Orlando Dental Guide

July 16, 2026

All-on-4 Dental Implants Cost in Orlando: 2026 Full-Mouth Price Guide

Real Orlando All-on-4 prices for 2026 — per arch and both arches — plus a material price ladder from acrylic to zirconia, an All-on-4 vs. All-on-6 decision table, and the 'starting at' trap to avoid.

If you’ve priced All-on-4 dental implants in the Orlando area, you’ve probably seen everything from “$13,495 per arch” to “$40,000 per arch” — a spread wide enough to make you wonder if anyone’s telling the truth. They mostly are. The confusion comes from what each quote includes: some are the final, all-in restored arch, and some are a temporary set of teeth that you’ll replace in a few months.

This guide cuts through it with real Central Florida numbers for 2026: what All-on-4 costs per arch and for both arches, a straight material-by-material price ladder (the thing almost no local page publishes with actual dollars), how it compares to All-on-6 and traditional implants, and how to spot a lowball quote before it costs you.

A note on these numbers: These are planning estimates, not quotes. Your real cost depends on an in-person exam, a CBCT scan, and your specific case. Insurance is highly plan-dependent — verify with your carrier. This is informational content, not clinical or financial advice.

All-on-4 cost at a glance — per arch and both arches

Central Florida (Orlando, Kissimmee, Winter Park, Davenport), 2026:

What you’re gettingCentral FL price rangeTypical
All-on-4, per arch (acrylic/hybrid)$20,000–$30,000~$24,500
All-on-4, per arch (zirconia)$28,000–$40,000+~$32,000
All-on-4, both arches (acrylic)$40,000–$50,000~$43,000
All-on-4, both arches (zirconia)$56,000–$60,000+~$60,000
All-on-6, per arch$25,000–$35,000~$30,000
Implant overdenture (snap-on), per arch$5,000–$15,000~$10,000

The realistic all-in number most Orlando patients should plan around: $20,000–$30,000 per arch in acrylic, $28,000–$40,000 per arch in zirconia, and $40,000–$60,000 for both arches depending on material. Anything advertised under $15,000 per arch almost always excludes the final prosthesis — more on that trap below.

What’s included in the All-on-4 price

A proper All-on-4 quote should be all-in and should cover:

  • Four implants per arch (two straight in front, two angled in back to avoid the sinus and use denser bone)
  • Extractions of any remaining failing teeth on that arch
  • The same-day temporary bridge (“teeth in a day”)
  • The final prosthesis after healing — this is the expensive, load-bearing part
  • CBCT 3D imaging and surgical planning
  • Sedation (often IV)
  • Follow-up visits through healing

The line item that separates an honest quote from a misleading one is the final prosthesis. The temporary you leave with on surgery day is not the finished product — it’s acrylic, it’s provisional, and it’s replaced with the definitive bridge after 3–6 months of healing. If a quote’s low number is really just the temporary, your true cost is thousands higher.

Material price ladder: what you’re actually paying for

This is the biggest gap in every other Orlando All-on-4 page — everyone names the materials, almost nobody attaches the dollars. Here’s the ladder, cheapest to premium, per arch:

TierMaterialCentral FL cost per archDurability
EntryAcrylic / PMMA hybrid (acrylic teeth on a titanium bar or directly)$20,000–$25,000Good; teeth can wear/chip over years
MidTitanium bar with higher-grade acrylic/composite$24,000–$30,000Better strength, longer-lasting
PremiumZirconia (monolithic, full-ceramic)$28,000–$40,000+Highest; ~93.7% 5-yr survival vs ~83% acrylic

The zirconia upgrade costs +$5,000–$15,000 per arch over acrylic — call it roughly +$8,000 on a typical case. What you get for it: a stronger, more stain- and wear-resistant, more natural-looking bridge that holds up better over 10–15 years. For many patients acrylic is perfectly reasonable; for heavy bite forces or those who want the most durable option, zirconia earns its premium. The point is you should see both numbers before you decide.

All-on-4 vs. All-on-6 vs. 3-on-6 vs. traditional implants

There’s more than one way to restore a full arch. Here’s when each makes sense and what it costs in Central Florida:

ApproachImplants per archCentral FL cost/archBest for
All-on-44$20,000–$30,000Most patients; often avoids grafting via angled implants
All-on-66$25,000–$35,000Patients with adequate bone wanting more support
3-on-66 (three small bridges)Varies, often similar to All-on-6Those wanting sectional repairability
Traditional individual implants8–10+$60,000–$100,000+ (full mouth)Rarely cost-effective for full arches

All-on-4 is cheaper and often avoids bone grafting because the angled back implants use existing dense bone. All-on-6 adds two implants for extra support and load distribution if you have the bone for it. Traditional one-implant-per-tooth restoration is almost never the economical full-arch choice — that’s precisely why All-on-4 exists.

Orlando / Central Florida pricing in 2026

Grounding the ranges in real local data: solid 2026 Florida figures put All-on-4 at $20,000–$30,000 per arch and $40,000–$60,000 for both arches, with All-on-6 at $25,000–$35,000 per arch and zirconia adding $5,000–$15,000 per arch. Orlando practice quotes cluster around $24,500 per arch for a standard case.

Now the caution: at least one Orlando provider advertises a “$13,495 per arch fixed denture” — and it explicitly excludes the final prosthesis, listing the permanently fixed bridge separately at $16,000–$19,495. That’s the trap in action. The eye-catching number is the temporary; the real all-in is materially higher.

Add-on costs that change your quote

Add-onWhen it appliesCost
ExtractionsRemaining teeth on the arch$75–$500 per tooth, or ~$1,000–$2,000/arch bundled
Bone graftingInsufficient bone (All-on-4 often avoids this)$250–$3,500 per site
Sinus liftRarely needed with angled implants$1,500–$5,000
IV sedationMost full-arch surgeries$600–$1,000
CBCT scanIf not already bundled$250–$500

One of All-on-4’s real advantages is that the angled posterior implants frequently avoid the grafting that individual implants would require — a genuine cost saver for patients with some bone loss.

Does insurance cover All-on-4? And financing

Insurance rarely covers All-on-4 in any meaningful way. Most plans classify it as cosmetic or elective, and even generous annual maximums ($1,000–$2,500) are dwarfed by a $20,000+ per-arch case. In practice, expect only about $2,000–$5,000 of offset on a $40,000–$60,000 both-arch case, usually applied to the covered components (extractions, imaging, sometimes grafts). Medical insurance may contribute only if your tooth loss stems from an accident, injury, or qualifying medical condition — and that requires documentation.

Florida Medicaid does not cover All-on-4 or any implants for adults. The adult Medicaid dental benefit (through DentaQuest of Florida and Liberty Dental in 2026) covers one upper and one lower denture per lifetime — not implant-supported teeth. If you’re on Medicaid and want fixed full-arch implants, you’re financing or paying out of pocket.

Financing is how most patients handle it: CareCredit (0% for 6–24 months), in-house plans, LendingClub, Sunbit, or Wells Fargo. Orlando practices commonly advertise $0 down with 48-, 60-, or 90-month terms landing around $210/month. HSA/FSA dollars are eligible when treating dental disease.

Why All-on-4 costs what it costs

It helps to understand where a $24,500-per-arch number actually goes, because it demystifies both the price and why the cheap ads can’t be real:

  • Four implants — titanium hardware from a reputable brand (Nobel Biocare, Straumann) isn’t cheap, and All-on-4 is a branded, well-researched protocol.
  • Surgical skill and sedation — placing angled implants into precise positions, often extracting a full arch of teeth the same day, under IV sedation.
  • 3D planning and imaging — a CBCT scan and often guided-surgery planning to position implants accurately.
  • The final prosthesis — a custom, lab-fabricated full-arch bridge in acrylic or zirconia, designed to bear years of chewing force. This is the single most expensive component and the one temporary-only quotes omit.
  • Follow-up care — multiple healing visits, the temporary-to-permanent conversion, and adjustments.

When a billboard offers “teeth in a day from $13,495,” it’s pricing the surgery plus a temporary acrylic bridge — not the definitive prosthesis you’ll wear for the next decade. The gap between that number and $24,500 is largely the final prosthesis and the full surgical package. Always insist on the all-in, final-restoration price in writing.

All-on-4 vs. traditional dentures — the daily-life difference

Beyond cost, the reason people choose All-on-4 over a conventional denture is how it feels to live with. A removable denture covers the roof of your mouth (dampening taste), can slip while eating or speaking, requires adhesives, and needs nightly removal and soaking. An All-on-4 bridge is screwed to implants — it doesn’t come out, doesn’t cover the palate, doesn’t slip, and lets you bite into foods a denture wearer avoids. It also preserves jawbone: because the implants transmit chewing force into the bone, they slow the bone loss that makes long-term denture wearers’ faces look “sunken.” That functional gap is why many patients consider the higher price worthwhile.

The procedure and recovery timeline

Start to finished teeth is about 4–6 months:

  1. Consultation — exam, CBCT scan, treatment plan.
  2. Surgery day (2–3 hours per arch) — remaining teeth extracted, bone recontoured, four implants placed, and a same-day fixed temporary attached. You leave with teeth.
  3. Healing / osseointegration (3–6 months) — soft diet for roughly the first 12 weeks; most people return to normal daily life within 2–3 weeks. Worst swelling is the first 48 hours.
  4. Final prosthesis — new impressions after healing; the definitive bridge is delivered around month 4 (lower arch) to month 5 (upper arch).

Are you a candidate?

Good candidates: people who’ve lost or are about to lose most teeth on an arch, have enough bone for four angled implants, are in reasonable overall health, and are committed to hygiene. Current denture wearers who want fixed teeth are ideal.

Higher-risk or not yet ready: smokers (implant failure runs ~15.8% vs ~7.3% in non-smokers), severe bone loss beyond what angled implants and grafting can address, uncontrolled diabetes or other systemic conditions, active infection, and unmanaged teeth grinding. Many of these can be addressed first, then reassessed.

How to avoid overpaying — red flags in an All-on-4 quote

  • A low “per arch” price that’s really the temporary. Always ask: “Does this include the final prosthesis?” Get it in writing.
  • No material specified. Acrylic and zirconia differ by $5,000–$15,000 per arch — the quote should say which.
  • Both-arch total left vague. A straight both-arch number should be roughly 1.9× the per-arch price.
  • Sedation, imaging, and extractions quoted separately and buried. Ask for the all-in figure.
  • Pressure to book surgery immediately. A real plan survives a second opinion.

All-on-4 vs. dentures: lifetime value

A conventional denture costs far less upfront ($1,000–$3,000 per arch) but sits on your gums, allows continued bone loss, slips, and gets replaced every 5–7 years. All-on-4 costs much more upfront but is fixed, preserves bone, functions like natural teeth, and the implants can last 20+ years (the bridge typically 10–15). For someone facing decades of denture replacements and relines, the fixed solution often wins on both quality of life and long-term cost. If budget rules it out, a snap-on implant overdenture ($5,000–$15,000 per arch) is a middle path — more stable than a conventional denture, cheaper than fixed All-on-4.

Frequently asked questions

How much do All-on-4 dental implants cost?

In Central Florida, All-on-4 runs $20,000–$30,000 per arch in acrylic and $28,000–$40,000+ per arch in zirconia. The typical Orlando quote is around $24,500 per arch. Both arches together run $40,000–$60,000.

How much does All-on-4 cost for both arches / a full mouth?

Both arches run $40,000–$60,000 in Central Florida — roughly $40,000–$50,000 in acrylic and up to $60,000 in zirconia. That’s about 1.9× the per-arch price, reflecting a slight bundle discount.

Does insurance cover All-on-4 implants?

Rarely, and never in full. Most plans treat it as cosmetic, and annual maximums of $1,000–$2,500 barely touch a $20,000+ arch — expect only $2,000–$5,000 of offset on a both-arch case. Florida Medicaid does not cover implants for adults at all.

What is the difference in cost between All-on-4 and All-on-6?

All-on-6 adds two implants per arch and costs more: about $25,000–$35,000 per arch versus $20,000–$30,000 for All-on-4. All-on-6 offers more support for patients with adequate bone; All-on-4 is less expensive and often avoids grafting.

How long do All-on-4 implants last?

The titanium implants can last 20+ years, often a lifetime, while the prosthetic bridge typically needs replacement every 10–15 years. Zirconia bridges tend to outlast acrylic ones.

Is All-on-4 cheaper than individual implants?

Yes, dramatically. Replacing a full arch with individual implants can cost $60,000–$100,000+ for a full mouth, while All-on-4 restores an arch with just four implants for $20,000–$30,000. That cost efficiency is the whole point of the technique.

What’s included in the All-on-4 price?

A complete quote includes four implants, extractions of remaining teeth, the same-day temporary bridge, the final prosthesis after healing, 3D imaging, sedation, and follow-up visits. The final prosthesis is the component that dishonest low quotes leave out.

How long is recovery after All-on-4?

You leave surgery day with temporary teeth. The worst swelling is the first 48 hours, most people resume normal daily life in 2–3 weeks, and full osseointegration takes 3–6 months, during which you eat a soft diet. The final bridge is placed around month 4–5.

Are you a candidate for All-on-4 if you have bone loss?

Often yes — All-on-4’s angled back implants are specifically designed to use available bone and frequently avoid grafting. Severe bone loss may still require grafting or an alternative, which a CBCT scan will determine.

Can you get All-on-4 in a day (same-day teeth)?

You get temporary teeth the same day as surgery — the “teeth in a day” concept is real. The permanent, final prosthesis comes after 3–6 months of healing, so the finished result isn’t truly same-day.


Get your realistic number. All-on-4 is too big a decision to guess at — use our free dental cost estimator to see a personalized Central Florida range in about a minute, no email required. Weighing options near you? Compare local providers and pricing in Kissimmee, Davenport, and across Central Florida. And for single-tooth pricing, see our dental implants cost guide.

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