How much does Periodontal Treatment cost in Tennessee?
Underlined terms link to definitions in the Pearl Dental Glossary.
What is this procedure?
About this procedure
Periodontal (gum disease) treatment covers a spectrum of interventions depending on disease severity. For mild gingivitis, treatment may be just an enhanced cleaning ($150-300). For moderate periodontitis, scaling and root planing ('deep cleaning') runs $250-450 per quadrant. Advanced cases may require surgical procedures ($1,500-$3,500 per quadrant).
Price factors
What affects the cost?
- Disease severity: Gingivitis (cheap) vs. moderate vs. advanced periodontitis (expensive)
- Number of quadrants treated: Usually 4 quadrants (full mouth) but mild cases may treat 1-2
- Provider type: General dentist vs. periodontist (specialist, more expensive)
- Adjunct therapies: Antibiotic rinses, antimicrobial chips, laser therapy add cost
- Surgical intervention needed: Flap surgery, bone grafts, gum grafts dramatically increase cost
By city
Cities we cover
Pearl has city-level pricing in these covered cities. Click a city to see local fee ranges, what affects the quote, and your estimated out-of-pocket.
Quote checker
What should your quote include?
Different offices bundle costs differently. Here's what a complete quote typically covers โ and what's often left out.
Usually included in the quoted price
- Periodontal evaluation and charting
- Scaling (above gum) and root planing (below gum)
- Local anesthesia if needed
- Polishing and antimicrobial treatment
Often billed separately โ ask before you agree
- Periodontal maintenance visits (every 3 months ongoing, $100-200 each)
- Surgical interventions if needed
- Tooth extractions for unsalvageable teeth
Health stakes
What happens if you delay treatment?
Restorative procedures are usually recommended once a tooth has lost too much structure to remain stable on its own. Waiting rarely makes the situation simpler.
- Untreated periodontal disease leads to tooth loss
- Recurrence requires ongoing maintenance visits
- Some gum recession may be permanent after treatment
- Linked to systemic conditions (diabetes, heart disease)
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.
- What stage is my disease, and what specific treatment do I need?
- Is this a one-time treatment or ongoing maintenance?
- Should I see a periodontist specialist?
Coverage
Insurance & coverage notes
Insurance coverage varies by procedure type. For Periodontal Treatment, typical coverage tiers are: No Insurance $250 - $4,000, Basic Insurance $200 - $3,500, Major Insurance $100 - $2,500.
Common questions
Frequently asked questions
What's the difference between regular cleaning and periodontal treatment?
Regular cleaning (prophylaxis, D1110) treats healthy gums - it removes plaque and surface tartar. Periodontal treatment (D4341 scaling and root planing) treats diseased gums - it removes tartar from BELOW the gumline along the tooth root. Insurance distinguishes between them; you can't typically receive both in the same visit.
Does insurance cover periodontal treatment?
Most basic dental plans cover scaling and root planing at 50-80%, subject to documentation showing periodontal disease (bleeding, pocket depth >4mm). Periodontal maintenance visits are typically covered. Surgical periodontal procedures (flap surgery, bone grafts) are often covered at major-services rate.
Once I have periodontal disease, do I need treatment forever?
Yes. After initial treatment, you'll need periodontal maintenance visits every 3 months indefinitely (instead of regular 6-month cleanings). Each visit is $100-200. Periodontal disease is chronic and managed, not cured.
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What does this cost in your city?
Pearl's cost data is calculated for every U.S. ZIP. Search your area to see local fee ranges, what insurance typically pays, and your estimated out-of-pocket.
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