Oral Surgery

Gum Graft Cost: Prices per Tooth & Full Mouth for 2026

A gum graft costs $600 to $1,200 per tooth in 2026, or $1,000 to $3,000 or more when several teeth are treated in one session. A gum graft (gingival graft) rebuilds gum tissue that has receded — pulling back and exposing the tooth root — to stop sensitivity, decay, and further gum and bone loss.

This guide covers what drives the price, when insurance helps, and — because not all recession needs surgery — how to tell whether you truly need a graft yet.

Gum graft cost by type

Graft typeTypical cost per toothWhat it is
Connective tissue graft$600 – $1,200The most common; tissue taken from under the palate surface
Free gingival graft$600 – $1,200Surface tissue from the palate; for thickening thin gums
Pedicle (lateral) graft$700 – $1,300Tissue moved from gum next to the receded area
Donor/allograft tissue$700 – $1,400Processed donor tissue — no second surgical site
Pinhole technique$800 – $1,500Minimally invasive, no palate cutting; easier recovery

Treating multiple adjacent teeth together lowers the per-tooth cost, since much of the fee is the surgical setup. A periodontist (gum specialist) typically charges more than a general dentist but is the usual provider for grafting.

What affects the price

  • Number of teeth. The biggest factor — one tooth versus a group in one session.
  • Graft source. Using your own palate tissue means a second surgical site; donor tissue avoids that and can change the price.
  • Technique. The pinhole method and specialist care sit at the higher end.
  • Provider and region. Periodontists and coastal metros price higher, as everywhere in dentistry.

Do you need a graft yet?

Recession is common, and not every case needs surgery right away. A graft is genuinely warranted when recession is:

  • Causing root sensitivity or exposing root surfaces to decay
  • Progressing over time (compared against past records)
  • Approaching the point of bone loss or tooth instability

For mild, stable recession, monitoring plus a gentler brushing technique is sometimes enough — because over-aggressive brushing is a leading cause of recession. Ask your dentist: “Is this progressing, and what happens if we monitor it a while longer?” When recession is genuinely advancing, though, grafting early keeps it to fewer teeth and a lower cost.

Gum graft cost with insurance

When medically necessary — treating recession that causes sensitivity, decay risk, or bone loss rather than cosmetics — dental plans often cover gum grafts at around 50% under periodontal/surgical benefits, within the annual maximum. Purely cosmetic grafting (for a “gummy” or uneven smile line with no functional problem) is less likely to be covered.

To maximize coverage: have the office document the recession (measurements, photos) and file a pre-treatment estimate establishing medical necessity.

5 debt-free ways to pay less

  1. Dental school periodontics clinics perform gum grafts at 40–60% off under faculty supervision — the best value for specialist gum surgery.
  2. Treat early, treat fewer teeth. Advancing recession spreads to more teeth; grafting sooner keeps the total down.
  3. Ask about donor tissue to avoid a second (palate) surgical site — sometimes cheaper overall and always easier to recover from.
  4. Community health centers offer income-based sliding-scale periodontal care.
  5. HSA/FSA and cash-pay discounts apply — medically necessary grafting is a qualified expense.

Preventing recession (the free part)

The cheapest gum care is not needing the graft in the first place — or not needing a second one. Recession is driven by aggressive brushing, gum disease, grinding, and smoking. So the prevention toolkit costs almost nothing: a soft-bristled brush and gentle technique, treating gum disease early, a night guard if you grind (see our night guard cost guide), and not smoking. Pair a graft with these habits and it’s a one-time fix rather than a recurring expense.

What to expect

A gum graft is a single outpatient surgery under local anesthetic, usually taking under an hour for one or a few teeth. Recovery takes a week or two — soft foods and careful cleaning of the area — with more discomfort if palate tissue was used (the donor site heals like a pizza burn). Results are both protective and cosmetic: covered roots, less sensitivity, and a halt to the recession. For the related gum-disease treatment that often accompanies recession, see our deep cleaning cost guide.

Frequently asked questions

How much does a gum graft cost per tooth?

A gum graft costs $600–$1,200 per tooth on average. Treating several adjacent teeth in one session is more cost-effective per tooth, often $1,000–$3,000 total for a small group. Using donor tissue instead of tissue from your own palate can change the price, and adding a specialist's fee raises it. Dental schools perform grafts for 40–60% less.

Does insurance cover gum grafts?

Often partially, when the graft is medically necessary — treating recession that causes root sensitivity, decay risk, or progressing bone loss, rather than purely cosmetic reasons. Dental plans typically cover it at around 50% under periodontal or surgical benefits, subject to the annual maximum. A pre-treatment estimate with documentation of the recession improves your chances of coverage.

What happens if I don't treat gum recession?

Untreated recession tends to worsen: exposed tooth roots become sensitive and decay-prone, and continued gum and bone loss can eventually loosen teeth. A gum graft ($600–$1,200 per tooth) that stops this is far cheaper than the root canals, fillings, or tooth replacement that advanced recession can lead to. Not all mild recession needs grafting, though — ask whether monitoring is an option first.

Are there alternatives to a traditional gum graft?

Yes. The pinhole surgical technique treats recession through a tiny hole without cutting donor tissue from the palate, and can cost similarly or a bit more but with easier recovery. For very mild recession, sometimes monitoring plus a soft toothbrush and gentler brushing technique is enough — recession is often caused or worsened by aggressive brushing. Ask your dentist whether your case truly needs surgery yet.

Where can I get a cheaper gum graft?

Dental school periodontics clinics are the best value, performing gum grafts at 40–60% below private specialist fees under faculty supervision. Community health centers offer income-based sliding-scale pricing for periodontal care. Getting the graft done before recession advances also keeps it to fewer teeth and a lower total cost.

Sources

  1. American Academy of Periodontology
  2. American Dental Association — MouthHealthy: Gum disease
  3. National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research (NIH)
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.