Rochester, MN Β· Implant Β· D6010

How much does an Implant cost in Rochester, MN?

an Implant in Rochester typically runs $1986–$3310. Here's what affects that number, what your quote should include, and whether the price you were given is fair.

Underlined terms link to definitions in the Pearl Dental Glossary.
πŸ₯
Based on ADA fee survey data
πŸ“
Midwest pricing
πŸ”„
Updated May 20, 2026
βœ“
Reviewed by Pearl clinical team
$1986 – $3310
Typical range for an Implant in Rochester
🦷 PPO covers 50%–80% after deductible
No insurance? Average is ~$2995
National avg.
$2995
Implant
Coverage tierTypical out-of-pocket
PPO dental insurance (major coverage)$1,000 – $3,000
Basic / preventive-only plan$2,000 – $4,500
No insurance (self-pay)$3,000 – $6,000
Dental savings plan (~20% discount)β€”

Price factors

What affects Implant cost?

  • Implant brand and material
  • Whether bone grafting is needed first
  • Implant placement surgery fee
  • Abutment and crown cost (often separate)
  • Geographic region and specialist vs. general dentist

Quote checker

What should your quote include?

Most confusion about dental pricing comes from different offices bundling costs differently. Here's what a complete quote typically covers β€” and what's often left out.

Usually included in the quoted price

  • Implant fixture (the titanium post)
  • Abutment connector piece
  • Implant crown
  • Any bone grafting required
  • Imaging (CT scan) for surgical planning

Often billed separately β€” ask before you agree

  • Watch for quotes that show only the post β€” the final crown is often billed separately

Is my quote fair?

Check your quote

Enter the price you were quoted and we'll tell you how it compares to what Rochester patients typically pay for an Implant.

Health stakes

What happens if you delay treatment?

Dental issues rarely resolve on their own β€” most progress and get harder to treat over time. Here's what's at stake if you delay.

  1. Bone continues to resorb after extraction, making future implant placement more difficult
  2. Neighboring teeth shift into the gap, changing your bite
  3. Facial structure changes as jawbone volume decreases
  4. Full-mouth reconstruction risk increases the longer you wait
  5. Success rate of implants declines if systemic health worsens

Before you agree

Questions to ask your dentist

A good dentist won't mind these. Print this list or take a photo before your next visit.

  1. Does this quote include the implant, abutment, AND crown?
  2. Do I need a bone graft, and is that included?
  3. What brand of implant do you use, and what is its track record?
  4. How many implants have you placed, and what is your success rate?
  5. What happens if the implant fails?
  6. Am I a good candidate given my health history?

Common questions

Implant cost FAQ

Almost always just the surgical placement. A complete implant restoration includes the implant post (surgery), the abutment (connector), and the crown (visible tooth). Always ask for the all-in cost. Many practices show only the implant fee in advertising.

Implants don't require altering adjacent teeth and last much longer (20+ years vs. 10–15 for bridges). Bridges are faster, cheaper upfront, and avoid surgery. Implants are usually the long-term winner; bridges win on speed and upfront cost. For a single missing tooth in a healthy mouth, an implant is often the recommended choice if the budget allows.

Coverage varies. Some PPO plans cover implants at 50% after the deductible (subject to the annual maximum); others exclude implants entirely. Many plans cover the abutment and crown but not the implant post itself. Check your plan's specific implant coverage before committing.

City coverage

Zip codes covered

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