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Costs & Financing

How Much Do Dental Implants Cost in Sydney: 2026 Guide

Written by Jack Allen
Updated April 15, 2026
7 min read
Overhead illustration of a person reviewing a dental implant quote document at a desk, with the Sydney Harbour Bridge and Opera House visible as simplified silhouettes in the background.

Full-arch dental implants in Sydney cost between $19,000 and $45,000 per jaw. If you've already had a consultation, your quote probably sits somewhere in that range. You're not sure what's driving the number.

In this guide

    What Do Dental Implants Cost in Sydney?

    In 2026, Sydney clinic pricing looks like this:

    Treatment Sydney Range (AUD)
    Single tooth implant $3,000 to $7,000
    Implant-supported bridge (3 or more teeth) $8,000 to $16,000
    Full arch / All-on-4 (per jaw) $19,000 to $45,000
    Full mouth (upper and lower) $38,000 to $90,000+

    Your actual cost depends on your bone density, how many teeth need replacing, which materials are used for the final restoration, and where in Sydney you're treated.

    In our review of Sydney clinics, most quotes in the $19,000–$25,000 range are for the provisional phase only. The final permanent teeth are often quoted separately and typically add $10,000–$20,000 more per arch. Most patients don't realise that until they're already mid-treatment.

    Why Does Sydney Cost More Than the National Average?

    Sydney is Australia's most expensive city to run a business in, and that cost flows directly to patients.

    A dental practice in Sydney's CBD or North Shore pays commercial rent roughly 40–60% higher than a clinic in the outer suburbs. Staff wages are higher, too. Both are structural costs that get reflected in what clinics charge.

    There's also a specialist factor. Sydney has a high concentration of prosthodontists and periodontists. These are specialist dentists who complete three extra years of training after their general dental degree. That extra training is specifically focused on complex implant and restoration cases. Specialists charge more than general dentists. The premium reflects that training.

    What Does a Sydney Implant Quote Actually Include?

    Two quotes for "dental implants" can differ by $5,000 and still cover the same procedure. Clinics don't bundle costs the same way. Some include the 3D scan. Some don't. Some include bone grafting in their package price. Most don't.

    Here's what a complete implant treatment involves, and what each part costs:

    Initial consultation — most specialist implant clinics in Sydney offer this free. Some general dental practices charge $80–$250.

    CBCT scan (3D X-ray) — maps your bone density and shows exactly where the implant can go. Costs $150–$350 as a standalone item. Many clinics include it in the consultation or bundle it with the implant quote.

    Extraction — if the tooth is still present, removing it adds cost. Usually $150–$600, depending on how complex the extraction is.

    Bone graft — if there isn't enough bone to support the implant, a graft is needed first. A minor socket graft adds $500–$1,200. A moderate graft costs $1,000–$3,000. Complex grafting can reach $3,000–$8,000. Not everyone needs one, but it's worth asking about in the initial consultation.

    Implant fixture — the titanium post that goes into your jawbone.

    Abutment — the small connector piece between the post and the crown. Often quoted separately.

    Crown / prosthesis — for full-arch treatment, the base price typically covers an acrylic prosthesis. Upgrading to zirconia adds $4,000–$6,000 per arch.

    Follow-up appointments — usually included in a package, occasionally billed separately.

    When you're comparing quotes, ask each clinic which of these items is included. A $28,000 full-arch quote that includes the CBCT scan, bone grafting (if required), and provisional bridge can be better value than a $23,000 quote that prices these separately.

    For a full breakdown of how to compare quotes correctly, see our Australia-wide dental implants cost guide.

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    Does Location Within Sydney Affect the Price?

    CBD and North Shore clinics carry higher overhead costs, and those costs show up in procedure fees. The gap between a CBD specialist and an outer suburban general dentist can reach $6,000–$10,000 on a full-arch procedure.

    Western Sydney and outer suburban clinics tend to quote lower, but the gap is often smaller than people expect. The components themselves cost the same everywhere. What varies is the procedure fee, which reflects the clinic's rent, staff costs, and the practitioner's experience.

    Getting two or three quotes from clinics in different parts of Sydney is reasonable if you're cost-sensitive. But compare carefully. A $28,000 full-arch quote from a western suburbs clinic and a $40,000 quote from a North Shore specialist aren't necessarily for the same thing. Ask what brand of implant is being used, whether the CBCT is included, and who will actually be performing the surgery.

    Does Private Health Insurance Cover Dental Implants in Sydney?

    Most private health funds pay out $600 to $1,500 toward implant treatment. On a $25,000 full-arch procedure, you're still covering the bulk of it yourself.

    Implants fall under Major Dental on most private health extras policies. To access Major Dental benefits, you need to have held the policy for 12 months. There's also a 36-month benefit replacement period, meaning you can't re-claim the same item within three years of the first claim.

    Fund Annual Major Dental limit (indicative)
    Medibank Super Extras Up to $1,500
    HCF Ultimate Extras Up to $1,300
    nib (varies by product) $600 – $1,000
    Bupa (varies by product) Not publicly listed; check via myBupa

    These limits apply across all Major Dental claims, not just implants. On a $19,000 full-arch procedure, a $1,000 annual benefit covers less than 5% of the total cost.

    Before you book, call your fund and confirm three things: your annual Major Dental limit, how much you've already used this year, and whether they cover the items above under your policy.

    What about Medicare? Medicare doesn't cover routine dental treatment, including implants. The only exception is MBS item 45845, which covers implant placement following bone loss caused by a tumour, trauma, or congenital abnormality. For most patients, Medicare isn't relevant here.

    DVA patients: If you hold a DVA Gold Card, implants may be covered with prior DVA approval. See dva.gov.au for current entitlements and the approval process.

    Payment Plans for Dental Implants in Sydney

    Most patients financing full-arch treatment use one of these four options.

    humm / National Dental Plan

    For most patients, humm works out cheapest, if you meet the eligibility criteria. It's genuinely interest-free, not a 0% promotional rate that changes after a few months.

    • Maximum: $30,000
    • Interest: 0%
    • Fees: $70 setup fee, plus $8 per month
    • Term: up to 24 months

    A $25,000 procedure costs $25,262 total, repaid at roughly $1,049 per month. To be eligible, you need at least $1,000 per month in taxable income, permanent employment (or an aged or veterans pension), and a credit check. You apply through a participating clinic.

    TLC Finance

    TLC is a personal loan broker. It charges interest, but covers larger amounts and longer terms.

    • Loan range: $2,001 to $70,000
    • Interest rate: typically 9.4% to 12%
    • Term: up to 7 years
    • No early payout fees

    A $25,000 procedure at 9.4% over 5 years costs roughly $31,380 total ($523 per month). The lower monthly repayment comes at the cost of around $6,380 in interest. TLC suits patients who can't meet humm's eligibility criteria or need a lower monthly payment.

    DentiCare

    DentiCare is interest-free with no credit check, capped at $12,000. It requires a 20% deposit upfront and runs up to 24 months. It works well for single-tooth implants but won't cover most full-arch procedures on its own.

    Afterpay and Zip

    Standard Afterpay has a spending limit of $500–$2,000 with a 6-week repayment window. Not suitable for implants.

    Zip Money can handle larger amounts, but switches to 25.9% annual interest after any promotional period. At that rate, a $25,000 loan can cost more than $10,000 in interest over a standard repayment period. It’s only worth considering if you can clear the balance within the promotional window.

    Many Sydney clinics also offer in-house payment plans. Terms vary widely, so ask for a written repayment schedule before signing anything.

    How to Choose an Implant Dentist in Sydney

    There's no Australian law preventing a general dentist from placing implants, regardless of their level of experience. That puts the burden on you to ask the right questions before you commit.

    Verify their AHPRA registration. Any dentist can call themselves an implant dentist. There's no law against it and no minimum experience required. Check their AHPRA registration at ahpra.gov.au. If they're listed as a prosthodontist or periodontist, that's a formal specialist credential. If not, ask how many implant procedures they've completed.

    Ask what implant brand they use. Premium systems like Straumann and Nobel Biocare have 30+ years of clinical data behind them. Clinics using these systems tend to name them. If a clinic won't name their implant brand, ask directly before you book.

    Get an itemised quote in writing. A legitimate clinic gives you a written treatment plan that lists every item and its cost. A single total figure with no breakdown isn't enough. Ask for the line items.

    Know what a red-flag quote looks like. These include: unusually low all-in pricing with no breakdown, no 3D scan as part of the assessment, and pressure to decide on the same day as your consultation.

    The most common one we see is a quote with no implant brand listed. Premium systems cost the clinic more. If a clinic is unusually cheap, the brand is usually where the savings are happening.

    Get a second opinion. For full-arch treatment, always get at least two quotes, including one from a registered specialist.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How much does full-arch dental implant treatment cost in Sydney?

    Most full-arch quotes in Sydney start between $19,000 and $25,000 per jaw. That usually covers the provisional teeth fitted while your implants heal into the bone. The final permanent teeth are often quoted separately and typically add $10,000–$20,000 more per arch.

    Are dental implants more expensive in Sydney than in other cities?

    Generally yes. Higher commercial rents, staff wages, and specialist concentration push Sydney prices above the national average. The national range for a single implant sits broadly at $3,000–$6,500. Sydney's range skews toward the higher end.

    Does Medicare cover dental implants in NSW?

    No, for the majority of patients. Medicare doesn't cover routine dental work. The exception is MBS item 45845, which applies to implants placed following bone loss from a tumour, trauma, or congenital abnormality.

    Can I use private health insurance for dental implants in Sydney?

    Yes, partially. You'll need a Major Dental extras policy held for at least 12 months. Annual Major Dental caps on top-tier policies are typically $1,000–$1,500, which covers a part of the total implant costs.

    Is it worth going to a cheaper dentist in Western Sydney?

    It can be, but only if you're comparing the same treatment. Get itemised quotes from both and check the implant brand, what's included in the price, and the practitioner's credentials before making a decision based on price alone.

    What's the cheapest way to get dental implants in Sydney?

    For full-arch treatment, starting prices begin around $19,000 per jaw. Prices below this typically mean something is excluded from the quote or the prosthesis is provisional only.

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