A dental crown typically costs between $800 and $3,000 per tooth in the United States, with national averages around $1,270 to $1,400 depending on material and location, as of 2025..
You probably expected an answer like “around a thousand bucks.” And that’s true—for some people. But the real range is wide enough to leave you overpaying by hundreds of dollars if you don’t know what drives the price.
This article breaks down the actual costs for different crown materials, what your insurance may or may not cover, and a few ways to keep more money in your wallet. Prices are current as of 2025 and vary by location, provider, and your specific dental needs.
What Drives the Big Price Range
The single biggest factor is material. A metal crown on a back molar costs far less than a layered porcelain crown on a front tooth. Your dentist will recommend a material based on the tooth’s position, your bite strength, and cosmetic priorities.
Location changes the number, too. Crowded urban areas with higher overhead tend to charge more than suburban or rural practices. Your dentist’s experience and lab fees also factor in. Even within the same city, quotes can differ by several hundred dollars.
And don’t forget the procedure itself. A routine crown on a healthy tooth is quick. If you need a root canal first, a buildup, or a same-day digital scan, those add line-item fees to your final bill.
Why the Sticker Shock Hits Hard
Most people expect a crown to cost a lot, but they don’t expect the final number to triple the low end. The confusion comes from seeing a cheap online estimate and then getting a quote that’s double or triple that amount. The gap isn’t random—it’s almost always material choice.
Here’s a quick look at how material changes the price:
- Metal (gold or base alloy): $800 to $1,200. Extremely durable, great for molars. The metallic color is the main downside.
- Porcelain-fused-to-metal (PFM): $900 to $1,800. A middle-ground option that blends strength with a tooth-colored outer layer.
- All-porcelain or ceramic: $900 to $2,500. Best for front teeth where appearance matters most. Matching your adjacent teeth takes skill.
- Zirconia: $1,200 to $3,000. A high-strength ceramic that resists chipping and looks natural. Often used for molars and bridges.
- Same-day (CAD/CAM milled): $1,000 to $2,000. Fabricated in-office while you wait. Convenient but requires specialized equipment.
The takeaway: if a dentist quotes you $800, they’re likely suggesting a full-metal crown. If they quote $2,500, it’s probably zirconia or all-porcelain. Always ask which material they’re pricing before comparing quotes.
Insurance — What It Covers and What It Doesn’t
About 61% of adults have private dental insurance, according to data cited by GoodRx. Most plans classify crowns as “major restorative” work and cover 50% of the allowed amount after you meet your deductible. That deductible is typically $50 to $150. You pay the other 50% out of pocket.
Here’s the catch: insurance covers only the cost of a standard crown for that tooth—usually the least-expensive option that’s medically appropriate. If you want a higher-end zirconia crown, you pay the difference between the allowed amount and the actual cost. Some plans also have a waiting period of a few months to a year for major work.
In-network pricing also matters. A CareCredit breakdown of the National Average Crown Cost shows porcelain crowns averaging $1,399, but in-network rates can be hundreds lower. Always ask your dentist for an in-network estimate before scheduling.
| Component | Typical Cost (out-of-pocket) | What Insurance May Cover |
|---|---|---|
| Dental exam (diagnostic) | $50–$100 | Often 80–100% |
| Crown preparation + impression | $400–$800 | Part of the crown fee |
| Lab fee (material cost) | $300–$1,200 | Included in allowed amount |
| Temporary crown | $100–$300 | Usually bundled |
| Final crown placement | $300–$700 | Part of the crown fee |
| Root canal (if needed) | $700–$1,500 | 50–80% as endodontic work |
The total you pay at checkout depends heavily on whether your dentist is in-network and how much the plan allows for a standard crown. Ask for a pre-treatment estimate before any work begins.
Three Ways to Lower Your Out-of-Pocket Cost
If your insurance covers only 50%, the remaining half is still a big number. These steps can shrink the bill:
- Ask for an in-network provider first. In-network rates are usually 20–40% lower than out-of-network. Delta Dental’s out-of-network average sits between $1,100 and $2,000, but in-network can be significantly less.
- Compare quotes from two or three dentists. Crown pricing varies by practice, even within the same city. One dentist may charge $1,200 for a PFM crown while another charges $1,600 for the same material. A half-hour of phone calls can save you $300–$500.
- Use a dental discount plan or financing. Discount plans (not insurance) offer 10–30% off at participating dentists. Financing through CareCredit or similar companies lets you split the cost into monthly payments, often with no interest for 6–12 months.
Some dental schools also offer reduced-cost crowns performed by supervised students. The cost may be 50–70% less than a private practice, though appointments take longer and scheduling is less flexible.
Real-World Cost by State — A Quick Snapshot
Regional variation is real. Here’s what in-network crowns for common materials run in three populous states, based on dental network data:
An Aspen Dental breakdown of the Average Crown Cost Per Tooth puts the national average at $1,269 per tooth, with a range from $902 to $2,051. State-level estimates from dental networks show similar variation:
| State | Typical In-Network Crown Range | Common Materials Used |
|---|---|---|
| California | $800–$3,000 | Porcelain, PFM, Zirconia |
| New York | $800–$2,000 | Zirconia, PFM, Porcelain |
| Texas | $800–$2,500 | Full gold, Zirconia, PFM |
Keep in mind these are in-network ranges. Out-of-network or cash prices can be 10–can be higher. If you live in a higher-cost area, expect the upper half of the range.
The Bottom Line
A dental crown costs anywhere from $800 to $3,000 per tooth, with your final bill determined by material choice, insurance coverage, and where you live. The biggest savings come from choosing an in-network provider, asking for a cost breakdown by material, and comparing quotes before committing.
Your dentist can walk you through the exact out-of-pocket estimate based on your specific tooth’s needs and your plan’s benefits—just ask for it in writing before the first drill touches enamel.
References & Sources
- Carecredit. “Dental Crown Cost Dental Crown Financing” The national average cost of a porcelain crown is $1,399, but can range from $915 to $3,254.
- Aspendental. “Dental Crowns Cost” Dental crowns average $1,269 per tooth, ranging from $902 to $2,051 depending on material and location.
Mo Maruf
I created WellFizz to bridge the gap between vague wellness advice and actionable solutions. My mission is simple: to decode the research and give you practical tools you can actually use.
Beyond the data, I am a passionate traveler. I believe that stepping away from the screen to explore new environments is essential for mental clarity and physical vitality.