Know what the dental work should cost —
with your insurance, and without.
Fair-price ranges for the most common dental procedures, computed transparently: a national-average price adjusted for your insurance, provider, and region. Free, no sign-up, no dentist referrals — the estimate is the product.
Dental cost calculator
Transparent math: a national-average price, adjusted for your insurance, provider, and region. See exactly how this is computed →
A quote inside this range is ordinary. Above it isn't automatically overcharging — but every dollar above should map to a line you can question (materials, lab fees, a specialist, add-ons). Well below the range: ask what's included, since the cheapest way to a low number is leaving things out.
Dental procedures, priced
Every guide shows the fair range with and without insurance, the lines dentists add to estimates (and when they're legitimate), and the questions that keep a quote honest.
What a routine cleaning, exam, and x-rays really cost in 2026
Filling$150 – $450 per fillingCavity filling costs in 2026
Root canal$700 – $1,800 per toothRoot canal costs in 2026
Crown$800 – $2,000 per crownDental crown costs in 2026
Dental implant$3,000 – $5,500 per toothSingle dental implant costs in 2026
Tooth extraction$130 – $600 per toothTooth extraction costs in 2026
Wisdom teeth removal$1,000 – $3,000 all fourWisdom teeth removal costs in 2026
Braces$3,000 – $7,500 full treatmentThe cost of traditional braces in 2026
Invisalign / clear aligners$3,000 – $7,000 full treatmentInvisalign and clear-aligner costs in 2026
Dentures$1,000 – $4,000 per arch / setDenture costs in 2026
Dental bridge$2,000 – $5,000 per bridgeDental bridge costs in 2026
Deep cleaning (scaling & root planing)$600 – $1,600 full mouthDeep cleaning costs in 2026
Veneers$900 – $2,500 per toothDental veneer costs in 2026
Professional teeth whitening$300 – $1,000 per treatmentProfessional teeth-whitening costs in 2026
Ranges shown are the typical cost paying without insurance. Open any guide to see the with-insurance estimate.
Math you can check
Every estimate shows its work: a national-average price, your insurance coverage, provider, and region. No black box. Read the methodology.
Nothing to sell you
We don't take referral fees from dental offices or gate estimates behind lead forms — incentives shape numbers, so we removed the incentives.
Built to be refined
Estimates come from published fee surveys and ADA research; we're also gathering anonymous reader-submitted bills to sharpen each range against what dentists actually charge.
Anatomy of a dental estimate
A major-work quote breaks into the same parts every time — and the number that matters is your share, after insurance and its annual cap.
Reading a dental estimate: the 60-second version
- Ask for an itemized treatment plan. Each procedure with its ADA code, fee, what insurance is expected to pay, and your estimated share. A single number can't be evaluated.
- Know your plan's tiers and annual max. Preventive is ~100% covered, basic ~80%, major ~50%, ortho to a lifetime cap — and most plans stop paying past a ~$1,500 yearly maximum.
- Separate "must do now" from "watch." Ask which work is urgent and which can be monitored or staged into next year's benefits to beat the annual max.
- Question add-ons against their trigger. Core build-ups, deep cleanings, sedation, premium materials — each has a legitimate reason, listed on every guide here.
- A second opinion costs an exam. On anything over a few hundred dollars — especially crowns, deep cleanings, and implants — it's the highest-paid hour of your month.