
You've been told dental implants are an option, and you want to know what you're actually signing up for before walking into a consultation. The procedure stretches over months and costs more than most patients expect. Most articles you'll find were written by clinics that want you to book a consultation, so the practical details get stripped out.
The procedure runs across 5 or 6 stages, with most of the time spent waiting for the bone to heal between visits. The chair time itself is much shorter than people expect.

The first visit is talking, looking, and scanning. Your dentist takes a medical history, asks about medications, examines your mouth and gums, and discusses what you want to achieve. They'll take a cone beam CT (CBCT) scan, which is a 3D X-ray of your jaw. This shows bone density, nerve positions, and sinus locations, all of which the dentist needs before any surgery starts.
The consultation usually takes 45 to 60 minutes. The CBCT itself takes about 20 to 30 seconds, with your head held still in a frame.
You'll leave with a treatment plan and a quote. For implant-focused practices, CBCT is now standard rather than optional.
Not every patient needs prep work. If you do, it happens before implant placement, so the site can heal.
The common preparatory procedures:
Local anaesthetic covers most prep work. IV sedation is common for longer procedures or anxious patients. Recovery looks like a tooth extraction: bruising, swelling, and soft food for a week.
This is the surgical visit people think of when they hear "implant." The dentist opens the gum, drills a precise hole into the jawbone, screws in the titanium implant fixture, and closes the gum either over the implant or around a temporary healing cap.
Chair time depends on the case:
Most patients describe pressure rather than pain during surgery. Local anaesthetic is the minimum. IV sedation is common, especially for longer procedures. General anaesthetic is used for complex full-arch cases or patients with severe dental anxiety.
Afterwards, you'll have numbness for a few hours, mild bleeding, and swelling that peaks around day 2 or 3. You'll need soft food, prescribed pain relief, and cleaning instructions. If you had IV sedation or general anaesthetic, you can't drive yourself home, and someone needs to be with you for the rest of the day.
Osseointegration is the process by which your jawbone fuses to the titanium implant. From the outside, nothing seems to be happening. Inside, the implant is becoming a permanent part of your jaw.
The standard timeframe is 3 months for the lower jaw and 3 to 6 months for the upper jaw, where bone tends to be softer. Grafted sites take longer. An implant might fail at this stage if smoking, infection, or compromised healing stops proper bone integration.
You're not toothless during this phase. For full-arch implants, a fixed provisional prosthesis is screwed into the implants on the day of surgery and stays in place through the healing period.
The abutment is a small connector that attaches to the top of the implant and supports the final crown or prosthesis. Some surgeons place the abutment in the same visit as the implant. Others do it as a separate minor procedure later.
If it's separate, chair time is around 20 to 30 minutes under local anaesthetic. The gum is opened around the implant, the abutment is attached, and the gum heals around it for about two weeks before the final teeth are fitted.
The last stage is the visible tooth. Your dentist takes impressions or an intraoral scan, the prosthesis is made in a lab or in-house at the clinic, and you come back to have it fitted.
For full-arch, the final prosthesis replaces the provisional teeth fitted on day one. Multiple appointments may be needed for fit, bite, aesthetics, and final polish. It tends to be a more involved finish than a single crown.
For full-arch cases, you'll be offered one of two pathways: same-day (often marketed as "All-on-4," "All-on-6," or "teeth in a day") or traditional staged surgery.
Same-day full-arch. Extractions, implant placement, and a fixed provisional prosthesis happen in one visit. You leave with teeth. The provisional is replaced with the final prosthesis 3 to 6 months later, once the bone has integrated. Survival rates in well-selected patients sit around 97% in systematic reviews of immediate-load implants.
This approach needs enough bone for primary stability. It's not appropriate for patients with severe bone loss, uncontrolled diabetes, heavy smoking, or active gum disease.
Traditional staged. Extractions and grafting first, then a healing period (3 to 6 months), then implant placement, then osseointegration (3 to 6 months), then the final prosthesis. The path takes 9 to 12 months for a full arch and is the safer route when bone is compromised.
Neither is better. Each fits different situations. The choice depends on your bone, your health, your timeline, and the clinic's recommendation. The right question to ask is: "Why this protocol for my case?"
The dental implant procedure takes 3 to 12 months from the first consultation to the final restoration.
The full timeline depends on what's being replaced and the condition of the bone. The ranges below assume no major complications.
What stretches the timeline:
What shortens it:
A full-arch dental implant procedure in Australia typically costs $18,000 to $35,000 per arch with All-on-4, or $38,000 to $80,000 for both arches replaced.
Cost is the most hidden part of the procedure for most patients. Few clinics publish itemised pricing. The ranges below come from ImplantBridge's review of published Australian clinic pricing through 2025 and 2026. We've cross-checked them against the Australian Dental Association's National Dental Fee Survey. Your case will sit somewhere in these ranges depending on the city, complexity, and clinic.
These figures assume no medical complications. Sedation costs sit on top.
Private health extras cover a part of implant costs as "Major Dental," with a typical 12-month waiting period. Annual Major Dental limits sit between $500 and $1,500 on mid-tier extras and higher on top-tier plans. Some funds also apply lifetime limits on implant items. Your fund's rebate is unlikely to cover more than a small fraction of full-arch treatment.
Medicare doesn't cover dental implants.
DVA Gold and White Card holders can access implants where there's a confirmed clinical need. Standard cover includes single tooth implants and implants used to retain dentures, with limits set in the DVA fee schedule.
Interest-free payment plans (Humm, Afterpay, Zip, National Dental Plan) are widely offered for treatment up to $50,000, depending on the provider. Fees and credit checks apply.
Sedation often gets less discussion than it deserves. Often it's a single line item and a 30-second mention in the consultation, even when it adds thousands to the bill and changes how the procedure feels.
Local anaesthetic. Numbs the surgical site. You're fully awake. You feel pressure and movement but no pain. Numbness lasts 2 to 4 hours after the procedure. Included in the standard surgical fee. Used for most single implants and many minor bone grafts.
IV sedation (also called twilight sedation or sleep dentistry). A sedative is delivered through a cannula in your arm. You're deeply relaxed, breathing on your own, able to respond to instructions. Most patients have little or no memory of the procedure. Costs around $500 to $1,500 added to your bill, or $800 to $900 per hour for longer procedures. Used for longer procedures, anxious patients, and most full-arch work.
General anaesthetic. A specialist anaesthetist watches your breathing and vital signs the whole time. Done in a hospital or accredited day-surgery setting. Recovery is longer and requires monitoring. Adds $1,000 or more for the anaesthetist plus facility fees. Used for complex full-arch surgery, patients with severe dental anxiety, or specific medical conditions.
Medicare may offer small rebates on the anaesthetist fee in specific circumstances, but the dental treatment itself isn't claimable.
Implants work best for adults who have:
Some factors push a candidate from straightforward into borderline territory. Borderline candidates can still get implants. It usually means more preparation or specialist input before the surgery goes ahead.
Smoking. Smokers have roughly twice the implant failure rate of non-smokers in international meta-analyses. The mechanism is reduced blood flow, slower healing, and higher infection risk. Quitting before surgery and during osseointegration measurably improves outcomes. Most surgeons will ask you to stop smoking at least a few weeks before and after.
Diabetes. Well-controlled type 2 diabetes (HbA1c under about 8%) shows survival rates similar to non-diabetics in published evidence. Poorly controlled diabetes significantly worsens outcomes through impaired healing and higher infection risk.
Osteoporosis medication. If you take medication for osteoporosis or cancer-related bone treatment (common ones include Fosamax, Actonel, and Prolia), tell your dentist before any implant work. These medications can affect how the jaw heals after surgery. Implants aren't ruled out, but your dentist will need to assess the risk in consultation with your treating doctor. The TGA has published safety advice for anyone in this situation.
Bone loss. Significant bone loss after extractions can be addressed with bone grafting or sinus lifts. Severe upper-jaw bone loss might require zygomatic implants, which anchor into the cheekbone and are placed by oral and maxillofacial surgeons in a hospital setting.
Active gum disease. Needs treatment before implants are placed. Otherwise, the bacterial environment that caused the gum disease will compromise the implant site.
Implant surgery is a routine procedure for most adults. Like any surgery, it still carries recognised risks. These include:
Recovery, week by week:
Warning signs that warrant a return visit:
Most clinics offering implants will answer these questions clearly. If a clinic can't or won't, that's information you can factor into your decision.
Any surgical or invasive procedure carries risks. Before proceeding, seek a second opinion from an appropriately qualified health practitioner.