If you're weighing up a dental implant, the first thing you want is a straight answer on cost. So here it is, plainly: in New Zealand, a single dental implant usually costs between $4,500 and $7,000 once you add up everything involved — the implant itself, the connector, and the crown that sits on top. The dental implant cost in NZ varies more than most people expect, and the rest of this page walks through exactly why, so you can read any quote you're given and understand what you're actually looking at.
No sales pitch here. Just what goes into the number.
A dental implant isn't one thing. It's three, and each has its own cost.
First, there's the implant itself — a small titanium post that goes into the jawbone and takes the place of the tooth root. Second, the abutment, the connector that joins the post to the visible tooth. Third, the crown, the part you actually see and chew with.
On top of the parts, you're paying for the planning and the surgery: the scans, the 3D imaging, the surgical appointment, and the follow-up visits while everything settles. Sometimes a tooth needs removing first, or the bone needs a little building up before an implant can go in. Those add to the total, and a good dentist will tell you about them before you commit, not after.
So when you see a price, it helps to ask what's inside it. A figure that looks low might be the post only, with the abutment and crown quoted separately later.
Here's the honest spread you'll see around the country:
Quotes vary this much for real reasons, not random ones. The brand of implant matters — established systems with decades of research behind them cost more than budget alternatives. Whether you need a bone graft or an extraction first changes the total. So does the complexity of your particular mouth, and the experience of the person doing the work. A quote isn't just a price; it's a reflection of what's actually being planned for you.
If two quotes are thousands apart, that's usually the signal to ask what each one includes, rather than to assume one practice is simply overcharging.
The more teeth you're replacing, the more the maths shifts.
One missing tooth is the simplest case: one implant, one crown. Several missing teeth in a row can sometimes be solved with two implants and a bridge spanning between them, which works out cheaper per tooth than an implant for every gap. A full arch — replacing all the teeth top or bottom — is a bigger piece of work, and there are a few different approaches to it, each at a different price point.
There's no single right answer. The best option depends on how many teeth are involved, the state of your jawbone, and what matters most to you. Worth seeing the choices laid out for your own mouth rather than guessing from a general guide.
Sometimes, yes — but not always, and it's worth being clear-eyed about it.
A lower price can simply mean a different implant system or a more straightforward case. That's fine. What's worth watching is when the saving comes from cutting the planning, using an unproven component, or skipping steps that protect the long-term result. An implant is meant to last decades. If a cheaper version fails early and needs redoing, the cheaper option becomes the expensive one.
The useful question isn't "what's the lowest price?" It's "what am I getting for this price, and how long is it built to last?" A quote you fully understand is worth more than a quote that's simply low.
A big number doesn't have to be paid all at once.
If you've lost a tooth through an accident, ACC may contribute — it's always worth checking, and we can help you find out. Treatment can often be sequenced, too: dealing with the most pressing thing first and spacing the rest over time, so you set the pace rather than facing the whole total in one go. Many people also use finance to spread payments.
The point is that an intimidating total is usually a sequence, not a single demand. There are nearly always choices in how and when it's done.
We tell you the cost up front, in plain numbers, before any work starts. That's not a policy we advertise; it's just how we've always worked. Patients tell us they remember being told exactly what everything would come to — and that's the point.
When you come in, you'll see your own mouth on screen, we'll lay out the options that genuinely apply to you, and you'll get a clear quote for each. Then the decision is yours, at your pace.
If you'd like to see how we approach implants, there's more on our dental implants page, and if you're curious about full-arch options specifically, that's here. And if the question on your mind is really why implants cost what they do, we've written about that honestly too. No rush — have a read whenever you're ready, and feel free to email if anything doesn't make sense.

At Supreme Dental Concepts, we provide a comprehensive selection of cosmetic dentistry services designed to give you the confident smile you desire.
Our commitment extends to ensuring you look your absolute best.
As dentists, our training in injection techniques and facial anatomy during dental school equips us to preserve your youthful appearance, complementing your beautiful teeth.
