Restorative Dentistry

Dental Crown Cost: What You'll Really Pay in 2026

A dental crown in the United States costs $800 to $2,500 per tooth without insurance, with most people paying around $1,300. The exact price depends mainly on four things: the material, the tooth’s position, your region, and how much prep work the tooth needs before the crown goes on.

That range is wide — and dentists rarely volunteer where your quote falls within it. This guide breaks down real 2026 prices by material, the “hidden” line items that surprise people on the final bill, and six legitimate, debt-free ways to bring the cost down.

Dental crown cost by material

Crown materialTypical cost per toothBest for
Porcelain-fused-to-metal (PFM)$800 – $1,500Back teeth; the budget workhorse
All-ceramic / all-porcelain$1,000 – $2,500Front teeth; most natural look
Zirconia$1,000 – $2,500Strength + looks; heavy grinders
Gold alloy$1,200 – $2,500Out-of-sight molars; lasts longest
All-metal (base alloy)$800 – $1,400Function over looks
Same-day CEREC (milled ceramic)$1,000 – $2,500One visit instead of two
Stainless steel (children)$300 – $600Baby molars until they fall out

Two things worth knowing about this table. First, the material is only part of the price difference — a PFM crown made by a premium U.S. dental lab can cost more than a zirconia crown milled in-office. Second, “cheap” and “expensive” don’t map neatly onto quality: gold is the most durable material in dentistry, and PFM has decades of solid track record.

The line items that aren’t in the headline price

The crown itself is usually only most of the bill, not all of it. A complete, honest quote should list:

Add-onTypical costWhen it applies
Exam + X-rays$50 – $250Almost always (often credited if you proceed)
Core buildup$200 – $500When decay has hollowed the tooth
Post and core$250 – $650After a root canal
Root canal first$700 – $1,800If the nerve is infected
Temporary crown$0 – $150Usually included — confirm
Gum contouring$50 – $350If the break is at the gumline

Get it in writing: ask for an itemized treatment plan with ADA procedure codes (a crown is usually D2740–D2752). It makes quotes comparable between offices — and politely signals that you’re comparing.

What makes your crown cost more (or less)

  • Where you live. The same crown that costs $900 in a small Midwestern city can run $2,000+ in New York or San Francisco. Fees track local rent and wages, not quality.
  • Front tooth vs. molar. Front teeth need more cosmetic artistry (color matching, translucency), which pushes ceramic work toward the top of the range. Molars need strength, not beauty.
  • The lab behind the dentist. Offices using premium domestic labs pay $300–$500 per crown in lab fees; offices using overseas labs pay a fraction of that. Neither is automatically bad — but it explains price gaps, and you’re allowed to ask which lab is used.
  • Who does the work. A prosthodontist (crown-and-bridge specialist) typically charges 20–50% more than a general dentist. For a routine single crown, a good general dentist is usually plenty.
  • How urgent it is. Emergency or same-week treatment often costs more. If the tooth isn’t painful or cracked, you usually have time to compare quotes.

Dental crown cost with insurance

If you have dental insurance, crowns typically fall under “major restorative” coverage at 50% — meaning a $1,300 crown costs you roughly $650 out of pocket, if everything lines up. Three catches to check before you book:

  1. Waiting periods. New plans commonly make you wait 6–12 months before covering major work. A crown booked in month five may be covered at 0%.
  2. Annual maximums. Most plans stop paying after $1,000–$2,000 per year, total, across all procedures. One crown plus a filling can exhaust it.
  3. “Medically necessary” only. If the crown is judged cosmetic, plans pay nothing. Your dentist’s office can file a pre-treatment estimate so you know the exact coverage in writing before drilling starts — always ask for this on major work.

No insurance? Don’t assume you’ll pay rack rate — the next section usually beats insurance pricing anyway for people who only need occasional work.

6 debt-free ways to pay less for a crown

None of these involve loans, credit cards, or financing plans — just lower actual prices.

  1. Dental school clinics — the biggest verified discount. Supervised students and residents place crowns for 30–60% less than private practice ($400–$1,000 is common). Work is slower but checked at every step by faculty. Every U.S. dental school runs a patient clinic; search “[your state] dental school clinic.”
  2. Community health centers. Federally funded clinics (FQHCs) charge on a sliding scale based on income — find one via the official HRSA locator (linked in sources).
  3. Ask for the cash price. Many offices discount 5–10% for payment in full at the time of service, because it saves them insurance paperwork. It’s routine — you just have to ask.
  4. In-house membership plans. Many practices now offer their own annual plan (often $300–$450/year) that includes cleanings and 20–40% off restorative work — a flat fee, not insurance and not credit. For one crown plus routine care, it frequently beats a year of premiums.
  5. Use HSA/FSA money. Crowns that restore a damaged tooth are a qualified medical expense. Paying with pre-tax dollars effectively cuts the price by your tax rate — commonly a 20–30% saving.
  6. Choose the material strategically. On a lower molar nobody sees, a PFM or metal crown at $900 does the same job as a $2,200 layered ceramic. Tell your dentist looks don’t matter on that tooth and let them re-quote.

If the tooth is already causing you hardship and none of the above is enough, Dental Lifeline Network coordinates donated dental care for people who are elderly, disabled, or medically fragile — see sources.

What actually happens (and why it takes two visits)

A standard crown takes two appointments 1–3 weeks apart. Visit one: the dentist numbs the tooth, shapes it down, takes an impression or digital scan, and fits a temporary crown. A dental lab then custom-manufactures your crown. Visit two: the temporary comes off, the final crown is checked for fit and bite, and cemented on. Same-day CEREC crowns compress this into one visit by milling the crown in-office — convenient, though for demanding front-tooth cosmetics many dentists still prefer a lab.

Mild sensitivity for a few days is normal; pain that gets worse is not — call the office.

Crown vs. the alternatives

OptionCostWhen it makes sense
Large filling$150 – $600Enough healthy tooth remains
Dental bonding$100 – $600Small chips, cosmetic fixes
Onlay (“partial crown”)$650 – $1,200Damage limited to the chewing surface
Crown$800 – $2,500Cracked, root-canaled, or heavily destroyed tooth
Extraction + implant$3,200 – $5,000Tooth can’t be saved
Extraction + bridge$2,000 – $5,000Tooth can’t be saved, implants not an option

The honest rule of thumb: a savable tooth is almost always cheaper to save. A $1,300 crown that prevents a $4,000 extraction-and-implant sequence is the better deal, even when the upfront number stings.

Frequently asked questions

How much does a dental crown cost without insurance?

Without insurance, expect $800–$2,500 per tooth depending on material and where you live, with a national average around $1,300. Porcelain-fused-to-metal is usually cheapest ($800–$1,500), while all-ceramic and zirconia crowns run $1,000–$2,500. Dental schools and community health centers can cut this by 30–60%.

Why are dental crowns so expensive?

You're paying for three things: the dentist's chair time across two visits, a custom-manufactured restoration (lab fees alone run $100–$500), and the materials. High-end ceramics, an experienced local lab, and big-city overhead all push the price up. That's also why quotes for the same tooth can differ by $1,000 or more — it always pays to compare.

Does insurance cover dental crowns?

Most dental plans classify crowns as a 'major' procedure and pay around 50% after your deductible — but only if the crown is medically necessary, not purely cosmetic. Watch for waiting periods (often 6–12 months on new plans) and the annual maximum, typically $1,000–$2,000, which one crown can nearly exhaust.

How long does a dental crown last?

A well-made crown typically lasts 10–15 years, and zirconia or gold crowns often 15–20+ with good hygiene. Spread over its lifetime, a $1,300 crown costs roughly $100 a year — one reason dentists usually recommend against choosing the cheapest possible option for a tooth you chew on.

Can I get a filling instead of a crown?

Sometimes. If the tooth still has enough healthy structure, a large filling ($150–$600) or an onlay ($650–$1,200) may work and costs far less. But if the tooth is cracked or more than half destroyed, a filling can fail and take the tooth with it — ask your dentist to explain exactly why a crown is necessary, and get a second opinion if the answer is vague.

Sources

  1. American Dental Association — MouthHealthy: Crowns
  2. FAIR Health Consumer — Dental cost lookup
  3. National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research (NIH)
  4. HRSA — Find a community health center
  5. Dental Lifeline Network — Donated dental services
About these numbers: Prices on this page are 2026 national estimates compiled from published fee surveys, insurer data, and real clinic price lists. Dental fees vary widely by region and provider — always get a written quote before treatment. This article is for general information and is not dental or medical advice.