Surgical Tooth Extractions

When your tooth needs more than a routine extraction.

Some teeth come out easily. Others — broken at the gum line, with curved or fractured roots, fused to the bone, or surrounded by dense bone — require surgical extraction performed by an oral and maxillofacial surgeon. If your dentist has referred you for a surgical extraction, here's what that means and what to expect.

Simple vs. Surgical

The difference your dentist was actually describing.

"Simple" and "surgical" aren't statements about how complicated the procedure feels for you as a patient — both are performed under appropriate anesthesia, both are routine for the providers performing them. The distinction is about the technique required to remove the tooth from the bone safely.

Performed by Most General Dentists

Simple Extraction

The tooth is visible above the gum line, has a relatively straightforward root structure, and can be removed using forceps and gentle elevation without cutting the gum or removing any bone. Most general dentists perform simple extractions routinely.

  • Tooth is fully erupted and visible
  • Root structure is relatively straight
  • No bone removal needed for access
  • Local anesthesia typically sufficient
  • Quick procedure (10-20 minutes typical)
Referred to an Oral Surgeon

Surgical Extraction

The tooth requires more than forceps and elevation. The procedure may involve creating a small incision in the gum tissue, removing a small amount of bone for access, sectioning the tooth into pieces for removal, or specialized instruments for retained roots. Performed under IV sedation in our office.

  • Tooth is broken, fractured, or below gum line
  • Root structure is curved, fused, or hooked
  • Dense surrounding bone requires modification
  • IV sedation standard for patient comfort
  • Longer procedure (30-60 minutes typical)
  • Bone graft typically placed at the time of extraction
When Surgical Extraction Is Needed

Six clinical situations that mean your dentist will refer.

If any of these apply to your tooth, simple extraction is unlikely to be successful and your general dentist will typically refer you to an oral and maxillofacial surgeon.

Situation 01

Tooth broken at or below the gum line.

When there's no longer enough tooth structure visible above the gum to grasp with forceps, simple extraction isn't possible. Surgical access is required to expose the remaining tooth and root structure, often involving a small incision and minimal bone removal.

Situation 02

Curved, hooked, or fused roots.

Teeth with severely curved roots, hooked tips, or roots fused to surrounding bone (a condition called ankylosis) cannot be removed with simple forceps technique. Surgical extraction allows controlled sectioning of the tooth and individual root removal without fracturing surrounding bone.

Situation 03

Retained roots after a previous extraction.

Sometimes a tooth fractures during simple extraction, leaving root tips behind in the bone. These retained roots may need to be surgically removed if they're causing infection, interfering with implant placement, or otherwise creating clinical problems.

Situation 04

Dense bone surrounding the tooth.

Lower posterior teeth (especially in younger adults) and teeth in patients with very dense jawbone may require surgical access and minimal bone removal even when the tooth itself looks straightforward. Forcing simple extraction in dense bone risks tooth fracture.

Situation 05

Patients requiring IV sedation.

For anxious patients, patients with multiple teeth requiring extraction at one time, patients with medical conditions requiring sedation management, or patients who simply prefer not to be awake — surgical extraction at an oral surgeon's office under IV sedation provides a controlled environment that general dental offices typically can't.

Situation 06

Concurrent procedures: grafting, implants, multiple teeth.

When extraction is combined with bone grafting, immediate implant placement, or multiple-tooth extractions in a single visit, the case is typically managed surgically by an oral surgeon. Combining procedures in one appointment under sedation reduces total surgical exposure for the patient.

Patient Education Resources

Learn more about extractions and post-op care.

Coming Soon · Educational Video

Surgical Extraction: Animated Patient Explainer

Video Placeholder AAOMS member-produced animated explainer video on surgical extractions and post-operative care will be embedded here. Video file URL to be added once downloaded from the AAOMS member portal.
What to Expect

The procedure, plainly explained.

Surgical extractions at our office are performed under IV sedation as the standard. You'll be asleep during the procedure, which typically takes 30-60 minutes depending on case complexity. Most patients are surprised by how routine the experience feels — the IV sedation eliminates the anxiety and discomfort that often comes to mind when patients hear "surgical extraction."

Anesthesia and timing. IV sedation administered by Dr. Volland in our office. WA General Anesthesia Permit-authorized; ACLS, PALS, ATLS, BLS-certified. You'll be asleep for the procedure and won't remember it. You'll need a driver to take you home and stay with you for several hours.

The procedure. After sedation is established, the area is locally anesthetized. The surgeon then accesses the tooth through whatever combination of techniques the case requires — gum incision, minimal bone removal, sectioning the tooth into pieces, removing root fragments, or specialized instruments for ankylosed teeth. Bone grafting is typically placed at the same time as the extraction if you have natural teeth on either side of the extraction site (see our bone grafting page for why).

Healing timeline. Mild to moderate swelling and discomfort for 3-5 days. Most patients return to normal activities within 2-3 days. Soft food diet for the first week. Avoid spitting, smoking, and using straws for 5-7 days to prevent dry socket and protect any graft material. Sutures (if used) typically dissolve over 7-14 days. Follow-up appointment at 1 week to verify healing.

Post-operative care. Pain management with prescribed medications and over-the-counter options. Ice packs for the first 24-48 hours to reduce swelling. Gentle rinses with warm salt water after the first 24 hours. Avoid vigorous physical activity for 2-3 days. Most patients describe the recovery as easier than they expected.

Cost & Insurance

What it costs, and what's typically covered.

Surgical extraction cost varies based on case complexity. Routine surgical extractions typically cost $300-$600 per tooth. More complex cases (deeply impacted teeth, ankylosed teeth, multi-rooted teeth requiring sectioning) can range higher. Bone grafting and IV sedation are typically priced separately from the extraction itself.

Insurance coverage for surgical extractions is generally good — most dental insurance plans cover surgical extractions as basic or major services at 50-80%. IV sedation coverage varies; some plans cover it when medically necessary in conjunction with surgical procedures, others classify it as elective. We verify your specific coverage before treatment and provide a written estimate of patient responsibility.

HSA and FSA funds are eligible for surgical extraction expenses. For multi-tooth cases or cases combined with implant placement, financing options through our partner network can spread costs across multiple months. See our financing page for partner options.

Frequently Asked Questions

Questions patients actually ask.

Will I be awake during a surgical extraction?

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Standard practice at our office for surgical extractions is IV sedation — you'll be asleep during the procedure and won't remember it. You'll be breathing on your own throughout, and you'll wake up afterward feeling groggy but otherwise comfortable. Most patients describe the experience as much easier than they expected.

If you specifically prefer to remain awake under local anesthesia for a routine surgical extraction, that's available — patient choice is preserved when clinically appropriate. The default presentation is sedation; the choice is yours.

How long does the recovery take?

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Most patients return to normal activities within 2-3 days. Mild to moderate swelling and tenderness for 3-5 days. Soft food diet for the first week. Sutures dissolve over 7-14 days. Full healing of the gum tissue takes about 2-3 weeks; complete bone healing of the extraction site takes several months.

You can typically work the day after a surgical extraction unless your job requires heavy physical exertion or speaking extensively. Many patients schedule the procedure for a Friday morning to allow weekend recovery before returning to work Monday.

Why does the extraction site need a bone graft?

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If you have natural teeth on either side of the extraction site, bone grafting at the time of extraction protects the bone supporting those neighboring teeth. Without grafting, the bone resorption that occurs after extraction extends laterally — affecting the bone supporting the teeth on either side, leading to exposed roots, deeper periodontal pockets, and compromised long-term prognosis of those teeth.

For more on the rationale, healing timeline, and material options, see our bone grafting page. Most surgical extractions at our office include socket preservation grafting performed during the same procedure under the same anesthesia.

What if I have multiple teeth that need surgical extraction?

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Multiple-tooth extractions in a single appointment are routine in oral surgery practice. Removing several teeth in one session under IV sedation reduces total anesthesia exposure, total recovery time, and total cost compared to staging extractions across multiple visits. Many patients facing significant restorative work opt for single-session multi-tooth extraction.

For full-arch cases — when all remaining teeth in an arch need to come out as part of full-arch implant therapy — the extractions are typically performed at the same surgical visit as implant placement, all under IV sedation. See our full-arch implants page for that workflow.

Does Dr. Volland's practice take referrals from any general dentist?

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Yes. We accept referrals from any general dentist, regardless of their geographic location or whether you've been referred to our practice before. Your dentist can send a referral with imaging and a brief clinical note; our office will contact you to schedule a consultation. Most surgical extractions can be scheduled within 1-2 weeks of referral; urgent cases (severe pain, active infection) are typically accommodated same-day or next-day.

For surgical extractions, a referral from your general dentist is requested. If you don't currently have a general dentist and need a surgical extraction, contact our office and we can discuss your options.

What if my insurance won't cover the IV sedation?

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Insurance coverage for IV sedation varies. Many plans cover sedation when it's documented as medically necessary in conjunction with surgical procedures (which is typically the case for surgical extractions). Some plans classify it as elective. We verify your specific coverage before treatment and provide a written estimate of any patient responsibility for sedation.

If sedation isn't covered and you'd prefer not to pay out-of-pocket, local anesthesia is available for routine surgical extractions where clinically appropriate. We'll discuss your options at consultation. HSA and FSA funds can also be used to cover sedation costs.

Begin

Get the extraction handled under sedation, in one visit.

If your dentist has referred you for a surgical extraction, schedule a consultation. Most cases can be evaluated and scheduled within 1-2 weeks; urgent cases involving pain or infection are accommodated same-day or next-day.

Schedule a Consultation →