Ever caught yourself wincing at the mention of dental implants, muttering about their steep price tag? You're not alone. It's a sentiment echoed far and wide. While the upfront cost of dental implants is certainly higher than other tooth replacement options, definite advantages make implants cheaper in the long run! So, before you write off them as a budget-buster, let's uncover why implants are a savvy solution to missing teeth.
Patients might not know that while an implant replaces a single tooth, it also helps restore balance to your full mouth and gives your teeth stability. Think of dental implants not just as tooth replacements but as guardians of your dental health, silently restoring balance to your mouth's ecosystem. - Dr. Thakkar
When you are missing a tooth, things begin to shift, and the bite doesn’t stay the same. You will begin to use your other teeth more to make up for the one missing tooth. Over time, this can lead to more expensive and extensive treatments down the road.
Based on the American Dental Association’s Health Policy Institute cost survey:
The main reason why there’s no standard price is that no two implant procedures are the same. This is mainly due to the multiple steps of dental implant placements, which may also be performed by multiple specialists such as periodontists, oral surgeons, and prosthodontists.
Whether you need to replace one tooth, multiple teeth, or a full arch, dental implants are the restoration method that gives you a permanent, long-term replacement option with teeth as strong and aesthetically pleasing as natural teeth.
And while you may first think dental implants are expensive, there are definite advantages to dental implants that make them a better investment over the long run. Why? Dental implants restore balance to your full mouth by integrating into the bone, enabling bone to continue growing and stabilizing your teeth. When you are missing a tooth or have a fixed bridge or dentures, spaces below the gum line shrink and shift, and your bite doesn’t stay the same. You will begin to use your other teeth more to make up for the missing tooth or teeth. This frequently leads to more extensive treatments – and more expensive treatments – down the road.
Bonus Tip: When looking at dental insurance, be sure to ask about a "Missing Tooth Clause." If you are missing a tooth when you purchase a policy with such a clause, they will not pay anything to replace that tooth. But if you include the clause before you lose a tooth, you will have some coverage for its replacement.
Written by Dr. Radhika Thakkar, BDS, MPH.
Follow her Instagram @dr.radhika.thakkar for more information.
Acknowledgment: I would like to express my sincere gratitude to Dr. Joseph DiDonato for the invaluable lessons from the AGD authorship and speaker training courses. These courses equipped me with essential skills that have greatly contributed to the creation of this article. Thank you, Dr. DiDonato, for your continuous support and mentorship.