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How Much Does All-on-X Cost?
Dr. Nav Atwal
All-on-X typically costs $20,000 to $50,000 per arch in the United States, and $40,000 to $100,000 for both arches. The price depends on the number and type of implants, the material of the final teeth (acrylic-titanium hybrid versus zirconia), surgical complexity, and the team. A comprehensive fee usually bundles planning, extractions, surgery, a same-day temporary, and the final fixed prosthesis.
Key Takeaways
- All-on-X costs roughly $20,000–$50,000 per arch in the U.S., or $40,000–$100,000 for both. - Price is driven by implant number and type, prosthesis material, and surgical complexity. - Acrylic-titanium hybrids cost less; monolithic zirconia is the premium tier. - A full quote usually bundles planning, extractions, surgery, a same-day temporary, and final teeth. - Insurance may cover part of the cost, and many practices offer financing.
Replacing a whole arch of teeth with a fixed set anchored to implants — the treatment known as All-on-X — runs roughly $20,000 to $50,000 per arch in the United States, with a full upper-and-lower reconstruction usually landing somewhere between $40,000 and $100,000. What that figure represents reaches well beyond the implants themselves; it folds in the surgical planning, the number and style of implants chosen, the material used for the finished teeth, and the skill of the clinical and laboratory team delivering the result.
"All-on-X" is a catch-all name. It spans All-on-4, All-on-6, and several related approaches, all built on one idea: a complete arch of teeth carried by a modest number of implants. Because the work is designed as a single, unified rebuild rather than one tooth at a time, pricing is almost always expressed by the arch:
Acrylic-and-titanium hybrid, per arch — $20,000–$35,000
Monolithic zirconia, per arch — $30,000–$50,000
Both arches, a full set — $40,000–$100,000
Those numbers describe a kind of implant dentistry organized around durable function, support for the facial structures, and a result meant to last.
Why the Numbers Vary So Much
No two All-on-X cases are quite the same, and a few variables decide where any individual case lands on that scale.
How Many Implants — and Which Kind
All-on-4 rests the arch on four implants; All-on-6 uses six. More demanding situations may call for additional fixtures, and when bone has been lost to a significant degree, longer zygomatic implants anchored in the cheekbone become an option. Each added or more specialized implant lengthens surgery and raises the cost.
What the Final Teeth Are Made Of
The teeth you leave with on the day of surgery are usually a temporary acrylic set. The lasting prosthesis is where cost separates most sharply. An acrylic-and-titanium hybrid is well proven and hard-wearing — the more attainable choice. Monolithic zirconia is tougher, resists staining, and looks more like natural tooth, all at a higher price.
How Much Surgery the Case Requires
Teeth that still need extracting, areas that call for bone grafting, or a sinus lift each add steps to the plan. The more groundwork required before implants can be placed, the higher the figure climbs.
The Team and the Technology Behind It
Computer-guided surgery, CBCT imaging, photogrammetry, and a close working relationship with an accomplished laboratory all push precision — and price — upward. This is frequently where the line is drawn between a result that merely works and one that genuinely looks and feels like your own teeth.
What a Quote Usually Covers
A well-structured All-on-X fee tends to gather most of the process into a single number:
The consultation, CBCT scan, and digital planning
Removing whatever teeth remain in the arch
Placing the implants
A fixed temporary arch, often delivered the same day
The definitive prosthesis once healing is complete
It always pays to ask precisely what a quoted price contains. Whether extractions and the final teeth are built in can shift a side-by-side comparison considerably.
Is All-on-X Worth It?
For anyone living with failing teeth, dentures that slip, or several gaps at once, All-on-X gives back more than a fixed set of teeth. It restores the everyday confidence to eat, speak, and smile, and it maintains the facial support that conventional dentures cannot. Understood as a long-term rebuild rather than a one-off procedure, it ranks among the most transformative treatments dentistry offers today.
A Considered Approach to Full-Arch Treatment
Every full-arch case I take on begins with the face and with how the teeth work together — never with the implants viewed in isolation. A thorough consultation lets me assess your bone, your bite, and what you want from treatment, then map out a clear plan and an investment built around your particular anatomy, so the figure you receive reflects exactly what your case calls for.
— Dr. Nav Atwal
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does All-on-X cost per arch? In the United States, All-on-X generally costs between $20,000 and $50,000 per arch, depending on the implants used, the material of the final teeth, and the complexity of the case. How much does full-mouth All-on-X cost? Treating both arches typically ranges from $40,000 to $100,000, since each arch is planned and priced as its own complete reconstruction. Is All-on-4 cheaper than All-on-6? Usually yes. All-on-4 uses four implants per arch while All-on-6 uses six, so the additional implants and surgical time generally make All-on-6 more expensive. Why is zirconia more expensive than an acrylic hybrid? Monolithic zirconia is stronger, more stain-resistant, and more lifelike than an acrylic-titanium hybrid, and it requires more advanced fabrication, which raises the cost. Does insurance cover All-on-X? Coverage varies. Many plans contribute toward extractions or part of the implant treatment but rarely cover the full amount, so confirm specifics with your provider. Are there financing options for All-on-X? Many practices offer financing or payment plans that spread the investment over time. Ask what options are available during your consultation.
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