At Rodin Dental Office Tokyo, a single dental implant runs ¥578,800–¥588,800 (tax included), with the exact figure confirmed in a written estimate after examination. The initial consultation (¥19,900) and diagnostic imaging such as CT (from ¥15,900) are charged separately. Implant treatment typically spans two visits to Tokyo — placement, a healing period of several months, then the final restoration — which our implant timeline guide covers in detail (linked in the related reading below).
Dental implants are an elective (self-pay) treatment and are not covered by Japanese National Health Insurance. Whether an implant is the right option — rather than a bridge or denture — depends on your individual case; our comparison guide walks through that decision.
Single implant pricing in Tokyo: the numbers
| Item | Fee |
|---|---|
| Single dental implant | ¥578,800–¥588,800 per tooth |
| Initial consultation (exam, intraoral photos, written treatment plan) | ¥19,900 — separate |
| Diagnostic imaging | CT from ¥15,900; X-rays from ¥5,900 — separate |
| IV sedation (optional) | From ¥165,000 per session |
| Bone grafting / sinus lift (where needed) | Quoted per case in your written plan |
| Full-arch alternative: All-on-4 | From ¥3,500,000 per arch (+¥300,000 intensive short-term plan for international patients) |
The per-tooth figure covers the complete restoration — implant body (¥299,900), abutment (¥99,000), and ceramic crown (¥179,900, IPS e.max or Zirconia). Your written estimate itemizes exactly what your figure includes before any treatment begins — the figure you see is the figure you pay for the planned treatment.
What's included — and what's separate
Included: the implant treatment itemized in your written plan — surgical placement and the restorative steps listed for your case.
Separate: the initial consultation (¥19,900 — comprehensive oral examination, intraoral photography, and a written treatment plan), diagnostic imaging (CT is essential for implant planning), optional IV sedation, and any preparatory treatment your examination reveals — for example, an extraction, gum treatment that must be completed first, or bone grafting where bone volume is insufficient. None of this is hidden: it appears as line items in your written estimate before you commit.
What actually drives implant pricing
Implant system
Clinics in Japan place a range of internationally documented systems; component and laboratory costs differ by system. Our implant brand comparison guide explains the practical differences — see the related reading below.
Bone condition
If bone volume is insufficient, grafting or a sinus lift adds surgical steps and cost — identified on the CT before anything is scheduled.
Position in the mouth
Front-tooth (aesthetic zone) implants demand more exacting soft-tissue and crown work than molars.
Sedation choice
Local anaesthesia is standard; IV sedation (from ¥165,000) is available for longer procedures or anxious patients.
Number of teeth
Adjacent missing teeth may be restored with fewer implants than teeth (an implant-supported bridge); full-arch cases are usually better served by All-on-4 — see our All-on-4 cost guide in the related reading below.
How Japan compares with the US
US pricing for a complete single-tooth implant varies widely by city and case; commonly published estimates run several thousand US dollars per tooth, frequently in the roughly $3,000–$6,500 range once the implant, abutment, and crown are counted together — treat any such figure as approximate and compare written, itemized quotes rather than headline numbers. At recent exchange rates, ¥578,800–¥588,800 is roughly US$3,800–4,100, with the exact comparison depending on the exchange rate when you travel and on what each quote actually includes.
As with veneers, destinations such as Thailand and Turkey can show lower headline prices than Japan. Look past the headline: which implant system, who places it, what the CT and planning process looks like, what happens if something needs adjustment after you fly home, and whether the estimate is written and itemized. Japan's strengths are consistent: rigorous clinical standards, meticulous planning, and documented, all-inclusive written estimates.
Trip planning: implants usually mean two visits
- Visit 1 (about 5–7 days) — examination, CT, treatment plan confirmation, and implant placement. Any extraction or grafting is scheduled here.
- Healing (about 3–6 months, at home) — the implant integrates with your bone. No need to stay in Japan.
- Visit 2 (about 5–7 days) — the final crown is fitted, adjusted, and checked.
An optional online consultation before you travel can confirm feasibility and rough costs from your photos and any existing X-rays — useful for planning flights, though entirely optional. Our implant timeline guide covers the full schedule in detail.
Risks and who implants are not for
Implant treatment is well established, and most implants integrate successfully — but it is surgery, and honesty about the risks matters more than a sales pitch.
- Implant failure is possible. A small proportion of implants fail to integrate and must be removed, allowed to heal, and in many cases replaced.
- Surgical risks include infection, swelling, and — rarely — nerve disturbance or sinus involvement, which careful CT planning is designed to minimize.
- Smoking and uncontrolled diabetes significantly raise failure risk; we will tell you honestly if your situation needs addressing first.
- Implants need maintenance. Peri-implantitis (gum disease around an implant) can threaten an otherwise successful implant; ongoing hygiene and check-ups are part of the deal.
- No implant is guaranteed for life, and individual results vary — anyone promising otherwise is overselling.
All of this is assessed individually at examination, which is why final figures come after a doctor has seen your CT — not before.
Prices are in JPY, tax included, current as of June 2026; see our fees page for the latest. Dental implants are an elective (self-pay) treatment not covered by Japanese National Health Insurance. Suitability, final pricing, and treatment outcomes depend on individual examination; nothing here is a guarantee of results.
