Patient Education Guide
NATURAL TOOTHDENTAL IMPLANTGUM LINECrownRootCrownAbutmentImplant PostOsseointegration

Understanding Dental Implants — From First Question to Final Crown.

Written for patients, not professionals. No jargon, no upselling — just an honest walk through what implants are, whether you're a candidate, and what the process actually feels like.

1Step One

Am I a Candidate?

If you're reading this, you're probably living with a gap, a failing bridge, or dentures that don't quite feel like yours. You're not alone — 178 million Americans are missing at least one tooth, and implants have become the standard of care for replacing them.

Most healthy adults are candidates. The key factors your dentist will evaluate are bone density in your jaw, overall gum health, and whether any medical conditions require special planning.

Good Candidate Indicators

You have one or more missing teeth (or teeth that can't be saved)

Your jawbone has stopped growing (typically 18+ years old)

You have adequate bone density — or can undergo a bone graft first

Your gums are healthy or treatable

You don't smoke heavily (smokers can still qualify with proper planning)

!

Uncontrolled diabetes or bisphosphonate medications may require specialist evaluation

Bone loss after extraction is fast. You lose up to 25% of bone width in the first year after a tooth is removed. If you're considering implants, earlier consultation is almost always better — not because of pressure, but because your options stay wider.

"I kept thinking I was too old at 62. My dentist walked me through a CBCT scan right there and showed me I had plenty of bone. I wish I'd asked five years earlier."

P

Patricia Holloway

Single implant, Denver CO · Verified Patient

2Step Two

Types of Implants & What Actually Happens

An implant is a titanium post — roughly the size of a short screw — placed into your jawbone where a root used to be. Over the next few months, the bone grows around it in a process called osseointegration. Then an abutment and crown are attached on top.

Inline Diagram — Osseointegration Process

Day 1 — PlacementPost seated in boneWeeks 2–8 — FusionBone cells attaching3–6 Months — IntegratedFully fused — permanent

The Three Main Options

Single Implant

$3,000–$5,500

One missing tooth. The most common procedure.

○○

Multiple / Bridge

$6,000–$16,000

Several adjacent teeth replaced with implant-supported bridge.

○○○○

All-on-4 / All-on-6

$20,000–$45,000

Full arch restoration on four or six strategically placed posts.

Same-day implants (immediate load) place a temporary crown the day of surgery. Not every patient qualifies — bone density and bite forces matter — but it's worth asking about if you're concerned about wearing a temporary gap.

"The actual procedure took about 45 minutes. I was nervous about pain but I felt pressure, not pain. Ibuprofen handled the soreness for two days and that was it."

M

Marcus Webb

Single implant, Austin TX · Verified Patient

3Step Three

What Does It Actually Cost?

Implant pricing is legitimately confusing because quotes bundle different things. Here's what drives the number — and what to watch for when comparing.

Component

Typical Range

Notes

Consultation + imaging

$150–$350

CBCT scan often included

Implant post (titanium)

$1,000–$2,000

Brand matters less than placement skill

Abutment

$300–$700

Connects post to crown

Crown (porcelain)

$1,000–$2,000

Ceramic or zirconia options

Bone graft (if needed)

$500–$3,000

Not always required

Sinus lift (if needed)

$1,500–$3,500

Upper jaw, low bone only

Watch Out For

  • Quotes that exclude the crown
  • "Free consultation" that leads to high-pressure close
  • No mention of the implant brand being used
  • No written fee estimate before treatment

Financing Reality

  • Most practices offer 12–24 month 0% financing
  • CareCredit and Proceed Finance are common
  • Some insurers now cover part of implant cost
  • FSA/HSA dollars can be applied

The honest math: A single implant done well lasts 25+ years. The per-year cost works out to roughly $120–$200 — less than most people spend on coffee. A bridge typically needs replacement after 10–15 years, and each replacement can cost more than the original.

"I got four quotes that ranged from $2,800 to $5,400 for the exact same procedure. The cheapest was excluding the crown. ImplantGuide helped me ask the right questions and I ended up with a dentist who was transparent from the first appointment."

D

Denise Yamamoto

Two implants, Portland OR · Verified Patient

4Step Four

Recovery Timeline — What to Realistically Expect

The procedure itself is usually less eventful than patients expect. Recovery is measured in phases, not days — here's what actually happens at each stage.

1

Day of Surgery

Placement & first hours

Local anesthesia or light sedation. You'll feel pressure but not pain. Drive home with someone. Soft foods, ice packs, rest. Most patients take one day off work.

How it feels: Mild soreness, some swelling. Manageable with ibuprofen.

2

Days 2–7

Acute healing phase

Swelling peaks around day 3, then recedes. Bruising is normal. Avoid smoking, straws, and hard foods. Salt-water rinses begin day 2.

How it feels: Discomfort decreasing daily. Most people return to normal activity by day 3.

3

Weeks 2–8

Osseointegration begins

The bone is quietly growing around the titanium post. You won't feel this happening. Routine life resumes. A temporary crown or flipper may be worn.

How it feels: Essentially normal. You may forget the implant is there.

4

Months 3–6

Integration confirmed

Your dentist checks integration with a torque test or imaging. Once confirmed, the abutment is placed and impressions are taken for your permanent crown.

How it feels: One more brief appointment. Minor sensitivity for a week after crown placement.

5

Month 6+

Your permanent crown

The crown is seated and adjusted. It looks, feels, and functions like a natural tooth. Brush and floss normally. Annual check-ins confirm long-term stability.

How it feels: Done. Most patients say they forget which tooth is the implant.

"I had a full-time job and two kids. I took a Friday off, was back at my desk Monday. The hardest part was not eating crunchy foods for a week. Genuinely not a big deal."

R

Robert Fitzpatrick

Single implant, Chicago IL · Verified Patient

5Step Five

Find an Implant Dentist Near You

Every provider in our directory has been vetted for transparency, patient communication, and implant volume. They're dentists who draw diagrams, not just quote sheets.

Board-certified implantologistsTransparent fee estimatesCBCT imaging on-site

No spam. No sales calls. Just vetted providers who explain what they're doing.

Still Researching?

Free Download

The Complete Implant Guide

32 pages covering every question your dentist may not have time to answer — candidacy, costs, timelines, questions to ask, and red flags to watch for.