The short answer: A single tooth dental implant in Chicago costs between $2,500 and $5,000 depending on the provider, location, and what is included. A full arch (All-on-4) ranges from $12,000 to $30,000. At Chicago Elite Implant Center in Woodridge, IL, a single implant is $2,599 all-inclusive and All-on-4 starts at $14,999 per arch.
But the number itself only tells part of the story. What matters more is what that price includes — and whether you're comparing all-inclusive pricing to à-la-carte pricing from a practice that charges separately for every component.
This guide breaks down exactly what drives dental implant costs in the Chicago area, what a fair all-inclusive price looks like, and what financing options make implants accessible at any budget.
2026 Dental Implant Pricing in Chicago
| Procedure | Typical Chicago Range | Chicago Elite Price |
|---|---|---|
| Single Tooth Implant (post + abutment + crown) | $2,500 – $5,000 | $2,599 |
| Implant Post Only (if crown separate) | $1,500 – $2,500 | Included in $2,599 |
| All-on-4 (per arch) | $12,000 – $30,000 | From $14,999 |
| All-on-6 (per arch) | $15,000 – $35,000 | From $17,999 |
| Bone Grafting | $500 – $3,000 | From $699 |
| Sinus Lift | $1,500 – $5,000 | From $1,499 |
| Free Consultation + 3D Imaging | $200 – $500 at most offices | $0 |
Important: The biggest source of confusion in implant pricing is all-inclusive vs. à-la-carte billing. Some practices quote a low implant post price ($1,200–$1,500) but charge separately for the abutment, crown, x-rays, and follow-up. Always ask: "Does this price include the crown?" before comparing quotes.
What's Included in an All-Inclusive Implant Price?
A complete single tooth dental implant involves three separate components. When a practice quotes an "all-inclusive" price, all three should be included:
- Titanium implant post — The screw-shaped fixture surgically placed into the jawbone. This is what most people picture when they hear "dental implant."
- Abutment — The connector piece that attaches to the implant post and holds the crown in place above the gumline.
- Porcelain crown — The tooth-colored cap that sits on top of the abutment and looks and functions like a natural tooth.
At Chicago Elite Implant Center, the $2,599 price covers all three components plus all follow-up visits. The free consultation includes 3D CBCT imaging that most practices charge $200–$500 for separately.
Why Do Dental Implant Prices Vary So Much?
Several factors influence what you pay for a dental implant in the Chicago area:
1. Provider Specialty
General dentists, oral surgeons, and prosthodontists all place implants — but they don't all have the same training. A prosthodontist has 3+ additional years of post-dental-school training specifically in restoring and replacing teeth. There are fewer than 3,500 prosthodontists in the United States. Specialty providers typically charge more, but the planning, aesthetics, and bite outcomes are generally superior to a generalist who adds implants as a side service.
2. All-Inclusive vs. Component Pricing
As described above, a $1,500 "implant special" usually means just the post. Add the abutment ($300–$700) and crown ($1,200–$2,000) and you've spent $3,000–$4,200 — more than an all-inclusive quote. Always ask what each estimate includes before comparing.
3. Diagnostic Imaging
A proper implant evaluation requires a 3D cone beam CT (CBCT) scan that shows bone density, nerve location, and sinus anatomy. Practices that skip this are guessing. The scan typically costs $200–$500 elsewhere. Chicago Elite Implant Center includes it free with every consultation.
4. Need for Additional Procedures
If you have bone loss or inadequate bone volume, bone grafting ($699+) or a sinus lift ($1,499+) may be needed before implant placement. These add cost but are often unavoidable — and doing them in-house at the same practice saves time and coordination.
5. Location and Overhead
Practices in downtown Chicago or high-rent suburbs typically charge more to cover overhead. Suburban practices like ours in Woodridge often offer identical quality at lower cost — roughly 10–20% less than downtown Chicago for the same procedure.
Does Dental Insurance Cover Implants?
Most dental insurance plans do not fully cover dental implants, but that doesn't mean insurance is useless. Here's what most plans will cover:
- Extraction — If you need the failing tooth removed, most plans cover this at 50–80%.
- Bone grafting — Sometimes covered at 50% if deemed medically necessary.
- Crown — Many plans cover porcelain crowns at 50%, which means they contribute $600–$1,000 toward your all-inclusive implant price.
- X-rays and exams — Usually covered fully as preventive care.
Medical insurance (not dental) may cover implants when tooth loss is due to an accident, cancer treatment, or certain systemic conditions. It's worth asking your medical insurer if implants qualify as medically necessary for your situation.
At Chicago Elite Implant Center, we verify your benefits before your appointment and tell you exactly what your plan will contribute. You know your real out-of-pocket cost before you commit to anything.
Financing Options: What Does a Monthly Payment Look Like?
Financing makes dental implants accessible at virtually any budget. Here are realistic monthly payment estimates at common financing terms:
| Procedure | 24-Month Plan | 36-Month Plan | 60-Month Plan |
|---|---|---|---|
| Single Implant ($2,599) | ~$108/mo | ~$72/mo | ~$58/mo |
| All-on-4 — One Arch ($14,999) | ~$625/mo | ~$417/mo | ~$250/mo |
| All-on-4 — Both Arches ($29,998) | ~$1,250/mo | ~$833/mo | ~$500/mo |
| Bone Graft + Implant ($3,298) | ~$138/mo | ~$92/mo | ~$74/mo |
We offer financing through CareCredit (0% APR for 6–24 months on approved credit) and Lending Club Patient Solutions (extended low-interest plans up to 60 months). Applications take about 2 minutes and most patients receive same-day approval.
Bottom line: A single dental implant can cost less than $58/month — roughly what most people spend on a cell phone bill. The real cost of not replacing a missing tooth is the bone loss that accelerates over time and makes future treatment more complex and expensive.
Is a Cheaper Implant Worth It?
Dental implants placed correctly have a 95–98% success rate over 10+ years. The titanium post is designed to last a lifetime. The crown typically lasts 15–25 years. A poorly placed implant — from insufficient bone evaluation, wrong implant sizing, or inadequate surgical technique — can fail and require removal, costing more to fix than doing it right the first time.
The question to ask isn't "how do I find the cheapest implant?" — it's "how do I find the best value?" That means all-inclusive pricing, a qualified provider, proper diagnostics before treatment, and transparent communication about what's included.