You bite into something soft — a sandwich, a noodle — and a sharp, fleeting zing shoots through one tooth. Then it’s gone. No visible crack, no swelling, nothing your dentist can point to on an x-ray. That maddening, hard-to-pin-down pain is the hallmark of cracked tooth syndrome, and the cost to fix it depends entirely on how deep the crack runs.
What You’ll Actually Pay
| Treatment | Typical Cost (No Insurance) |
|---|---|
| Diagnostic exam + bite test | $75–$200 |
| Bonding (tiny surface crack) | $150–$400 |
| Crown (crack contained in enamel/dentin) | $1,000–$2,000 |
| Root canal + crown (crack reaches pulp) | $1,800–$3,200 |
| Extraction + implant (crack splits the root) | $3,000–$5,500 |
A crack you catch early is cheap to manage. One you ignore for months can travel into the nerve or the root — and that’s where the bills jump.
Why It’s So Hard to Diagnose
Cracked tooth syndrome is sneaky because the fracture is often microscopic. Your dentist may use a “bite stick” — you chomp on a small plastic wedge tooth by tooth until one reproduces that zing. They might paint on dye, shine a transillumination light through the tooth, or take a 3D cone-beam scan. According to the American Association of Endodontists, cracked teeth are now among the leading reasons adult teeth are lost, behind decay and gum disease.
That diagnostic legwork costs money, but skipping it is worse. Guessing wrong means paying for a treatment that doesn’t solve the problem.
A hairline crack treated with bonding or a crown before it reaches the nerve might cost $300–$2,000. Wait until the pulp is involved and you’re looking at a root canal on top — easily doubling the bill. The same crack, six months apart, can mean a $1,000 difference.
How Treatment Choice Drives Price
The fix matches the crack’s depth:
- Surface cracks (craze lines): These hairline lines in enamel are extremely common and usually need nothing. The CDC reports that more than 90% of adults over 20 have had some tooth damage or decay, and harmless craze lines are part of that picture. Cost: $0 if asymptomatic.
- Cracks into dentin: A crown caps the tooth and holds it together, stopping the flexing that causes pain. $1,000–$2,000.
- Cracks reaching the pulp: The nerve is irritated, so a root canal clears it out before the crown goes on. $1,800–$3,200 combined.
- Vertical root fractures: Bad news. The crack splits the root, the tooth usually can’t be saved, and you’re into extraction plus replacement territory.
Does Insurance Help?
Usually, yes — but partially. Crowns and root canals are major restorative procedures, typically covered at 50% after your deductible, with an annual cap (often $1,000–$2,000) that a single cracked tooth can blow through fast. Diagnostic exams are generally covered at 80–100%.
If you’re uninsured, a dental savings plan can knock 15–40% off crowns and root canals. Many people find that math works out better than buying a policy mid-crisis. If you’re weighing coverage, our guide on how dental insurance works breaks down the waiting periods that matter here.
Should You Wait and See?
Tempting, but risky. A tooth that flares only occasionally feels skippable. The problem is that biting forces keep working the crack deeper, and cracks don’t heal — they only grow. The longer you wait, the higher the odds you slide from a $300 bonding into a $3,000 root-canal-and-crown.
If a cracked tooth suddenly develops constant throbbing, swelling, or pain when you release a bite, the crack may have reached the nerve or caused an infection. That’s not a wait-it-out situation — it’s an urgent visit. See our dental emergency cost guide for after-hours pricing.
Bottom Line
Cracked tooth syndrome costs anywhere from a few hundred dollars to over $5,000, and the single biggest variable is timing. That occasional zing when you bite isn’t going to fix itself. Get the bite test done while it’s still a small problem — the diagnostic fee is the cheapest money you’ll spend on this tooth.
Frequently Asked Questions
Treatment costs range from $200 to $3,000+ depending on severity. A simple diagnostic exam with bite test runs about $75–$150, while a dental crown (the most common fix) costs $300–$1,200, and a root canal with crown can reach $1,500–$2,500 total.
Most dental insurance plans cover 50–80% of treatment costs after your deductible, though some plans classify it as a pre-existing condition and may deny coverage. Root canals are typically covered at 50%, and crowns at 50%, meaning you could pay $750–$1,500 out-of-pocket even with insurance depending on your plan.
A diagnostic exam takes 15–30 minutes, but if a crown is needed, you'll need at least 2 dental visits over 2–3 weeks (preparation and placement). If a root canal is required first, add 1–2 additional visits, making the total timeline 4–6 weeks from diagnosis to completion.