Independent · not affiliated with any clinic Updated June 2026

All-on-4 · All-on-6 · full-arch

What full-arch implants really cost — at home vs. abroad.

All-on-4 averages about $15,000 per arch in the US (roughly $11,600–$27,500), so a full mouth is commonly $30,000–$50,000. In Mexico, Costa Rica, Hungary or Thailand, advertised prices run 40–60% lower per arch — but you add travel and harder follow-up. These are market estimate ranges, not quotes.

An independent, research-backed look at All-on-4 pricing across 8 countries and every material — so you can compare a US clinic against dental tourism without the sales pitch.

8 countries compared Every material & arch 5 cited studies No clinic affiliations
Full-arch cost planner

Estimate your cost — and what you’d save abroad

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United States home baseline
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Market estimate ranges compiled from public clinic pricing & cost guides (as of mid-2026) — not quotes. All-on-4 outcomes data is limited and prices vary by clinic — verify every quote independently.

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A full-arch decision is part health, part finance. We lay out both — the prices and the studies — in plain sight, with no clinic taking a cut.
Where the clinics are

92 researched full-arch clinics, across 6 countries

Every clinic vetted from public sources — maps, reviews and licensing registries. Tap a country to see its list, verified ones first.

39 Mexico 10 Costa Rica 7 Colombia 11 Hungary 18 Turkey 7 Thailand

Browse all 92 clinics →

At a glance

All-on-4, one arch — typical market ranges

Per-arch estimate for a titanium-acrylic hybrid. Ranges are compiled from public clinic pricing and cost guides — directional, not quotes.

DestinationWherePer-arch range (acrylic)vs. US typical
United States national average $11,640–$27,500
Mexico Los Algodones (border) $8,110–$10,800 −41%
Costa Rica San José $8,000–$13,000 −31%
Hungary Budapest $2,900–$13,709 −57%
Thailand Bangkok / Phuket $6,500–$14,100 −41%
Turkey · est. Istanbul / Antalya $6,000–$11,000 −47%
Colombia · est. Medellín / Bogotá $6,000–$12,000 −44%
Read past the headline number

A cheap quote isn’t the whole cost

What’s included

Headline prices often exclude extractions, bone grafts, sedation, the CBCT scan and — crucially — the final prosthesis. Confirm what the number covers before you compare.

The trip on top

Two trips, flights, hotels and lost work days add up. We fold a realistic travel budget into every destination so the comparison is honest.

The follow-up risk

If something needs adjusting after you fly home, who fixes it? Aftercare and warranty are the real cost of going abroad — not the airfare.

The decision that moves the price most

Acrylic hybrid vs. monolithic zirconia

~$7,800

more per arch to fabricate zirconia vs. an acrylic-titanium hybrid (U.S. study, 2020) — but with higher 5-year survival (~94% vs ~83%) and fewer complications.

~94.8%

10-year implant survival in the longest All-on-4 cohort. Most failures are prosthetic, not the implants — and the headline “99.8%” figure only covers cases past 24 months.

Compare materials in depth

Frequently asked questions

How much do All-on-4 dental implants cost?
In the United States, All-on-4 averages about $15,000 per arch (roughly $11,600–$27,500) for a titanium-acrylic hybrid, and more for monolithic zirconia — so a full mouth is commonly $30,000–$50,000. Abroad — in Mexico, Costa Rica, Hungary or Thailand — advertised prices run 40–60% lower per arch, though you add travel and accept harder follow-up. These are market estimate ranges, not quotes; use the planner above for a country-by-country breakdown.
Is it safe to get All-on-4 implants abroad?
Many international clinics deliver good outcomes, but the evidence base on All-on-4 itself is limited and complications do happen — most commonly fractures of the acrylic prosthesis and, less often, early implant loss. The added risk abroad is logistical: handling complications, adjustments and warranty after you fly home. Vet the clinic, the dentist’s credentials and the lab independently, and plan for at least one follow-up.
Zirconia vs. acrylic — which is worth it?
A peer-reviewed U.S. study found monolithic zirconia full-arch prostheses cost roughly $7,800 more per arch to make, but had higher 5-year survival (about 94% vs 83%) and fewer complications, so lifetime repair costs ended up similar. Acrylic-hybrid is cheaper upfront and easier to repair; zirconia is more durable but harder to fix if it ever fractures. See our materials guide for the full trade-off.
How many trips does treatment abroad take?
Most full-arch cases abroad need two trips: one to place implants and fit a temporary set of teeth (immediate load), then a return weeks to months later for the final prosthesis after healing. Some clinics compress this, but rushing the final restoration can compromise the result. Budget 7–12 days abroad depending on the destination.