Cost & Medical Disclaimer: Prices listed are U.S. estimates based on publicly available data and dental industry surveys as of 2025. Actual costs vary by location, dental practice, and your individual treatment needs. This article was reviewed by Dr. James Park, DDS for medical accuracy. This content is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional dental advice. Always consult a licensed dentist for diagnosis and treatment decisions.

In 1990, a full set of dentures was the default fix for losing all your teeth, and implants were rare and astronomically priced. Today the choice is real: a fixed full arch on implants runs $20,000–$30,000, while conventional dentures cost $1,500–$4,000. That’s a huge gap — but it shrinks once you stretch the math across ten years.

Let’s compare both honestly, including the costs nobody mentions at the consultation.

Upfront Pricing

OptionUpfront Cost (per arch)
Conventional full dentures$1,500–$4,000
Implant-supported overdenture (snap-on, 2–4 implants)$6,000–$15,000
Fixed full-arch implants (4–6 implants, non-removable)$20,000–$30,000
Premium fixed full arch (zirconia bridge)$30,000–$50,000

On day one, dentures win by a landslide. But day one isn’t the whole story.

The 10-Year Total Cost

Dentures are cheap to buy and expensive to maintain. Here’s why the gap narrows:

Dentures resorb your jawbone. Without tooth roots, the jaw shrinks — a well-documented process. That means dentures need relining every 1 to 2 years ($300–$600 each) and full replacement every 5 to 8 years ($1,500–$4,000). Over a decade, that adds up.

Implants are nearly maintenance-flat. A well-placed fixed arch needs cleanings and occasional component swaps, but the implants themselves have survival rates above 95% at 10 years in long-term studies. No relines, no bone shrinkage at the implant sites.

Key Takeaway

Over 10 years, conventional dentures can total $4,000–$10,000 once you add relines and a replacement set, while fixed implants stay closer to their original $20,000–$30,000 plus modest maintenance. Implants still cost more long-term — but the gap is smaller than the sticker prices suggest, and the function is in a different league.

The Middle Path: Implant Overdentures

There’s a smart compromise a lot of people don’t know about. An implant overdenture snaps onto two to four implants — far more stable than a conventional denture, far cheaper than a fixed full arch at $6,000–$15,000. It stops the worst of the jaw shrinkage, doesn’t slip when you eat, and you remove it to clean. For many patients on a budget, this is the sweet spot.

Function and Quality of Life

This isn’t just dollars. Conventional dentures cover the roof of your mouth, can slip, and reduce bite force significantly — many wearers avoid certain foods entirely. Fixed implants feel close to natural teeth, preserve taste (no palate coverage), and let you eat almost anything.

The American College of Prosthodontists has long noted that edentulous (toothless) patients report substantially higher satisfaction with implant-supported options than with conventional dentures. That matters, even if it’s hard to price.

⚠ Watch Out For

“Free implant arch in a day” ads usually quote the temporary, not the final restoration, and may exclude extractions, sedation, or the final zirconia bridge. Get an itemized quote covering extractions, implants, the temporary, and the permanent prosthesis before comparing it to a denture price. The real number is often higher than the ad.

Who Should Choose What

  • Tight budget, need teeth now: Conventional dentures, eyes open about relines and replacements.
  • Want stability without the full price: Implant overdenture — the value pick.
  • Want the closest thing to real teeth and can finance it: Fixed full arch.
  • Severe bone loss: May need bone grafting or zygomatic implants first, which changes the math.

Paying for It

Implant arches are rarely covered by insurance beyond a token $1,000–$1,500 cap. Most patients finance through CareCredit for dental or in-house plans. Dentures are sometimes partially covered, so check how dental insurance works for your plan’s prosthetic benefit.

Bottom Line

Full-arch implants cost $20,000–$30,000 versus $1,500–$4,000 for conventional dentures — but over 10 years, denture relines and replacements close part of that gap, and implants protect your jawbone and function far better. If the fixed price is out of reach, an implant overdenture splits the difference. Match the choice to your budget and how much daily function is worth to you.

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ToothCostGuide Editorial Team

Dental Cost Writer

Our writers collaborate with licensed dentists to ensure all cost and health-related content is accurate, current, and useful for American dental patients.