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Costs & Financing

Does Health Insurance Cover Dental Implants in Australia?

Written by Jack Allen
Updated May 20, 2026
6 min read
Overhead view of a person at a desk preparing to call their private health fund about dental implant cover, with a phone, an itemised treatment plan, handwritten questions, and a health insurance card laid out in front of them.

Private health insurance pays back a much smaller share of dental implant costs than most patients expect. For a single-tooth implant of $5,000 to $6,500, top-tier extras typically pay back $1,000 to $1,500. For full-arch procedures at $20,000 to $35,000 per arch, the same rebate covers less than 10% of the total.

In this guide

    Does private health insurance cover dental implants in Australia?

    Yes, partially. Implants sit in the "Major Dental" category of extras cover, the same bucket as crowns, bridges and dentures. For the highest rebates, you'll need a top-tier extras policy and serve the standard 12-month waiting period.

    Medicare doesn't cover implants. They're classified as dental, not medical, so they sit outside the Medicare Benefits Schedule. Each state runs a limited public dental scheme that occasionally funds implants for concession card holders, with long waitlists and case-by-case approval.

    What "Major Dental" cover actually includes

    Major Dental is a specific category with specific item codes. For implants, the codes that matter are:

    • 684 or 688: surgical placement of the implant fixture (the titanium post in the jaw)
    • 672: the ceramic crown attached to the implant
    • 661, 679: implant components like the abutment that connects the post to the crown
    • 234 to 243: bone graft or sinus lift, where these are billed separately

    Your dentist's treatment plan should list each procedure by its item code so you can quote them when you call your fund.

    What's not included in Major Dental: initial consultations, CBCT scans (the 3D X-rays used for implant planning), anaesthesia and sedation fees.

    How much each major fund pays toward implants in 2026

    The five biggest Australian funds, Bupa, HCF, Medibank, nib and HBF, all cover dental implants under Major Dental at their top-tier extras products. None of them publishes per-item-code rebate amounts on their public marketing pages. The exact figures live in each fund's Product Disclosure Statement (linked from the policy page) or in your member portal.

    Fund Annual Major Dental limit (indicative)
    HBF (WA's largest insurer) $800 on Core Extras, up to $2,500+ on top extras
    Medibank Super Extras Up to $1,500
    HCF Ultimate Extras Up to $1,300
    nib (varies by product) $600 to $1,000
    Bupa (varies by product) Not publicly listed; check via myBupa

    Based on our review of fund product summaries, third-party comparison data, and clinic-reported HICAPS terminal data, the typical rebate ranges at top-tier extras are:

    • Implant fixture (item 684 or 688): $800 to $2,500 per implant
    • Implant crown (item 672): $400 to $1,200 per implant
    • Bone graft (items 234 to 243): variable, often with strict annual sub-limits, and many policies exclude bone graft from Major Dental entirely

    Annual Major Dental limits at top-tier extras generally sit between $1,500 and $2,500 per person per year. Limits reset on 1 January and don't carry over. Most funds also apply a 36-month benefit replacement period per item code, so you can't claim the same rebate on the same tooth position twice within three years.

    Send your treatment plan with item codes to your fund and ask for an itemised estimate.

    What you'll actually pay out of pocket: a worked example

    Take a single-tooth implant at $6,000, an uncomplicated case with no bone graft needed.

    The treatment plan would typically include:

    • Implant fixture placement (item 688): $3,000 to $4,000
    • Implant crown (item 672): $1,800 to $2,500
    • Abutment and components: $500 to $800

    If you have top-tier extras with a $2,000 annual Major Dental limit and you've served your 12-month waiting period, your fund might rebate $1,200 for the fixture and $700 for the crown. Total rebate: $1,900. Out of pocket: $4,100.

    For mid-tier extras with a $1,000 annual limit, you might receive a $600 rebate for the fixture and a $400 rebate for the crown. Total rebate: $1,000. Out of pocket: $5,000.

    On basic extras without Major Dental cover, you'll claim nothing. Out of pocket: $6,000.

    These figures are illustrative. Your actual rebate depends on your policy, remaining annual limit, and the item codes used.

    Why insurance barely helps with full-arch implants

    If you're looking at full-arch, the maths in the worked example above flips. A full-arch procedure runs $20,000 to $35,000 per arch at most specialist practices, and full-mouth (both arches) is $38,000 to $70,000 or more.

    Compare that to the annual Major Dental limit on top-tier extras: $1,500 to $2,500. Even if every dollar of your limit goes to the implant procedure, you're recovering 5% to 10% of one arch's cost.

    Splitting treatment across calendar years is the only way to claim two annual limits on one procedure, and even then, you're only doubling a small base number.

    Not sure what full-arch implants would cost for your situation?

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    Other funding options when insurance falls short

    Hospital cover for in-hospital surgery

    If your implant surgery happens in a private day hospital under general anaesthesia, hospital cover can contribute to the facility fee and the anaesthetist's fee. Extras still pays the dental surgery fees themselves. This combined approach can recover thousands of dollars that chair-side patients can’t access. Day surgery is common for full-arch cases, surgical extractions on the same visit, and patients with anxiety or complex medical histories.

    Department of Veterans' Affairs (DVA)

    Gold Card holders can access dental implants through DVA, but every implant case requires prior approval before treatment starts. White Card holders are only covered for implants where the underlying condition is service-related. A Biennial Monetary Limit of $5,980.30 applies to certain high-cost items.

    Payment plans through the clinic

    Most implant clinics offer interest-free or low-interest payment plans, either in-house or through third-party providers like humm, TLC Finance, or Zip Money. Interest-free terms typically run 6 to 12 months, with longer terms available at lower interest rates. Ask the clinic for a quote that includes the payment plan terms, not just the headline procedure cost.

    Questions to ask your insurer before you commit

    Take your treatment plan with item codes when you make the call. Without the codes, your fund can only give you generic ranges.

    1. What's my annual limit for Major Dental this calendar year, after any claims I've already made?
    2. What's your rebate on item 688 or 684 (implant fixture placement)?
    3. What's your rebate on item 672 (implant crown)?
    4. Do you cover items 234 to 243 (bone graft, sinus lift) under Major Dental, or are they excluded?
    5. Is there a lifetime limit or sub-limit on implants specifically?
    6. How does the benefit replacement period work for the same item code on the same tooth position?
    7. If my surgery is in a private hospital under general anaesthesia, what does my hospital cover contribute to the facility fee and the anaesthetist fee?
    8. What documentation do you need from my dentist to process the claim?

    Key takeaways

    • Medicare doesn't cover dental implants, except in narrow public-scheme cases.
    • Major Dental cover has a standard 12-month waiting period.
    • Single-tooth implants: top-tier extras typically pay back $1,000 to $1,500 of a $5,000 to $6,500 procedure.
    • Full-arch procedures: the rebate covers less than 10% of the per-arch cost.
    • Hospital cover can contribute when surgery happens in a private hospital under general anaesthesia.
    • Quote item codes, not procedure names, when you call your fund.

    Frequently asked questions

    Does Medicare cover dental implants in Australia?

    No. Implants sit outside the Medicare Benefits Schedule. Some state public dental schemes occasionally fund implants for concession card holders, but waiting lists are long, and approval is case by case.

    Is there a waiting period for dental implants on private health?

    Yes, typically 12 months for Major Dental on a new policy. Some funds waive this through new-member promotional offers.

    Will my fund cover bone grafting and anaesthesia?

    Bone graft is sometimes covered under Major Dental, often excluded or capped with a sub-limit. Anaesthesia fees aren't part of Major Dental, but hospital cover may contribute if surgery is performed in a private hospital.

    Will my extras cover the full implant procedure or just the crown?

    It varies by fund. Some rebate against each item code separately (fixture, crown, abutment). Others rebate against the bundled procedure. Item codes from your treatment plan are the only way to find out exactly what your fund will pay.

    Find out what full-arch implants would cost for you

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