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Full-mouth restoration in Turkey

"Full-mouth restoration" is one of the most misused phrases in dental tourism, because it's sold as a single product with a single headline price. It isn't. It's a goal — restoring a whole mouth — that's reached by two genuinely different routes, with different procedures, timelines and costs. This page keeps those two paths separate and honest, explains who each one suits, and sets out why a real price for your mouth can only come after a scan at our partner clinic, Taki Dent in Antalya.

My Dentist Brooklyn Consulting LLC is a Brooklyn-based dental treatment consulting and coordination company. Dental treatment is provided by our partner clinic, Taki Dent, in Antalya, Turkey. We do not provide dental treatment at our Brooklyn office.

Published New York-area range

$55,000–$75,000

Full-mouth implant-supported reconstruction, both arches. Upper and lower arches. Every patient receives an individualized plan and a fixed written quotation after X-ray or CBCT assessment.

Taki Dent, Antalya — starting price

from $11,300

Implant-supported full arch, both arches (All-on-6). Fixed and guaranteed once you provide a CBCT scan — known before you travel and it does not change. How we calculate this →

Turkey prices are for treatment performed at our partner clinic, Taki Dent, in Antalya, Turkey. No treatment is provided at our Brooklyn office, which offers consultation & coordination only.

Why "full-mouth restoration" is not one product

The single most important thing to understand before spending anything is that "full-mouth restoration" is not a procedure you can buy off a price list. It describes an outcome — a mouth restored to health, function and appearance — and there are two fundamentally different ways to get there. One keeps your own teeth and rebuilds them; the other removes teeth that can't be saved and replaces them with implant-supported arches. They are not interchangeable, they don't cost the same, and a clinic that quotes you a flat "full mouth" figure before establishing which teeth of yours can actually be saved has put a price before a diagnosis.

We keep the two paths deliberately separate on this page for that reason. Most real cases turn out to be a considered mix of the two — some teeth restored, some replaced — but you can only design that mix after a proper assessment. Below, each path is explained on its own terms: what it is, who it suits, what it realistically costs, and what the trip looks like.

Path 1 — Rehabilitating your own savable teeth

The first path keeps your natural teeth and restores them. Where the roots are healthy and enough sound tooth structure remains, teeth that are worn, broken, decayed or discoloured can be rebuilt using a combination of crowns, veneers and onlays — with any needed fillings, root canals or gum treatment done first. An onlay sits between a filling and a crown: it restores a substantial part of a tooth's biting surface while preserving more natural tooth than a full crown would. A rehabilitation of this kind might also rebuild a worn-down bite that years of grinding or erosion have collapsed, restoring both the height of the teeth and the way they meet.

Who it suits. This path is for patients who still have most of their own teeth, with healthy roots and enough structure to work with — people whose problem is damage, wear or appearance rather than teeth that are beyond saving. It's the more conservative route because it preserves your natural teeth and roots, which keep stimulating the jawbone the way implants do only partially. The guiding principle, exactly as on our crowns and veneers pages, is to use the most conservative restoration that does the job for each tooth — a veneer where a veneer is enough, a crown only where a tooth genuinely needs full coverage, an onlay where it preserves more tooth than a crown — and never to grind down healthy teeth purely to deliver a uniform look.

Roughly what it costs. Because this path is priced per unit, the total depends on how many teeth need restoring and with what. As a reference, Taki Dent's zirconia crowns start from $250 per tooth and ceramic veneers from $250 per tooth, against published NYC ranges of $1,500–$4,000 and $1,000–$2,500 respectively. A rehabilitation involving, say, twelve to twenty units of crowns and veneers is therefore a very different total from a two-or-three-tooth repair — and any root canals, build-ups or gum treatment are itemized on top. There is no single "Path 1 price"; there's a per-tooth plan that adds up to a written total.

Path 2 — Implant-supported full arch (All-on-4 / All-on-6)

The second path is for teeth that can't be saved. When most or all of the teeth on an arch are missing, failing, or need to be removed, the arch is restored not tooth by tooth but as a whole: a fixed bridge supported by implants placed into the jawbone. With All-on-4, four implants per arch support the bridge; with All-on-6, six implants give extra support and load distribution, which can matter for lower bone density or a heavier bite. A "full-mouth" version of this treats both arches this way — a complete implant-supported reconstruction of the upper and lower teeth.

Who it suits. This path is for patients who are already edentulous (have no teeth) on one or both arches, or whose remaining teeth are beyond saving — advanced gum disease with significant bone loss, multiple failed root canals, teeth broken down below the gum, or teeth so loose they can't be restored. For these patients, trying to "save" teeth that are already lost is neither possible nor sensible; a fixed, implant-supported arch gives back stable, fixed teeth without relying on foundations that have already failed. It's a bigger surgical undertaking than Path 1, with a healing period built in, but for the right case it's the appropriate treatment rather than a compromise.

Roughly what it costs. Taki Dent's per-arch starting prices are from $4,650 for All-on-4 and from $5,650 for All-on-6, against a published Brooklyn/NYC range of $20,000–$40,000 per arch. A full-mouth, both-arch All-on-6 reconstruction starts from $11,300, versus a published New York-area range of $55,000–$75,000 for an implant-supported full-mouth reconstruction. As with Path 1, extractions, bone grafts and sinus lifts are assessed from your scan and priced separately where needed — the arch figures are a starting point, not a guaranteed all-in total.

Choosing between the two paths — and combining them

In practice, the two paths are the ends of a spectrum, and most full-mouth cases land somewhere in between. It's entirely common for a plan to restore the upper front teeth with crowns and veneers while replacing a failing lower arch with an implant-supported bridge — or to save a handful of strong teeth and place implants only where teeth are genuinely lost. The right plan is the one that saves what's worth saving and replaces only what has to be replaced. That's a clinical judgement, and it's exactly why a scan comes before a price. Beware any offer that pushes the whole mouth toward one path — usually extracting teeth for implants, or crowning every tooth — without a clear, tooth-by-tooth reason, because the cheaper-to-deliver or more uniform option isn't always the one that's right for your mouth.

ConsiderationPath 1 — restore your teethPath 2 — implant-supported arch
Best forSavable teeth: healthy roots, enough structureMissing teeth, or teeth beyond saving
Main proceduresCrowns, veneers, onlays, root canals, gum treatmentExtractions, implants, fixed full-arch bridge
Keeps natural teeth / rootsYesNo — replaces them
Priced byPer unit — adds up across the teeth treatedPer arch — from $4,650 (All-on-4) / $5,650 (All-on-6)
Healing time built inUsually none — no osseointegration to wait forYes — implants integrate over months
Typical tripsOften one longer trip, case-dependentUsually two trips, months apart

Why a written quote after a CBCT scan is required

You'll have noticed this page gives ranges and starting prices but not a single number for "your" full-mouth restoration. That's deliberate and it's the honest position: an accurate full-mouth price depends on findings only a CBCT scan and clinical assessment can establish — how many of your teeth are savable, how many crowns or veneers versus how many implants, whether extractions, bone grafts or sinus lifts are needed, the state of your bite, and which materials suit your case. A CBCT scan is a 3D image that shows bone volume, density and nerve position in a way a flat X-ray can't, and for implant planning specifically it's essential.

So the process is scan first, quote second. Taki Dent's clinical team reviews your CBCT and assessment and issues an individualized written quotation — the specific mix of Path 1 and Path 2 for your mouth, itemized by procedure and material, with the number of trips and the total, before you commit to travel. What we can give you now, and have given you above, are the published starting figures and ranges so you can judge whether it's worth exploring at all. What no one can responsibly give you sight-unseen is a fixed figure specific to your mouth. If a clinic quotes you a firm "full mouth" total before any scan, treat that as a warning sign, not a convenience.

The honest total: clinical price is not the trip cost

Full-mouth restoration is the treatment where the New York-versus-Antalya gap looks most dramatic — a published New York-area $55,000–$75,000 for an implant-supported full-mouth reconstruction against a starting $11,300 at Taki Dent — and it's also the treatment where being honest about the total cost matters most. Your hotel and VIP transfers (airport ↔ hotel ↔ clinic and back) are included in Taki Dent's price, so the trip cost you add is mainly your own flight for each visit — a New York–Antalya round trip is typically around $700–$1,200 — plus meals, travel insurance, and a sensible contingency for any add-ons the scan reveals (grafting, extractions, or a change in the plan).

Even after adding all of that honestly, a full-mouth reconstruction abroad typically still lands far below the New York range — the saving on a case this size is large enough that travel costs, while real, don't erase it. But we'd rather you plan around the true all-in number than a headline clinical figure, because a surprise is the fastest way for a genuine saving to feel like a bad decision. For the New York side of the maths, see our guide, full-mouth restoration: US vs Turkey, and our full price comparison methodology for how every figure on this site is built.

The multi-trip timeline

How many trips a full-mouth case takes depends heavily on which path — or mix — your plan follows, and it's one of the things your written quote pins down before you book anything.

  1. Consultation and written plan (from Brooklyn)

    We review your case and any records you have and share them with Taki Dent's clinical team. Where a CBCT scan isn't yet available, the assessment and scan are the first clinical step — and the individualized written quote follows from it, before any flight is booked.

  2. First visit — the major work

    For a Path 1 rehabilitation this is where teeth are prepared and restored, often across a single longer stay. For a Path 2 implant case, this is where extractions and implant placement happen, usually with a fixed temporary bridge fitted so you don't fly home without teeth — followed by a months-long healing period at home.

  3. Healing period (Path 2)

    Implants need time to integrate with the jawbone — typically four to six months — during which you're home in New York using a temporary bridge and following Taki Dent's written instructions. A pure Path 1 case usually has no such wait, which is part of why it can sometimes be done in fewer trips.

  4. Second visit — final restoration

    For implant cases, a shorter return trip fits the final zirconia bridges once healing is confirmed. A combined Path 1 / Path 2 case is sequenced so the restorative and implant work come together into one finished result, with the bite planned across the whole mouth.

Planning the bite across the whole mouth

A full-mouth case is as much about how all the teeth come together as it is about any single tooth. When many teeth are restored or replaced at once, the occlusion — how the upper and lower teeth meet, and at what height — is being rebuilt from scratch, and getting it right is central to comfort, function and how long the work lasts. A bite that's even slightly wrong across a full reconstruction can cause soreness, jaw discomfort, and premature wear or fracture of the new restorations. This is why full-mouth planning takes assessment and time, and why patients with a history of grinding (bruxism) are almost always advised to wear a night guard to protect a large investment. Rebuilding a collapsed or worn bite to a healthy height is one of the more technical things dentistry does, and it's a reason full-mouth work should never be rushed into on a walk-in "package" basis.

Risks and honest limitations

A full-mouth restoration combines several treatments, so it carries the combined risks of each, and they deserve to be stated plainly rather than buried. Restored natural teeth can still need root canals, can be sensitive after preparation, and can decay at the margins if hygiene isn't maintained. Implant placement carries surgical risks — failure to integrate, infection, nerve or sinus injury, and, longer term, peri-implantitis around the implants if aftercare lapses. Extractions and grafting add their own healing and risk. A rebuilt bite can need adjustment. Crowns, veneers and bridges are not permanent and eventually need maintenance or replacement. Because the case is large, the consequences of getting the planning wrong — or of skipping the scan-first, tooth-by-tooth diagnosis — are larger too. Individual outcomes vary, and no clinic anywhere can honestly promise a guaranteed result across an entire mouth regardless of a patient's own healing, general health, bite habits or aftercare. Discussing these risks candidly against your specific case is part of what a consultation is for.

Our limited written warranty framework

Taki Dent offers a follow-up and limited written warranty framework for eligible full-mouth treatment, subject to the specific conditions published in your treatment documentation — attending recommended check-ups, following aftercare, maintaining oral hygiene, and wearing a night guard where one is recommended. Because a full-mouth case combines different treatments, the warranty terms can differ by component — the conditions on an implant fixture aren't the same as those on a crown or veneer — so it's worth reading each. We deliberately do not describe any of this as an unconditional "lifetime guarantee," because no responsible clinic can promise a guaranteed outcome across a whole mouth regardless of aftercare, general health or unforeseen complications. Ask to see the written warranty terms for each part of your plan before you travel — we can help you request this during a consultation, and we cover the wider aftercare and warranty framework on our How It Works page. Keeping the full written documentation — itemized invoice, materials and implant details per tooth or arch — also makes any future follow-up with a local New York dentist far more straightforward.

Frequently asked questions

Is "full-mouth restoration" a single procedure with one price?

No, and any clinic quoting a single flat "full mouth" price without first establishing which teeth can be saved is skipping the most important step. Full-mouth restoration describes a goal — restoring the whole mouth — that can be reached by two very different routes: rehabilitating your own savable teeth with crowns, veneers and onlays, or removing unsavable teeth and placing an implant-supported full arch such as All-on-4 or All-on-6. They involve different procedures, timelines, risks and costs. Which one suits you is a clinical determination made from a CBCT scan, and it results in an individualized written quote — not a package number.

How do I know whether my own teeth can be saved?

You don't, from home, and neither can we — it's a clinical judgement Taki Dent makes from a CBCT scan and assessment. In broad terms, teeth that are decayed, worn or broken but still have a healthy root and enough sound structure can often be restored with crowns, veneers or onlays. Teeth that are badly broken down below the gum, have failed root canals, severe bone loss from gum disease, or are loose are more likely to need removing and replacing with implants. Most real cases are a mix, and the plan is built tooth by tooth.

Why can't you give me a fixed price now?

Because an honest full-mouth price depends on findings only a scan can reveal — how many teeth are savable, how many crowns or veneers versus how many implants, whether extractions, bone grafts or sinus lifts are needed, and which materials suit your bite. A responsible quote is issued in writing after Taki Dent reviews your CBCT scan and assessment. We can give you the published starting figures and ranges on this page so you can gauge whether it's worth exploring, but a figure specific to your mouth requires the assessment first.

Is the warranty on a full-mouth restoration unconditional?

No. Taki Dent offers a limited written warranty framework for eligible treatment, subject to the specific conditions published in your treatment documentation — attending recommended check-ups, following aftercare, maintaining hygiene, and wearing a night guard where recommended. Because a full-mouth case combines several treatments, the warranty terms can differ by component (an implant fixture versus a crown, for example). We do not describe any of it as an unconditional "lifetime guarantee," because no clinic can promise a guaranteed outcome across a whole mouth regardless of aftercare, general health or unforeseen complications.

Find out which path — or mix — actually fits your mouth

A free, no-obligation consultation is the first step toward a scan-based, written plan — saving what's worth saving, replacing only what has to be replaced — and an individualized estimate from Taki Dent in Antalya.