Dental implants usually cost around $3,000–$6,000 per tooth in 2026 , and full-mouth options can run tens of thousands of dollars depending on how many teeth and the type of restoration.

Quick Scoop

  • Typical single implant (implant + abutment + crown): $3,000–$6,000 per tooth.
  • Some clinics quote ranges as low as $1,500–$6,000 per implant , but most patients land in the middle of that range.
  • Several teeth or “implant bridges”: $10,000–$30,000+ depending on how many teeth and complexity.
  • Full arch (like All‑on‑4 / All‑on‑6): roughly $20,000–$50,000 per arch , sometimes more.
  • Full-mouth (upper + lower): commonly $40,000–$90,000 total.
  • Costs vary a lot with city/region, dentist experience, materials (titanium vs zirconia), and whether you need bone grafts or extractions first.

Typical price ranges by option

[1][9][3] [6][1] [5] [1][5][6] [9][6] [2][5] [3][5]
Implant option Typical cost (USD, 2025–2026) Notes
Single tooth implant $3,000–$6,000 per tooth Includes implant, abutment, and crown in many quotes.
Multiple individual implants $10,000–$30,000+ Several teeth restored separately; cost rises with tooth count.
Implant‑supported bridge ~$5,000+ Replaces several teeth using fewer implants as anchors.
All‑on‑4 / All‑on‑6 (single arch) ~$20,000–$50,000 per arch Fixed full‑arch bridge on 4–6 implants.
Full mouth (both arches) ~$40,000–$90,000 Upper and lower full-arch restorations.
“Mini” implants Lower than standard implants Smaller diameter, often used for denture stabilization; per‑unit price usually lower.
Zirconia implants A few hundred more than titanium Metal‑free ceramic option at a premium.

Why the price swings so much

Several moving parts sit inside that one big number:

  1. Number of teeth and type of restoration
    • Replacing one front tooth is very different from rebuilding an entire arch.
    • Full‑arch systems (All‑on‑4/6) use fewer implants but more complex lab work and surgery, which drives up the total.
  1. Location and clinic type
    • Big coastal cities and high‑cost areas usually charge more than smaller towns.
    • Boutique implant centers, teaching hospitals, and corporate chains may price differently even in the same city.
  1. Materials and implant system
    • Titanium is the long‑time standard; zirconia and premium-brand systems usually cost more.
 * Custom abutments and high‑end crowns (porcelain‑zirconia, layered ceramics) add to the tab.
  1. Extra procedures you might need
    • Common add‑ons: extractions, bone grafts, sinus lifts, temporary teeth, sedation or general anesthesia.
 * Each of these can add hundreds to several thousand dollars.
  1. Dentist’s expertise and tech
    • Specialists or highly experienced implant dentists, and clinics using 3D scans, surgical guides, or same‑day milling, often charge a premium.

What’s usually included (and what’s not)

When you see an ad like “Implants from $999!”, the fine print matters.

  • Often included in a full quote:
    • Exam and basic imaging (X‑rays, sometimes CBCT scan)
    • Surgical placement of the implant post
    • Abutment and final crown or full‑arch bridge (for “turnkey” prices)
  • Often extra :
    • Extractions of bad teeth
    • Bone grafts or sinus lifts
    • Temporary teeth during healing
    • IV sedation or general anesthesia beyond local anesthetic
    • Follow‑up care, repairs, or replacement if damage occurs years later

A simple example:

  • Clinic A quotes $2,000 for “implant surgery only” (just the titanium post).
  • After adding abutment ($500–$1,000) and crown ($800–$3,000), you end up within the common $3,000–$6,000 range anyway.

Insurance, financing, and saving a bit

  • Many dental insurance plans partially cover implants or the crowns, but rarely the full cost. Annual maximums often cap benefits at a few thousand dollars.
  • Third‑party financing and in‑house payment plans are now standard, spreading payments over months or years for larger cases.
  • Ways people try to save:
    • Getting quotes from 2–3 different providers.
    • Considering a dental school clinic (slower, but with supervision).
    • Asking about phased treatment or alternative options (bridges, partials, overdentures) if full implants are out of budget.

A quick “story” scenario

Imagine someone missing two molars on one side:

  • Each implant package (post + abutment + crown) is quoted at $3,500.
  • They need minor bone grafting on one site (+$800) and IV sedation (+$600).
  • Their total ends up near $8,400 , but insurance pays $2,000 toward the crowns, so the out‑of‑pocket cost lands around $6,400.
    Numbers like this are typical of what many 2025–2026 patients report and what clinics publish online.

If you tell me:

  • How many teeth you’re thinking about, and
  • Whether you’re looking at a single tooth, a section, or a full mouth,

I can sketch a more tailored cost range (still rough, but closer to your situation).

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.