Dental Implant Cost Calculator
Country, procedure, implant brand, crown material, extractions, grafting, sedation, insurance — every variable that changes your real bill, broken down line by line.
How much do dental implants really cost in 2026?
Two patients in the same city can get quotes thousands apart for what sounds like "the same implant" because the components are different: a standard titanium post versus a premium surface-treated one, a porcelain crown versus zirconia, whether extractions or grafting come first, and how sedation is billed. The calculator walks through each of these the way a treatment coordinator would, then adds them up into one itemized total.
Dental implant cost by country
Base prices below are for a single implant (fixture, abutment and standard crown) and for one full All-on-4 arch, based on published clinic price lists and national fee data current for 2026.
| Country | Single implant | All-on-4 (per arch) |
|---|---|---|
| United States | $3,000 – $6,000 | $15,000 – $30,000 |
| United Kingdom | £2,000 – £3,000 | £12,000 – £17,000 |
| Canada | CA$3,000 – CA$5,500 | CA$16,000 – CA$28,000 |
| Australia | A$3,000 – A$5,500 | A$18,000 – A$30,000 |
| Turkey | €300 – €900 | €4,000 – €9,000 |
| Mexico | $600 – $1,200 | $6,000 – $12,000 |
The gap between countries mostly reflects clinic overhead, staff costs and currency strength — not a difference in the titanium post itself. Many clinics in Turkey and Mexico place the same implant brands used across US, UK, Canadian and Australian practices. Always confirm what a quoted package does and doesn't include before comparing two clinics.
Every line item this calculator accounts for
- Implant post & brand tier. Premium systems like Straumann or Nobel Biocare typically add $400–$900 per implant over a standard titanium post.
- Crown material. Zirconia crowns cost more than porcelain-fused crowns but resist staining and wear better long-term.
- Extractions. Removing a failing tooth before implant placement is billed separately, usually $150–$450 per tooth in the US.
- Bone grafting. Needed only when a scan shows insufficient bone volume — adds roughly $500–$1,500 in the US, less in Turkey and Mexico.
- Sinus lift. A more involved graft for upper back teeth, typically $1,500–$3,000 in the US.
- 3D CT imaging. Close to standard of care for surgical planning; often priced separately from the implant itself if not already done.
- Sedation. Local anesthesia is usually included; IV sedation or general anesthesia is billed on top.
- Insurance. Most plans cover ~50% of major procedures up to an annual cap, often $1,000–$2,000.
Insurance and financing
Most dental insurance plans treat implants as a "major" procedure, covering around 50% of the cost after your deductible, up to an annual maximum that is commonly $1,000–$2,000. Because a single implant often costs more than that entire annual cap, insurance typically covers a portion of one implant rather than a full case. In the UK, implants sit outside routine NHS treatment except in limited medically necessary cases, so most UK patients pay privately.
Where insurance falls short, financing options include CareCredit and similar medical credit lines, in-house payment plans from the clinic (often 12–60 months), personal loans, and — for US patients — HSA or FSA funds, which can be used tax-free for implant treatment.
Frequently asked questions
Is the number from this calculator a real quote?
No. It's a planning range based on aggregated 2026 clinic pricing data for your country, procedure and selected options. Your actual price depends on a clinical exam, imaging, and the treatment plan your dentist recommends — always confirm with a written quote before booking treatment.
Why does a full mouth of implants cost less per tooth than single implants?
Full-arch systems like All-on-4 replace an entire row of teeth using just four to six implants instead of one implant per missing tooth, which is why the per-tooth cost drops significantly compared to individual implants.
What's the difference between standard and premium implant brands?
Premium systems invest more in surface technology that promotes faster bonding with the jawbone (osseointegration) and carry more long-term clinical research. Standard systems from established manufacturers are still FDA/CE-cleared and widely used — the difference is mainly in cost and the depth of long-term outcome data, not basic safety.
Are cheaper implants abroad actually safe?
Safety depends on the clinic and surgeon, not the country alone. Look for internationally recognized implant brands, documented sterilization protocols, and a surgeon's credentials you can verify — the same checklist you'd apply to a domestic clinic.