Procedures / Deep cleaning (scaling & root planing)
Deep cleaning (scaling & root planing) cost in 2026, with and without insurance
Deep cleaning costs in 2026 — why it's priced by the quadrant, when it's genuinely needed, and how to tell it from an upsell.
What should it cost near you?
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.
Your likely cost, with and without insurance
General dentist, U.S. national average. Scaling and root planing is usually 'basic' care (~80% covered) but priced per quadrant, so a full-mouth treatment across four quadrants adds up even with insurance. A specialist runs higher — use the calculator's provider selector, and pick your state for local numbers.
| Paying | Typical range |
|---|---|
| Paying without insurance | $600 – $1,600 |
| With a typical PPO plan | $200 – $700 |
What insurance does to the price
The same procedure, out of pocket, with and without a typical PPO plan — on a shared scale.
The math, worked out
Every estimate here is the same formula — a national-average price, adjusted for insurance, provider, and your region — so you can reproduce it for your own quote:
Paying without insurance (general dentist): $600 – $1,600
With a typical PPO plan: $200 – $700
At a specialist (×1.25, before insurance): $750 – $2,000
Then adjust for your region — roughly ×0.82 in a lower-cost state, ×1.36 in a higher-cost one. The calculator above does all of this for your exact state, provider, and insurance status.
What moves the price
- Number of quadrants treated (it's priced per quadrant, up to four)
- Severity of gum disease and pocket depths
- Whether antibiotics or a periodontist are involved
- Insurance: usually ~80% as basic care, but four quadrants still adds up
Lines you may see on the bill
Legitimate in the right circumstances — the "when" column is the test to apply. Paste your full bill into the decoder to check each line at once.
| Line item | Typical cost | When it's legitimate |
|---|---|---|
| Per-quadrant pricing | $150 – $400 | Legitimate — deep cleaning is billed by the quadrant of the mouth; needing all four is more than needing one or two. |
| Localized antibiotic (Arestin) | $30 – $90 | Placed in deep pockets to help healing — sometimes useful, sometimes over-used. Ask whether your pocket depths justify it. |
| Follow-up periodontal maintenance | $120 – $350 | More frequent cleanings after treatment — reasonable for real gum disease, but confirm you actually needed the deep cleaning first. |
How much your region matters
Dental prices track local cost of living. Paying without insurance, this procedure runs roughly $900 in a lower-cost state like Mississippi versus about $1,500 in a higher-cost one like California — same work, different overhead. Use the calculator above for your own state.
When this comes up
- Bleeding, swollen, or receding gums
- Deep gum pockets measured on exam
- Persistent bad breath or loose teeth
- Tartar buildup below the gumline on x-ray
Cost of waiting
Untreated gum disease is the leading cause of adult tooth loss — and once bone is lost around a tooth, it doesn't come back. A timely deep cleaning is far cheaper than the extractions, implants, or gum surgery that advanced disease leads to.
Can you avoid it?
You can't deep-clean below the gumline yourself, but excellent home care (brushing, flossing, a water flosser) after treatment is what keeps gum disease from returning — and prevents needing it in the first place.
Common questions
How much does a deep cleaning cost in 2026?
A full-mouth scaling and root planing typically runs $600–$1,600 without insurance, priced per quadrant ($150–$400 each). Coverage varies more here than almost anywhere — some PPOs treat scaling and root planing as basic care at ~80%, many cover it at only 50% — so with insurance your out-of-pocket typically lands $200–$700 across all four quadrants.
Do I really need a deep cleaning, or is it an upsell?
It's genuinely needed when there's real gum disease — bleeding gums, deep pockets (usually 4mm+), and tartar below the gumline. It's over-recommended when pockets are shallow and gums are healthy. Ask for your actual pocket-depth measurements; if most are 1–3mm, a regular cleaning may be all you need, and a second opinion is fair.
Why is it split into four appointments?
Deep cleaning is done by quadrant (each quarter of the mouth), often two quadrants per visit with local anesthesia, because thoroughly cleaning below the gumline takes time. That per-quadrant structure is also how it's priced and billed to insurance.
Related procedures
What readers are actually paying
Sources & further reading
Where our inputs come from and the authorities worth knowing. Base ranges are compiled from published dental fee surveys, insurer coverage tables, and ADA Health Policy Institute research.
- ADA — MouthHealthy — the American Dental Association's consumer guide to procedures and care
- ADA Health Policy Institute — dental fee, utilization, and cost research
- FAIR Health Consumer — Dental — independent nonprofit cost-lookup tool for dental procedures
How this page is built: a national-average price range for this procedure, adjusted for insurance status, provider (general dentist / specialist), and your region's cost of living — compiled 07-2026 from published sources. We're building a reader-submitted bill dataset to refine these ranges; once enough exist they appear above. Full detail on the methodology page. This is an estimate, not a quote. Have a bill? Decode it →