Dental Implant Cost Guide

Cost of Dental Implants in Boise, ID (2026 Guide)

A single dental implant in Boise typically costs $3,500–$4,500 cash for the full restoration (implant + abutment + crown). With dental insurance covering 50% of major procedures, expect roughly $1,750–$2,250 out‑of‑pocket after your annual deductible. At Lamb Family Dental, we accept Delta Dental, Blue Cross of Idaho, Cigna, Aetna and most major plans, and offer an in‑house savings membership that discounts implant fees about 30% for uninsured patients. Call (208) 344‑6300 for a verified treatment estimate.

  • Dr. Kimball Mack, DMD & Dr. Kyle Pelletier, DMD
  • Practice founded 2003 in Boise
  • 4.9★ Google rating, 491+ reviews
  • Accepting new implant patients

The 60‑second cost answer

  • Average cash price (single implant + abutment + crown) in Boise: $3,500–$4,500. Idaho trends slightly below the national average of about $3,800 for the surgical step alone (CDT D6010), per the ADA Survey of Dental Fees.
  • With dental insurance (50% major): $1,750–$2,250 out‑of‑pocket after your deductible, if your plan covers implants and you have not exhausted your annual maximum.
  • With our in‑house savings plan: roughly $2,400–$3,200 for the same restoration, no deductible, no waiting period, no annual cap.
  • All‑on‑4 (full arch): $20,000–$30,000 per arch nationally; Treasure Valley pricing usually falls in the lower half of that range.
  • Common add‑ons: bone graft (CDT D7953) $300–$1,200 per site; sinus lift (D7951) $1,500–$3,000 per side; CBCT scan (D0364/D0367) $250–$500.
  • Financing: CareCredit, Proceed Finance and 0% in‑house payment plans are available for qualified patients.
  • Hidden costs to watch: tooth extraction, IV sedation, temporary restorations, and re‑treatment of failed implants, ask for a written treatment plan with CDT codes.

Boise dental implant cost: with vs without insurance

Dental Implant Cost in Boise: With vs Without Insurance

Sources: ADA Survey of Dental Fees 2024 + Healthcare Bluebook for Boise, ID + Lamb Family Dental fee schedule.

Numbers reflect the surgical placement of one endosteal implant body (CDT D6010). Add roughly $1,200–$2,500 for the abutment (D6056/D6057) and the implant crown (D6058/D6065) to reach the full restoration price. Insurance figures assume the patient’s plan covers implants at the major‑procedure tier and the annual maximum has not been met.

What’s actually in the price (itemized with CDT codes)

A “dental implant” is really three or four billable procedures, plus diagnostics. Asking your dentist for a written treatment plan with ADA CDT codes is the single best way to compare quotes apples‑to‑apples.

StepCDT codeWhat it isTypical Boise fee
Diagnostic 3D scan D0364 / D0367 Cone‑beam CT (CBCT) of one arch (D0364) or both jaws (D0367) for surgical planning. $250–$500
Implant body placement D6010 Surgical placement of the titanium endosteal implant in the jawbone (includes second‑stage surgery). $1,800–$2,400
Abutment D6056 (prefab) / D6057 (custom) The connector between the implant body and the crown. Custom milled abutments cost more but contour better to the gum line. $400–$900
Implant crown D6058 (abutment‑supported porcelain) / D6065 (implant‑supported porcelain) The visible tooth. D6058 attaches to a separate abutment; D6065 is a one‑piece restoration directly on the implant body. $1,200–$1,800
Bone graft (if needed) D7953 Ridge preservation graft, per site, when the socket lacks adequate bone. $300–$1,200
Sinus lift (if needed) D7951 Sinus floor augmentation when the upper jaw lacks vertical bone height. $1,500–$3,000
Tooth extraction (if needed) D7140 / D7210 Surgical removal of the failing tooth before implant placement. $200–$450

Fee ranges reconciled from the ADA Survey of Dental Fees (2020 and 2024 editions) and Healthcare Bluebook regional benchmarks for the Boise / Treasure Valley market. Your written estimate at Lamb Family Dental will list every CDT code so you can verify exactly what insurance is paying for.

Which implant option fits your situation?

flowchart TD A[Missing teeth?] -->|One tooth| B{Healthy bone?} A -->|Several teeth in a row| C[Implant-supported bridge] A -->|All teeth in an arch| D{Budget priority?} B -->|Yes| E[Single implant + crown$3,500-$4,500] B -->|No| F[Bone graft first+$300-$1,200, then implant] C --> G[2 implants + 3-unit bridge$7,000-$10,000] D -->|Lower cost,full arch| H[All-on-4 fixed bridge$20,000-$30,000 per arch] D -->|Maximum chewing power| I[6-8 individual implants$30,000-$50,000 per arch] E --> J{Have dental insurance?} F --> J G --> J H --> J I --> J J -->|Yes, covers implants| K[Confirm annual max,plan pays ~50%] J -->|No coverage| L[LFD in-house savings plan~30% off, no waiting period] J -->|No insurance + tight budget| M[CareCredit / Proceed Finance0%-promo financing]

Decision tree only. Final treatment plans depend on a clinical exam, CBCT scan and discussion with Dr. Kimball Mack or Dr. Kyle Pelletier.

Why dental implant prices vary in Boise

A patient calling three Boise practices for a single‑tooth implant quote will often hear three different numbers, sometimes by $1,500 or more. That spread is real, and it is mostly explained by six factors. Understanding them lets you compare quotes honestly instead of just chasing the lowest number.

1. Surgeon experience and credentials

Implant placement is a surgical procedure. General dentists who place implants typically charge less than periodontists or oral surgeons, but extensive case experience and continuing education matter more than the title on the door. Dr. Kimball Mack has placed and restored implants since the early 2000s, with continuing education through the American Academy of Implant Dentistry. When you compare quotes, ask the dentist how many implants they place per year and what their re‑treatment rate is.

2. Implant brand and components

The titanium implant body itself is not a generic part. Straumann and Nobel Biocare are the two most‑studied premium systems and account for the largest published peer‑reviewed datasets on long‑term survival. Practices using these systems typically charge $200–$500 more per implant than practices using value brands, but the components are easier to service and replace 10–20 years later if anything fails. A 2021 cohort study in the Journal of Clinical Periodontology of 10,871 implants reported a 96.8% cumulative survival rate at 10 years, the type of long‑run reliability that justifies premium components.

3. Technology used in planning

A CBCT scan and guided‑surgery software add roughly $250–$500 to the case but dramatically reduce surgical risk by mapping the position of the inferior alveolar nerve and the maxillary sinus before the drill ever touches bone. Practices that include digital planning in their flat fee usually quote higher than practices that bill it separately. Both can be reasonable, just make sure the quote shows whether CBCT (CDT D0364 or D0367) is included.

4. Crown material

The visible crown can be all‑ceramic (lithium disilicate / e.max), zirconia, or porcelain‑fused‑to‑metal. All‑ceramic and zirconia crowns from premium labs add $200–$400 to the fee but are the current standard for front‑tooth aesthetics. Ivoclar Vivadent e.max is the material most often referenced in modern aesthetic case reports.

5. Location and overhead

Boise is a medium‑cost‑of‑living market. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics May 2024 OEWS data shows Idaho dentist wages running below several coastal markets, which translates to dental fees in the Treasure Valley typically settling 5–10% below the national average for the same procedure (BLS State OEWS). Quotes from Sun Valley or out‑of‑state metro areas should not be compared 1:1 with Boise quotes.

6. Case complexity

The single biggest swing in any implant quote is whether bone grafting, sinus augmentation or extractions are required. Two patients can call about “a single implant” and one walks out at $4,200 while the other is at $7,500, not because the practice is dishonest, but because one patient needed a sinus lift and a graft. Always insist on a CBCT‑based written treatment plan before comparing prices.

Insurance and financing options

Dental insurance treatment of implants has shifted significantly in the last decade. As recently as 2014, most plans excluded implants entirely as “cosmetic.” Today the majority of PPO plans cover the implant crown and abutment, and many cover the implant surgery itself, at the major‑procedure tier (typically 50%). Coverage still varies plan‑by‑plan, so verification is essential.

CarrierTypical implant coverageAnnual maxWaiting period
Delta Dental (PPO) 50% on D6010, D6057, D6058 $1,500–$2,000 6–12 months on majors
Blue Cross of Idaho Dental 50% on most implant procedures $1,000–$1,500 12 months typical
Cigna Dental PPO 50% on majors; some plans 25% $1,000–$2,500 6–12 months
Aetna Dental PPO 50% on D6010 + D6058 (varies) $1,500–$2,000 12 months typical
MetLife Dental 50% major tier $1,500 12 months typical
UnitedHealthcare Dental 50% with implant rider $1,000–$2,000 6–12 months
LFD Savings Plan (uninsured) ~30% off implant fees No annual cap None

Coverage details summarized from each carrier’s standard PPO plan documents. Specific employer plans vary, we verify your individual plan benefits before any treatment so the estimate you sign reflects what your plan will actually pay. Annual maximums and waiting periods cited reflect typical, not universal, plan terms.

For uninsured patients, the three financing routes most Boise patients use are CareCredit (revolving healthcare credit card with 6, 12 or 24‑month no‑interest options for qualified borrowers), Proceed Finance (longer‑term fixed‑rate dental loans up to 84 months), and our in‑house Lamb Family Dental Savings Plan, which discounts implant fees about 30% in exchange for a flat annual membership.

Idaho‑specific cost factors

Boise sits in a price band most patients describe as “reasonable, but not cheap.” The same single‑implant restoration that runs $5,500 in coastal California or downtown Manhattan typically lands at $3,500–$4,500 in the Treasure Valley. Three Idaho‑specific dynamics drive that:

  • Idaho dentist wages. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics May 2024 Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics put the national median dentist wage at $179,210 (BLS Occupational Outlook Handbook). Idaho’s state‑level OEWS data, released August 2025 by the Idaho Department of Labor, shows Idaho dentists tracking modestly below that median, which compresses fees across the state (Idaho Labor Market Information, OEWS).
  • Cost of living. While Boise’s housing costs have risen sharply since 2020, overall cost‑of‑living indices still place the metro near the U.S. median, meaning practice overhead (rent, staff, supplies) trends below high‑cost coastal markets and above rural states. Healthcare Bluebook’s Fair Price benchmarks for Boise dental procedures consistently return numbers within 5–10% of the national fair price (Healthcare Bluebook).
  • Insurance market. The Idaho Department of Insurance regulates the dental insurance market in the state and publishes consumer‑facing guidance on dental coverage (Idaho Department of Insurance). Two of the dominant carriers in Idaho, Delta Dental of Idaho and Blue Cross of Idaho Dental, both treat implants as covered major procedures on most PPO products, which is not universally true in every state.

The practical takeaway: if you are quoted under $2,500 for a complete single‑tooth implant restoration in Boise, ask hard questions about implant brand, included components and whether bone grafting will be billed separately later. If you are quoted over $6,000 without complicating factors, ask what is driving the premium. Most legitimate Boise quotes for an uncomplicated single‑tooth implant fall in a $3,200–$5,200 band.

Are dental implants worth it? The longevity case

Cost is only half the equation. The other half is how long the result lasts. The peer‑reviewed evidence on dental implant longevity is unusually strong:

  • A 2021 cohort study in the Journal of Clinical Periodontology followed 10,871 dental implants in 4,247 patients for up to 22 years and reported a cumulative survival rate of 96.8% at the implant level at 10 years (PMC8359846, NIH).
  • A 2019 systematic review in the Journal of Prosthodontic Research aggregating long‑term studies reported pooled 10‑year implant survival above 94% (PubMed 30904559).
  • A 20‑year meta‑analysis published in 2024 reaffirmed implant survival above 90% at the 20‑year mark for properly placed and maintained implants (PMC11416373, NIH).

By contrast, a traditional three‑unit dental bridge typically requires replacement at 10–15 years and grinds down two healthy adjacent teeth in the process. Spread over 20+ years of service, a dental implant is often the lower‑cost option per‑year‑of‑function, even though the upfront fee is higher. That is the math we walk every implant patient through during the consultation.

Authoritative resources

Related cost guides & resources

Frequently asked questions about dental implant cost in Boise

Are dental implants worth the cost?
For most patients with one or more missing teeth and adequate bone, yes. Peer‑reviewed studies indexed in NIH’s PubMed report 10‑year implant survival rates of 94–97% and 20‑year survival above 90%. Compared with bridges that typically need replacement at 10–15 years and grind down adjacent healthy teeth, an implant is usually the lower‑cost option measured per year of function, even though the upfront fee is higher.
Can I finance dental implants in Boise?
Yes. Lamb Family Dental works with CareCredit (a revolving healthcare credit line with 6, 12 or 24‑month no‑interest plans for qualified borrowers), Proceed Finance (fixed‑rate dental loans up to 84 months) and offers in‑house payment plans for established patients. We will tell you on the consultation visit which option lines up best with the size of your treatment plan.
Does insurance cover dental implants in Idaho?
Most Delta Dental of Idaho, Blue Cross of Idaho Dental, Cigna and Aetna PPO plans cover implants at the 50% major‑procedure tier after the deductible, subject to the annual maximum (typically $1,000–$2,000). Some employer plans still exclude implants entirely or only cover the crown but not the implant body. We verify your specific plan before treatment so the estimate you sign reflects exactly what your plan will pay.
What’s the cheapest dental implant option that’s still safe?
For most patients, an FDA‑cleared titanium implant from a long‑established manufacturer (Straumann, Nobel Biocare, Zimvie or BioHorizons) placed by a clinician with substantial implant experience and a CBCT‑based plan is the lowest‑risk path, not necessarily the lowest sticker price. Avoid offers under $1,500 for a complete restoration, dental tourism without a U.S.‑based follow‑up plan, and quotes that do not list specific CDT codes for each step.
How does Lamb Family Dental’s pricing compare to other Boise practices?
Our fees fall in the middle of the Boise market, below specialty oral‑surgery and full‑arch implant centers, and consistent with established general/restorative practices in Meridian, Eagle and Garden City. We publish CDT codes on every estimate and will send you a written treatment plan you can use to compare with any other Treasure Valley practice. Our in‑house savings plan reduces the cash price about 30% for uninsured patients.
How much does an All‑on‑4 full‑arch implant cost in Boise?
All‑on‑4 (four implants supporting a full fixed bridge of replacement teeth) typically runs $20,000–$30,000 per arch in Boise, in line with the national average reported by CareCredit and the American College of Prosthodontists. Premium materials (zirconia bridge vs. acrylic) push the price toward the upper end. Treating both arches at once usually receives a discount versus two separate cases.
Will I need a bone graft, and how much does it add?
A CBCT scan tells us definitively. Patients who have been missing the tooth for more than six months frequently need a ridge‑preservation graft (CDT D7953, $300–$1,200 per site) to rebuild bone width before the implant can be placed. Patients missing upper back teeth sometimes need a sinus lift (D7951, $1,500–$3,000 per side). Both procedures have their own CDT codes and should appear on a written treatment plan up front, not as a surprise on the day of surgery.
How long do dental implants last?
Peer‑reviewed cohort studies indexed in NIH PubMed report 10‑year cumulative survival rates of 94–97% for modern titanium implants, and 20‑year meta‑analyses report survival above 90% for properly placed, well‑maintained implants. The crown on top of the implant typically needs replacement at 15–20 years, similar to a tooth‑supported crown.
How long does the implant process take from consultation to final crown?
A straightforward single‑tooth case at Lamb Family Dental typically runs 4–6 months from CBCT consultation to final crown delivery. About 3–4 of those months are osseointegration time, the implant healing into the jawbone, during which you wear a temporary restoration. Cases requiring bone grafting or sinus lifts add 3–6 months of healing before the implant is placed.
What if my implant fails, do I have to pay for a replacement?
Implant failures inside the first 12 months are uncommon (typically 1–3% of cases) but they do happen. At Lamb Family Dental, an implant body that fails to integrate within the first year is replaced at no charge to you for the implant component itself; you are responsible only for any new diagnostic imaging, abutment or crown that has to be remade. Failures after the first year are evaluated case by case based on the cause.

Get a real implant cost estimate in 24 hours

Bring your insurance card. We’ll verify your benefits, take a CBCT scan, walk you through every CDT code on the treatment plan, and put a written estimate in your hand, not a verbal range. No pressure, no surprises.

Lamb Family Dental · 4255 N Eagle Rd, Boise, ID 83713 · Mon–Thu 7am–4pm

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