What All-on-5 honestly costs here.
No clinic can quote you a real figure without a scan and an exam. What this page can do is set honest expectations: the typical ranges, what a quote should include, and what can legitimately add to it.
Full-arch implant treatment at U.S. and Canadian list prices commonly lands in this range, and often higher in major cities.
The same protocol, the same global implant brands — at a Mexican border-town cost base. Material choice moves the figure within this band.
Figures are typical published ranges in U.S. dollars, gathered for orientation — they are not a quote and not a promise. Your own cost is set by diagnosis and the bridge material you choose.
What a full-arch quote should already include.
A well-written All-on-5 quote bundles the core treatment into one clear figure. If these are missing, they are not "savings" — they are gaps.
When you compare two clinics, compare what is inside the number, not just the number.
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Five implants & abutmentsThe titanium fixtures and the multi-unit abutments that carry the bridge.
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The surgeryPlacement of all five implants, and routine extractions where included.
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The provisional bridgeThe fixed temporary teeth fitted on the first trip.
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The definitive bridgeThe final bridge in the named material, fitted on the second trip.
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A written warrantyStated cover on the implants, the bar and the bridge — each spelled out.
The honest variables that move the number.
These are not hidden fees when they are disclosed up front. They are real clinical work that some cases need and others do not — which is exactly why a quote stays provisional until the exam.
Bone grafting
Rebuilding bone where volume is low. Adds cost, and sometimes a healing stage before implants can be placed.
Sinus lift
In the upper jaw, creating height below the sinus so an implant has bone to anchor into.
Complex extractions
Difficult or surgical removals beyond the routine extractions a quote assumes.
Material upgrade
Choosing zirconia over an acrylic hybrid for the final bridge raises the figure within the range.
The second arch
Treating both jaws costs more than one — though usually less than two single-arch prices added together.
An added trip
If grafting or healing needs more time, an extra visit means extra travel — worth budgeting for.
One number is not a quote. A list is.
A trustworthy estimate breaks the treatment into parts you can see. That is what lets you compare clinics honestly — and spot what a suspiciously low price has quietly left out.
Ask for the quote itemised like this. The figure that matters is the one where every line is visible — including the lines marked "if needed," with their cost stated in advance.
Request an itemised estimateDeposits, balances and card surcharges.
Payment terms vary by clinic, but the pattern in Los Algodones is fairly consistent. Knowing it avoids surprises on the day.
A deposit to book
A modest deposit usually secures the surgery date and the planning. It should be receipted, and the terms should be in writing.
The balance in stages
The rest is commonly split — a share at the surgery trip, the remainder when the final bridge is delivered. Cash in U.S. dollars is standard.
Card surcharges are normal
Paying by credit card or cheque often carries a processing surcharge of a few percent. Ask for the exact figure before you choose how to pay.
The cheapest quote in town is a warning, not a win
A price well below the typical range usually means something has been removed — a scan, the provisional, the final material, the warranty, or honest planning time. Full-arch surgery is not where to chase the lowest figure. Aim for the clearest one.
Get a figure built around your case.
Send a recent scan and photos. You will get a written, itemised estimate — with the "if needed" lines priced in advance, so there are no surprises later.