance costs are now apportioned on the same basis as other support costs.

Support costs include general overheads and administration and have been allocated to activities on a basis consistent with staff time and estimated usage.

Investments

Investments are stated at market value as valued by the Company’s investment advisers. Income arising on investments is accounted for as it accrues. Movements in the valuation of investments are shown as realised and unrealised gains and losses in the statement of financial activities.

Tangible fixed assets

Expenditure on fixed assets over £1,000 is capitalised.

Depreciation is calculated by the straight-line method and aims to write down the cost of both intangible and tangible fixed assets over their expected useful economic lives.

The rates applicable are: Computer equipment 5 years
Equipment, fixtures & fittings 5 years
Freehold buildings 50 years

Stocks for resale

Stock is stated at the lower of cost and net realisable value on a first-in-first-out basis.

Debtors

Trade debtors are recognised at the settlement amount due after any trade discounts offered. Prepayments are valued at the amount prepaid net of any trade discounts due. Any losses arising from impairment are recognised in expenditure.

Cash at bank and in hand

Cash in bank and cash in hand includes cash only.

PAGE 58

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | FINANCIAL REVIEW

Creditors and provisions

Creditors and provisions are recognised where the charity has a present obligation resulting from a past event that will probably result in the transfer of funds to a third party and the amount due to settle the obligation can be measured or estimated reliably. Creditors with no stated interest rate and payable within one year are recorded at transaction price.

Taxation

The company has been granted exemption from corporation taxes under sections 486 and 487 of the Corporation Taxes Act 2010.

Defined contribution pension scheme

Contributions are charged to the statement of financial activities as they become payable in accordance with the rules of the scheme.

Funds

Funds held by the charity are either:

Unrestricted general funds – these are funds which can be used in accordance with the charitable objects at the discretion of the Directors.

Designated funds – these are funds set aside by the Directors out of unrestricted general funds for specific future purposes or projects.

Restricted funds – these are funds which must be used in accordance with the restrictions placed on them by the funder.

Transactions in foreign currencies are recorded using the rate of exchange ruling at the date of the transaction. Monetary assets and liabilities denominated in foreign currencies are translated using the rate of exchange ruling at the balance sheet date and unrealised and realised gains and losses in translation are included in the Statement of Financial Activities.

PAGE 59

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | FINANCIAL REVIEW

----- Start of picture text -----
3 Incoming Resources 2025 2024
£ £
Accreditation income is derived from the following
geographical markets:
UK 332,685 297,628
Europe 13,047 10,193
Rest of the World 61,715 57,417
407,447 365,238
4 Expenditure: Supporters 2025 2024
£ £
Supporters direct costs 366 262
Salaries 7,706 7,537
Overheads & support costs 4,779 5,333
12,851 13,132
5 Expenditure: Accreditation 2025 2024
£ £
Accreditation of dental products 6,033 8,942
Salaries 87,278 84,850
Overheads & support costs 33,700 35,804
127,011 129,596
----- End of picture text -----

----- Start of picture text -----
6 Expenditure: Educational Resource Sales 2025 2024
£ £
Cost of sales 181,605 199,884
Direct costs 73,175 73,903
Salaries 126,592 115,237
Overheads & support costs 39,170 44,126
420,542 433,150
----- End of picture text -----

PAGE 60

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | FINANCIAL REVIEW

----- Start of picture text -----
7 Expenditure: Information and Awareness Campaigns 2025 2024
£ £
Projects 18,128 21,359
Publicity 42,555 78,746
Salaries 272,890 275,437
Overheads & support costs 36,681 40,622
370,254 416,164
8 Expenditure: Mouth Cancer Awareness 2025 2024
£ £
Publicity 10,718 9,950
Salaries 66,193 58,785
Overheads & support costs 8,121 9,724
85,032 78,459
9 Governance Costs (allocated under support costs) 2025 2024
£ £
Overheads & support costs 4,319 4,986
Salaries 44,920 44,154
Other support costs 9,070 13,426
Audit, consultancy & professional fees 18,304 15,862
76,613 78,428
----- End of picture text -----

PAGE 61

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | FINANCIAL REVIEW

10 Allocation of Support Costs

The Foundation allocates its support costs as shown in the table below. Support costs are allocated on a basis consistent with the use of resources and staff time.

----- Start of picture text -----
Info Mouth
Support Cost Resources Accreditation Supporters & Aware Cancer Governance Total
£ £ £ £ £ £ £
Overheads 8,336 2,755 551 11,731 3,030 2,216 28,619
Depreciation 646 215 43 861 237 151 2,153
Amortisation 1,872 624 125 2,497 687 437 6,242
General Office 2,988 944 188 5,213 1,039 1,494 11,866
Finance 812 49 42 290 64 21 1,278
Governance
24,516 29,113 3,830 16,089 3,064 76,612
(note 9)
Governance
(4,319) (4,319)
(overhead)
39,170 33,700 4,779 36,681 8,121 122,451
----- End of picture text -----

----- Start of picture text -----
Staff Costs 2025 2024
£ £
Wages and salaries 498,002 484,862
Social security costs 54,255 49,109
Staff insurance and benefits 14,415 14,532
Other pension costs 38,907 37,497
605,579 586,000
----- End of picture text -----

11 Staff Costs

Two Directors (2024: 4) were reimbursed a total of £736 for travel expenses incurred during the year ended 31 July 2025 (2024: £1,315).

The Directors received no other remuneration or emoluments during the year.

2025 Number
2024 Number
2025 Number
2024 Number
2025 Number
2024 Number
Employees earning £60,000 per annum or more:
£150,000 - £159,999: 1 1

PAGE 62

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | FINANCIAL REVIEW

Pension contributions in the year for these employees amounted to £14,253 (2024: £14,253).

The key management personnel of the Foundation comprise the trustees, the Chief Executive and members of the senior management team. The total employee benefits of the key management personnel of the Foundation were £412,856 (2024: £400,512).

The average number of employees analysed by function was:

----- Start of picture text -----
2025 2024
Direct charitable activities 8 8
Income producing activities 2 2
Administration 1 1
11 11
----- End of picture text -----

12 Defined Contribution pension scheme

The company pays contributions to a personal pension fund which is available to all employees. The pension cost charge represents contributions payable by the company to the fund and amounted to £38,907 (2024: £37,467). No contributions were payable to the fund at the year end. No Directors qualified for benefits and no contributions were paid to Directors.

13 Net outgoing resources 2025 2024
£ £
Net outgoing resources are stated after charging/ (crediting):
Depreciation and amortisation 8,395 8,233
Auditors’ remuneration 6,950 6,650
Rental income (2,000) (3,000)

PAGE 63

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | FINANCIAL REVIEW

----- Start of picture text -----
Freehold
Fixtures & Computer Office
14 Fixed Assets land & Total
fittings equipment equipment
buildings
£ £ £ £ £
Cost
At 1 August 2024 348,065 25,416 53,365 37,312 464,158
Additions - - 298 - 298
At 31 July 2025 348,065 25,416 53,663 37,312 464,456
Depreciation
At 1 August 2024 144,375 23,340 49,404 36,544 253,663
Charge for the year 6,242 608 946 598 8,394
At 31 July 2025 150,617 23,948 50,350 37,142 262,057
Net book value
At 31 July 2025 197,448 1,468 3,313 170 202,399
At 31 July 2024 203,690 2,076 3,961 768 210,495
15 Fixed Asset Investments 2025 2024
£ £
Market Value
At 1 August 590,214 592,391
Additions 75,914 103,526
Disposals (77,726) (139,341)
Realised investment gains 1,939 13,008
Unrealised investment (losses)/gains 31,213 36,401
Net cash movement (1,949) (15,771)
At 31 July 619,605 590,214
----- End of picture text -----

The investments consist of a share portfolio managed by stockbrokers Rathbones, primarily held to provide an investment return for the charity. All investment assets were held in the UK. All shareholdings are of listed companies. The historic cost at 31 July 2025 was £478,195 (2024: £480,017).

PAGE 64

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | FINANCIAL REVIEW

Investments held at market value comprised:

----- Start of picture text -----
2025 2024
£ £
Equities 516,871 482,875
Interest securities 95,798 98,454
Cash held within investment portfolio 6,936 8,885
619,605 590,214
16 Debtors 2025 2024
£ £
Amounts failing due within one year
Trade debtors 255,724 222,446
Prepayments and accrued income 25,129 41,173
280,853 263,619
17 Creditors: amounts falling due within one year 2025 2024
£ £
Trade creditors 32,953 15,275
Other creditors 6,447 4,941
Social security and other taxes 56,095 58,724
Accruals and deferred income 3,478 15,680
Unexpired proportion of supporter income received 14,378
Unexpired proportion of intellectual property licensing 799 1,233
99,772 110,231
----- End of picture text -----

----- Start of picture text -----
Supporter
Deferred Income Website Total
Income
£ £ £
Balance at 1 August 2024 1,233 14,378 15,611
Amount released to incoming resources (1,233) (14,378) (15,611)
Amount deferred in the year 799 799
Balance at 31 July 2025 799 799
----- End of picture text -----

PAGE 65

ORAL HEALTH FOUNDATION | ANNUAL REPORT & ACCOUNTS 2024-25 | FINANCIAL REVIEW

----- Start of picture text -----
18 Reconciliation of movement in funds 2025 2024
£ £
Unrestricted funds
Balance at 1 August 1,121,438 1,114,518
Income 984,995 1,028,012
Expenditure (1,015,690) (1,070,501)
(Losses) / gains 33,151 49,409
Balance at 31 July 1,123,894 1,121,438
19 Analysis of net assets between funds 2025 2024
£ £
Unrestricted funds
Tangible fixed assets 202,399 210,495
Investments 619,605 590,214
Net current assets 301,890 320,729
Total 1,123,894 1,121,438
----- End of picture text -----

20 Guarantee

The company is limited by guarantees of £1 per member.

21 Other financial commitments

There were no financial commitments at 31 July 2025 (2024: NIL).

22 Contingent liabilities

At the year end, there were no contingent liabilities.

23 Related party transactions

There were no transactions with related parties in the current year. In 2024, sales of £110 were made to Ben Atkins, a director. At 31st July 2025, the balance owed was NIL (2024: £NIL).

24 Post-balance sheet events

After the year-end, the freehold property owned by the charity was sold for £485,000.

PAGE 66

PAGE 67