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Microsuction ear wax removal at Brooks Pharmacy — Romford ear wax clinic
CLOSED · OPENS 9AM · EAR WAX · ROMFORD

Ear Wax Removal in Romford

Blocked ears sorted in one 20-minute appointment, five minutes north of Romford Market. Free consultation and ear exam — and if there's no wax, there's no charge.

Free consultationNo wax, no chargeMicrosuction — no syringingFree parking on-site
4.9 on Google · GPhC-registered · Romford & Dagenham
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Written and clinically reviewed by
Gurvinder Singh Sembhi
Superintendent Pharmacist for Brooks Pharmacy Group, overseeing clinical governance across the Romford and Dagenham clinics. · Verify on the GPhC register

Ear wax removal in Romford: what to expect

Romford is a working town centre, and it shows in the ears we look at. Retail and hospitality staff around the Market, The Brewery and The Liberty; Queen's Hospital shift workers over on Rom Valley Way; and a steady tide of Elizabeth line commuters who spend forty minutes each way from Romford station to Liverpool Street with earbuds wedged in. Blocked ears are one of the most common things people ask us about across the counter.

Brooks Pharmacy runs its microsuction clinic on Chase Cross Road, at the top of Collier Row — about five minutes north of the Market up the A1112, with free patient parking on the door. No GP referral, no audiology waiting list, and most patients are seen the same week.

Your consultation and ear examination are free. If we look in your ears and there's nothing to remove, there's no charge for the procedure — we'd rather tell you straight than suction a clear canal.

This page is written and clinically reviewed by the pharmacist team at Brooks Pharmacy, led by Superintendent Pharmacist Gurvinder Singh Sembhi (GPhC 2030374) with Ali Nuhu (GPhC 2222371) at the Romford clinic, following NHS guidance on earwax build-up and the NICE Clinical Knowledge Summary on earwax.

What microsuction actually is

Microsuction is the professional clinical method for removing impacted ear wax. A trained clinician examines your ear canal through a binocular microscope and uses a fine suction wand to lift the wax out under direct vision. There's no water, no flushing and no mess — the procedure is dry and controlled from start to finish, and the clinician can see exactly what they're doing the whole time.

It's the same technique used in hospital ENT outpatient clinics; the equipment is medical-grade and the method is identical. The difference is access. NHS audiology waiting lists for wax management run to many months in most areas, while a private appointment is usually available the same week.

Why ear wax builds up

Wax — cerumen — is produced by glands in the outer ear canal, and it's supposed to be there. Its job is to trap dust, debris and microbes before they reach the eardrum, then migrate outwards naturally as the skin of the canal grows. Most people never need to do anything about it at all.

Problems start when that self-cleaning mechanism is disrupted. The usual culprits:

  • Cotton buds — they push wax further in rather than taking it out. By far the biggest single cause of impaction.
  • Hearing aids — they block the natural outward migration and trap wax against the dome or receiver.
  • In-ear headphones and earbuds — the same mechanism, and increasingly common in people who wear them for hours a day.
  • Narrow or hairy ear canals — largely genetic, and more of a factor with age.
  • Higher wax production — some people simply make it faster than it migrates out.
  • Skin conditions or previous ear surgery — eczema and psoriasis affecting the canal change how it sheds.

When wax actually needs removing

You don't need to remove wax unless it's causing symptoms. The signs that point to impaction worth treating:

  • Dulled or muffled hearing, in one ear or both
  • A feeling of fullness or pressure in the ear
  • Mild discomfort or itching deep in the canal
  • Tinnitus that's new or noticeably worse
  • Hearing aids whistling, or sounding flat and weak
  • Earbuds that no longer seem to seal or sit right

Ear pain is different — especially with fever, discharge or sudden hearing loss. Those point to infection or another ear condition rather than wax, and they need examining rather than suctioning. Come in anyway: the exam is free, and if it isn't wax we'll tell you what it looks like and where to go next.

Microsuction, syringing, irrigation and ear candling

Four things patients ask us to compare:

Microsuction — what we do

Suction wand and microscope, dry, no water. Direct vision throughout, so the clinician can see and avoid the eardrum. The safest of the options and suitable for almost every ear, including patients who've had ear surgery.

Syringing — largely obsolete

A manual syringe pushing warm water into the canal under pressure. It's a blind technique — the person doing it can't see what's happening — with a real risk of driving wax further in or against the eardrum. It was the NHS standard until around 2010 and has been phased out for good reason. We don't do it.

Irrigation

An electric pump delivering water at controlled pressure. Better than manual syringing, but still blind and still wet, so it's contraindicated for perforated eardrums and post-surgical ears and carries an infection risk if equipment isn't scrupulously maintained. Some NHS audiology services still use it.

Ear candling

Don't. There's no evidence it removes wax, regulators warn against it, and it can burn the canal and drop debris into the ear. We mention it only to talk you out of it.

Why the NHS stopped doing this

In 2019 NHS England issued commissioning guidance recommending that primary care no longer routinely manage ear wax removal, on the basis that audiology was the appropriate setting. In practice, audiology waiting lists for wax management now run to many months across most Integrated Care Boards. A lot of surgeries removed their ear-care equipment entirely, and the practice nurses who used to do syringing were retrained or retired without replacement.

That left a gap, and private clinics filled it. The procedure didn't become less safe, less effective or less necessary — it just moved out of NHS primary care. If you're able to wait, asking your GP for an audiology referral is still a legitimate option and we'll happily say so. For most people with blocked ears and a life to get on with, a same-week private appointment is the practical route.

What to expect at your appointment

Around 20 minutes in total; allow 30 for a first visit.

Arrival and consultation — a brief conversation about your symptoms and any relevant ear history: surgery, perforations, infections, what you're noticing now. Free, and it's where we decide whether suction is the right thing at all.

Otoscopic examination — we look in both ears, confirm wax, and rule out anything that needs ENT instead. Also free — and if there's no wax, that's where it stops and there's nothing to pay for the procedure.

The microsuction — you sit upright, the clinician positions the microscope and lifts the wax out gently with the suction wand. You'll hear it; it's loud close to the eardrum, a bit like a vacuum cleaner held near your ear. Each ear typically takes five to ten minutes.

Post-procedure check — we re-examine both ears to confirm they're clear, talk through aftercare, and answer anything you want to ask.

Aftercare and preventing it coming back

Keep water out of your ears for 24 hours — no swimming, and take care washing your hair. Hearing should be clearer immediately; if you've been blocked for weeks, the contrast can genuinely startle you.

If you're prone to build-up:

  • Stop using cotton buds. Permanently.
  • Two or three drops of olive oil once a week keeps the canal supple.
  • If you wear hearing aids or in-ear headphones daily, book a check every six to twelve months rather than waiting for the block.
  • If you're simply a fast wax producer, a routine appointment every few months is cheaper and easier than the alternative.

Why Romford ears block up

Two Romford patterns come up again and again. The first is the commute. The Elizabeth line put Romford roughly forty minutes from the City, and a great many people do that journey twice a day with noise-cancelling earbuds in the whole way — an hour and a half of sealed ear canal, five days a week. Earbuds do to wax exactly what hearing aids do: block the outward migration and press it back down the canal. We see the results constantly.

The second is age and hearing aids. The residential wards around Collier Row, Havering Park and Marks Gate have a long-settled older population, and hearing-aid users are the group most reliably affected by wax — the aid traps it, the trapped wax makes the aid whistle or sound flat, and people assume the aid is failing when the canal is simply full.

Then there's the practical bit: Romford's GP surgeries stopped doing this years ago, and Queen's Hospital audiology is not a realistic route for something as routine as wax. Working in the town centre or at the hospital also means you can't easily take a morning off — so we keep late-afternoon slots for people finishing a shift.

Getting to Chase Cross Road from Romford

From Romford town centre and the Market, head north on Collier Row Road (A1112) for about five minutes; Brooks Pharmacy is at the top of Collier Row on Chase Cross Road, RM5 3PR. If you're coming round the ring road, leave at Collier Row and follow the A1112 north. Buses along Collier Row Road stop close by, and there's free patient parking on-site — which matters more than it sounds when town-centre parking is what it is.

GPhC premises 1031352GPhC premises 1031154Superintendent GPhC 2030374 · Verify25+ booked this week
Prescriber-led care
Same-day appointments
No GP referral needed
Romford & Dagenham
WHY ROMFORD PATIENTS COME TO US

Blocked ears, cleared in one visit — without the audiology waiting list.

Brooks Pharmacy runs a microsuction ear wax clinic on Chase Cross Road, at the top of Collier Row and about five minutes north of Romford Market — no GP referral, no audiology waiting list, and free patient parking on the door.

Romford is a working town centre: retail and hospitality staff, Queen's Hospital shift workers on Rom Valley Way, and thousands of Elizabeth line commuters with earbuds in from Romford station to Liverpool Street and back. All of it is hard on ear canals, and blocked ears are one of the most common things we see across the counter.

Your consultation and ear examination are free. If we look and there's no wax to remove, there's no charge for the procedure — we'd rather tell you honestly than suction a clear canal. Book online or call 01708 897617.

What's included in your microsuction appointment.

Free consultation and ear exam, both ears treated if needed, pre- and post-procedure checks, and aftercare advice. If there's no wax, there's no charge.

Free consultation and ear exam
Every appointment starts with a free consultation and an otoscopic examination of both ears. We confirm it's wax — and rule out infection, perforation or anything that needs ENT instead — before we touch anything.
Microsuction, not syringing
Gentle, dry, controlled suction under direct vision. No water, no irrigation, no flushing — nothing gets pushed further down the canal.
No wax, no charge
If we look in your ears and there's no wax to remove, you don't pay for the procedure. You'll leave with an explanation and, where appropriate, the right referral route.
One visit, both ears
Most patients are seen and cleared in a single appointment — usually around 20 minutes from sitting down to walking out.
Trained clinicians, ENT-grade equipment
Carried out by trained clinicians using a professional suction unit and binocular microscope — the same technique used in hospital ENT outpatient clinics.
No GP referral needed
Self-refer directly. No GP letter, no audiology waiting list. Book online or call 01708 897617.

Three steps from blocked to clear.

Free exam, microsuction, you walk out. Usually under 20 minutes.

01
Free consultation and exam
We talk through your symptoms and look in both ears with an otoscope to confirm it's wax — and to rule out anything that needs ENT rather than suction. No wax, no charge.
02
Microsuction
Using a binocular microscope and a fine suction wand, a trained clinician lifts the wax out gently under direct vision. No water, no syringing. Most ears clear in 5–10 minutes each.
03
Walk out clear
We re-check both ears, show you what came out if you'd like to see, and run through simple aftercare. Hearing is usually back the moment the canal clears.
Information on this page is for general guidance. Suitability for microsuction depends on your ear-canal anatomy and history. The free otoscopic examination at your appointment determines what's appropriate.
Brooks Pharmacy (Romford) 12 Chase Cross Road, Romford RM5 3PR · GPhC premises 1031352 · Website
Brooks Pharmacy (Dagenham) 281 Wood Lane, Dagenham RM8 3NH · GPhC premises 1031154 · Website
Superintendent Pharmacist: Gurvinder Singh Sembhi (GPhC 2030374) · Verify on the GPhC register

Common questions from Romford patients.

Get your hearing back in one appointment.

Same-day microsuction in Romford, five minutes north of the Market. Free consultation and ear exam, both ears in one visit, no GP referral — and if there's no wax, there's no charge.

Romford Clinic
Romford Clinic is the clinic service of Brooks Pharmacy Group, a GPhC-registered community pharmacy serving Romford, Dagenham and East London.
GET IN TOUCH
Romford, 12 Chase Cross Rd, RM5 3PR
01708 897617View Romford NHS profile
Dagenham, 281 Wood Lane, RM8 3NH
01708 897706View Dagenham NHS profile
info@brookspharmacy.com
Romford Clinic is the clinic service of Brooks Pharmacy Group.
GPhC-registered pharmacy. Premises 1031352 (Romford) and 1031154 (Dagenham). Superintendent Pharmacist: Gurvinder Singh Sembhi (GPhC 2030374).
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