If you're missing all or most of your teeth in either jaw — or facing the extraction of remaining teeth — full mouth dental implants are the modern solution. Four to six implants per arch support a complete fixed bridge of teeth that functions like natural teeth and lasts decades. At Elite Oral Surgery in Bonney Lake — 30-45 minutes south of Seattle — the all-inclusive price is $15,000 per arch with the final zirconia bridge included.
Schedule a Consultation →Bone grafting and zygomatic implants priced separately when clinically required, in writing, before any surgical date is scheduled.
Schedule Consultation"Full mouth dental implants" is the broad term for replacing all teeth in one or both jaws with a fixed implant-supported bridge. Rather than placing one implant per missing tooth (which requires 8-14 implants per arch and is more expensive), full mouth implant therapy uses four to six strategically placed implants to support a complete bridge of all teeth in that arch.
For Seattle-area patients researching tooth replacement options, full mouth dental implants are typically the appropriate solution when you're missing all or most of your teeth in an arch — or when remaining teeth need to be extracted because of advanced disease or structural failure. Same-day provisional teeth are placed at the surgical visit, so you leave the appointment with a full set of teeth, not without them. The final zirconia bridge is fabricated and placed 10-12 weeks later, after the implants integrate with bone.
The terminology you may have encountered. Full mouth dental implants is a broad term that covers several specific protocols. All-on-4 uses four implants per arch and is the most common protocol — it's the standard option for most full mouth cases. All-on-6 uses six implants for additional redundancy in specific clinical situations. Zygomatic implants address severe maxillary atrophy when traditional protocols aren't viable. "All-on-X" is a generic term for any all-on-N protocol. "Permanent dentures," "implant-supported dentures," and "teeth in a day" all refer to similar or related procedures. The underlying concept is the same — replacing all teeth in an arch with a fixed prosthesis supported by 4-6 implants.
What's not full mouth implants. Conventional dentures (removable false teeth held in by suction) are not implants. Implant-retained dentures (removable dentures that clip onto 2-4 implants) are a hybrid — implants are involved but the prosthesis is still removable. Single dental implants replacing individual missing teeth are a different procedure. For a thorough comparison of all the options including conventional dentures and implant-retained dentures, see our Comparing Full Arch Options page.
A side-by-side comparison of full mouth dental implant pricing across the Seattle market — chains, multi-provider practices, and Elite. Pricing reflects publicly stated ranges where available and patient-reported pricing for practices that don't publish.
Seattle-area independent multi-provider practices and prosthodontist offices typically run $25,000-$50,000 per arch for full mouth implant cases — patient-reported pricing in the South Sound market. Specific quotes vary based on materials, complexity, and which provider model you're working with.
What explains the price differential. Elite's $15,000 per arch reflects the structural advantages of independent owner-operator practice in a Pierce County commercial market 30-45 minutes south of Seattle: lower geographic overhead than Seattle/Bellevue real estate, single-doctor model without multi-specialist team overhead, full-arch as the practice's primary specialty, and no DSO management fees or chain corporate parent overhead. The clinical work is the same — same titanium implants from major manufacturers, same zirconia from established dental labs, same techniques drawn from peer-reviewed literature.
For a more thorough comparison framework that applies to any practice you're evaluating, see our Comparing Full Arch Options page with the six-question evaluation framework.
Seattle to Bonney Lake is 30-45 minutes via I-5 South to SR-410 East in typical off-peak traffic. Rush hour can extend the drive to 60+ minutes; most Seattle patients schedule mid-morning or early-afternoon appointments to avoid peak congestion. Many Seattle-area patients take the Sounder commuter rail to Sumner Station and use rideshare for the final mile when scheduling allows.
For full mouth implant treatment specifically, the timeline involves 4-5 visits over 12 weeks: consultation (1-2 hours), surgery day (4-6 hours including provisional placement), prototype try-in at week 8 (1 hour), final delivery at week 10-12 (2 hours), and follow-ups. Seattle patients typically describe the drive as "worth it for the cost differential" — and after the initial consultation visit, many of the follow-up appointments are quick and don't require taking a full day off.
For full mouth implant surgery day (the longest visit), patients typically arrive by 7:30-8:30 AM under IV sedation. The procedure itself takes 3-5 hours including extractions, implant placement, and same-day provisional placement. Patients are typically discharged by mid-afternoon. You'll need a driver to bring you home — IV sedation requires a sober adult driver regardless of distance. Many Seattle patients arrange a family member to drive down with them; others stay at one of the Bonney Lake or Auburn hotels for the night and drive back the following morning when fully recovered from sedation.
For the Week 8 prototype try-in and Week 10-12 final delivery visits, the appointments are shorter (1-2 hours) and don't require sedation. Most Seattle patients handle these as half-day trips, scheduling the appointment mid-morning and being back in Seattle by early afternoon.
Full mouth implant treatment spans approximately 12 weeks from surgery to final restoration. Here's the standard workflow with timing notes for what to expect at each visit.
Cone Beam CT imaging assesses your bone, sinus position, and overall anatomy. Medical history review, sedation evaluation, and a written treatment plan with itemized pricing. Typically 60-90 minutes. For Seattle-area patients, this is the only visit before surgery day.
Under IV sedation: any remaining teeth are removed, four to six implants per arch are placed (depending on the protocol clinically appropriate for your case), and same-day printed PMMA provisional teeth are delivered. You leave with teeth, not without them. Typically 4-6 hours total visit length.
A printed prototype of your final teeth is tried in to verify fit, bite, and aesthetics. Adjustments are made before the final zirconia bridge is fabricated. Typically a 60-90 minute visit; no sedation required.
Your final zirconia bridge is delivered and secured to the implants. This is the restoration designed to last 20+ years with appropriate maintenance. Typically a 90-minute visit. The provisional comes off; the final goes in.
Total visits for Seattle patients: typically 4-5 trips to Bonney Lake over 12 weeks. Beyond the four visits above, one short follow-up at 1-2 weeks post-surgery confirms healing. After final delivery, follow-ups at 3, 6, and 12 months are part of the standard care included in pricing — these are 30-minute visits that many Seattle patients schedule around other Pierce County trips.
This is the most common Seattle-area patient question. The short answer: no, the price reflects a sustainable independent practice business model in a Pierce County commercial market — not cut clinical quality. Same titanium implants from major manufacturers (Nobel Biocare, Straumann, Zimmer Biomet, etc.). Same zirconia from established U.S. dental labs. Same surgical techniques drawn from peer-reviewed literature. Same WA General Anesthesia Permit-authorized IV sedation.
The structural reasons the price is lower than Seattle and ClearChoice: geographic location (Bonney Lake commercial costs are a fraction of Seattle/Bellevue real estate), practice model (single-doctor versus multi-specialist team overhead), operational focus (full-arch is the practice's primary specialty), and ownership structure (independent owner-operator without DSO management fees or chain corporate parent overhead). The math works because the cost structure is fundamentally different.
ClearChoice's published full-arch pricing range is $14,000-$36,000 per arch, with Seattle-area locations typically in the upper portion of that range. The lower end typically reflects PMMA-based long-term provisional restorations (acrylic), not zirconia. The upper end reflects zirconia bridges. Patient-reported pricing for ClearChoice Seattle full mouth cases with zirconia commonly runs $20,000-$35,000 per arch.
Nuvia patient-reported pricing in industry sources runs $25,000-$50,000 per arch. Their marketing emphasizes "permanent teeth in 24 hours" — see our Comparing page FAQ for why this framing is technically misleading (osseointegration takes 4-6 months regardless of which prosthesis is delivered).
Elite at $15,000 per arch all-inclusive with final zirconia included is meaningfully below both chains — typically saving Seattle-area patients $5,000-$35,000 per arch versus the chains.
Three reasons Seattle patients make the drive: price ($5,000-$35,000 in savings per arch), practice structure (single-doctor continuity vs the multi-provider model at most chains and group practices), and pricing transparency (published all-inclusive vs quote-only with potential for tier upgrades and add-ons later).
The Bonney Lake drive is comparable to drives Seattle residents already make for other specialty appointments — to Tacoma General, to specialty practices in Kent or Renton, to medical specialists in the South Sound. It's not an unusual distance for high-value medical care; it is unusual for the cost differential to be this large at this distance.
The honest answer: there are tradeoffs, but they're not clinical quality tradeoffs.
You drive 30-45 minutes instead of 10 minutes to a Seattle practice. You meet one surgeon rather than a multi-specialist team — which is structurally different but not better or worse depending on what you value. The practice is newer (opening February 2027) — Dr. Volland has 8 years of Naval surgical practice but Elite as an entity is less than a year old at launch. Capacity is more limited than at chain centers with multiple surgical chairs and rotating providers — booking can take longer at peak times.
What you don't trade off: clinical quality, materials, sedation safety, regulatory compliance, or post-operative care. The cost savings come from business model differences, not corner-cutting.
Yes. Elite is a single-doctor practice — there is one surgeon, and that surgeon (Dr. Volland) personally performs your consultation, your surgery, every prototype try-in, the final delivery, and every follow-up visit. No partner. No rotating provider. No "we'll see who's available."
For Seattle patients comparing full mouth implant practices, this is one of the clearest structural differences from chain implant centers and multi-surgeon group practices common in the King County market. Whether single-doctor continuity matters to you is a personal preference — but the difference is real and the question is worth asking of any practice you evaluate.
For true emergencies (significant bleeding, signs of severe infection, anaphylaxis), warrant immediate ED evaluation regardless of distance from your surgical practice. Seattle is well-served by emergency departments with experience managing oral and maxillofacial post-operative issues. For urgent but non-emergency concerns (excessive swelling, increasing pain after day 3, suspected dry socket), we provide phone guidance and arrange same-day or next-day evaluation when warranted.
Most post-operative concerns can be assessed by phone with photos before deciding if travel back to Bonney Lake is needed. The "I might need to drive 45 minutes back" concern is real but rarely materialized for routine post-operative care.
No. We describe the workflow accurately: same-day provisional teeth (printed PMMA) at surgery, then prototype try-in at week 8, then final zirconia bridge at week 10-12 after osseointegration is clinically confirmed.
The "permanent teeth in 24 hours" framing used in some chain marketing is technically misleading because osseointegration — the biological process of implants fusing with bone — takes 4-6 months regardless of which prosthesis is delivered on day one. A zirconia bridge delivered 24 hours after surgery still functions as a transitional restoration during osseointegration. Multiple independent dental sources have characterized this framing as misleading. We use accurate timeline language because it matches the biology.
Elite is in-network with most major dental insurance carriers. We verify your specific coverage before treatment and provide a written estimate of patient responsibility. For full-arch cases, dental insurance typically provides limited coverage, but medical insurance may cover meaningful portions when the case qualifies as medically necessary — see our insurance page for verification options.
Financing is available through several partners — see our financing page for partner options, terms, and the payment calculator. HSA and FSA funds are eligible for all our procedures.
For full mouth implant cases, the consultation at Elite is complimentary — including 3D imaging and a written treatment plan with itemized pricing. Bring quotes from other Seattle-area providers; we welcome the comparison. The drive is 30-45 minutes south; the consultation tells you whether the structural differences and pricing differential are meaningful for your specific situation.
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