What full-mouth dental implants cost in Greenville, SC
By Kai Ramos · Updated 2026-06-04
Full-mouth dental implants are one of the bigger financial decisions in dentistry, and quotes across the Greenville area can look wildly different for what sounds like the same procedure. Some of that spread is real: a full-arch case with a bone graft and IV sedation costs more than one without. Some of it is just different offices bundling different things into the number they quote you. Here’s what typically drives the price, so a quote makes sense before you sign anything. When you’re ready to compare offices, our full-mouth implant providers category ranks local practices by patient sentiment and completeness, not just price.
The baseline range
For a single implant post, abutment, and crown, this market typically runs somewhere in the $3,000 to $4,750 range. That’s the building block every other estimate scales from. A full-arch solution such as All-on-4 costs more in total, because you’re still paying for surgery, a temporary prosthesis, and a final lab-made arch, but it costs meaningfully less per tooth replaced than restoring each tooth individually, since only four to six implants support the whole arch.
What actually changes the number
| Factor | Typical effect on price | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Bone graft needed | Roughly +25% | Extra surgical step and healing time before implants go in |
| Same-day / immediate load | Roughly +25-30% | More chairside time and a same-day temporary prosthesis |
| Mini implants | Roughly -30% | Smaller diameter, simpler placement, less material |
| Sedation (beyond local) | Added separately, scales with type and time | IV sedation costs more per hour than nitrous oxide |
| Number of implants supporting the arch | Scales the total | More implants generally means more stability, and more cost |
None of these percentages are a guarantee for your case. They describe the direction and rough size of the swing, not an exact dollar figure, since every quote depends on your own imaging and treatment plan.
Where you land in the local market also depends on the specialist involved. A case handled by a periodontist or oral surgeon for placement, paired with a prosthodontist for a complex full-arch restoration, generally costs more than a simpler case a general dentist can manage largely on their own. That’s not a sign of overcharging, it reflects the added training and time those specialists bring to more complicated cases.

Insurance and what it usually covers
Most dental insurance treats implants as a major or cosmetic procedure, which means partial coverage at best, and some plans exclude implants entirely. It’s worth checking your plan’s annual maximum too, since a full-arch case can easily exceed a typical $1,500 yearly cap in a single visit. Ask the front desk to run a pre-treatment estimate through your specific plan rather than relying on what “most insurance” does, since coverage varies a lot plan to plan.
Reading a quote without getting surprised later
A complete quote should separate out:
- The surgical placement fee for each implant
- Any bone graft or extraction fees
- The temporary prosthesis, if you’re getting one the same day
- Sedation, billed by type and time
- The final, lab-made prosthesis
- Follow-up visits during healing
If a quote is a single lump number with no breakdown, ask for the itemized version before you commit. It’s the easiest way to compare two offices fairly, and to spot which one is including something the other left out.
It’s also worth asking what happens if your treatment plan changes mid-course, for example if your surgeon discovers during placement that additional grafting is needed. A clear answer about how that’s billed, rather than a vague “we’ll figure it out,” is a good sign the office handles pricing transparently.
This is general cost information, not a quote. Your own price depends on an in-person exam and imaging, which is why most offices offer a consultation before any commitment.
For background on how we evaluate local providers in the first place, see our ranking methodology, or head back to the home page to browse other categories.
FAQ
- Why do full-mouth implants cost less per tooth than single implants?
- A full-arch design like All-on-4 uses fewer implants to support an entire arch of teeth, so the per-tooth cost drops even though the total for the arch is higher than a single implant.
- Does a bone graft add much to the price?
- Typically yes, on the order of an extra 25 percent on top of the base procedure cost, since it's an additional surgical step with its own healing time before implants can be placed.
- Is same-day (immediate load) more expensive?
- Usually, by roughly 25 to 30 percent, because it requires more chairside time, a same-day temporary prosthesis, and more precise planning up front.
- Will my quote match what I read online?
- Only roughly. Online ranges are a starting point; your exact price depends on your bone volume, how many teeth need replacing, and whether extractions or grafting are needed, all of which an exam and imaging confirm.