Sydney · NSW · 2000
Dental Implants in Sydney, NSW
Urgent dental implants service in Sydney? We connect you with licensed local providers. Typical cost $4,500-$35,000. Free quotes in 60 seconds.
Best dental implant dentist in Australia?
A single dental implant in Australia in 2026 costs $4,500 to $7,000 all-up (implant post + abutment + crown). All-on-4 full arch implants cost $25,000-$35,000 per arch. Mini implants cost $2,000-$3,500 each. Private health insurance with major dental covers $1,000-$2,500 per implant. Bali, Thailand and Turkey offer implants for $1,200-$2,500 each but local follow-up is limited and complications can be expensive to fix in Australia. Most quality Australian implant dentists offer payment plans (Afterpay, MediPay).
15M+
Australians visiting a dentist annually
23,000+
Dentists registered in Australia
$11.5B
Australian dental industry size
$1,132/2 years
Children eligible for CDBS bulk-billing
Sydney at a glance
Sydney (2000) is a inner-city CBD suburb of Sydney, NSW, approximately 0 km from the Sydney CBD. Home to around 240,000 residents with a median age of 35 and a median household income of $2,200/week (ABS Census 2021). The median detached house price is approximately $1900k (2026). Local landmarks include Circular Quay.
Population
240,000
Median age
35
Median income / wk
$2,200
Km from CBD
0
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Top Dentists serving Sydney Providers in Australia
Independently compared. Updated April 2026.
Sydney Dental
Sydney CBD comprehensive dental practice with cosmetic and implant focus.
Pacific Smiles Group
National dental group with 130+ practices. Health insurance partnerships and same-day appointments.
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Dentist FAQs — Sydney
How much does a dental check-up and clean cost in Sydney (Sydney)?
Without insurance: $180-$320 for a check-up, scale and clean (item 011, 012, 114). With basic extras dental cover, typical out-of-pocket is $30-$100. Many private health funds offer "no gap" cleanings at preferred providers. Children under 17 may be eligible for the Child Dental Benefits Schedule (CDBS) — up to $1,132 over 2 years bulk-billed if family receives Family Tax Benefit Part A.
How do I find an emergency dentist?
For genuine emergencies (severe pain, swelling, knocked-out tooth, uncontrolled bleeding): call your regular dentist first — most have after-hours numbers. Capital city CBDs have dedicated emergency dentists open 7 days, evenings, and holidays (Sydney: 1300 Smiles Emergency, Melbourne: Smile Solutions, Brisbane: 1300SMILES). Hospital emergency departments handle dental trauma but rarely treat pain. Cost: $250-$450 for emergency assessment and treatment.
Are dental implants worth the cost?
For most people with missing teeth, yes — implants are the gold standard. They preserve jawbone (which deteriorates after tooth loss), function like natural teeth, last 20+ years with proper care, and don't damage adjacent teeth (unlike bridges). Cost-per-year: $200-$350/year over 20 years, comparable to other dental work. Alternatives like bridges ($2,500-$4,000) or dentures ($1,200-$5,000) cost less upfront but have functional and aesthetic limitations.
What's included in Sydney private health insurance dental waiting period?
Standard waiting periods: 2 months general dental (cleanings, fillings, x-rays), 12 months major dental (crowns, bridges, implants, orthodontics), 12 months for orthodontics. Switching between funds at the same level: waiting periods usually waived. Joining for the first time: full waiting period applies. Pre-existing conditions: dental conditions present before joining are still covered after waiting periods (unlike some other health conditions).
How do I get cheap dental work?
Options ranked by reliability: 1) Public dental services (eligibility based on Centrelink) — free but waitlists can be 6-24 months. 2) Dental schools (Melbourne, Sydney, Adelaide universities) — student-performed work supervised by professors, 50-70% cheaper. 3) Bulk-billed children's dentistry via CDBS. 4) Major dental insurance with no-gap providers. 5) Payment plans (Afterpay, MediPay, Humm) for one-off larger work. Avoid cheap overseas dental — initial savings often disappear with complications.
Should I go to Bali or Thailand for dental work?
Dental tourism saves 50-70% on major work (implants, veneers, crowns) but carries real risks: variable regulation standards, language barriers, no follow-up care, complications expensive to fix in Australia, and Australian dentists generally won't guarantee overseas work. Best for: simple cosmetic procedures, full mouth rehabilitation when budget is the main constraint, patients who can return for follow-up. Worst for: complex cases needing multiple visits or potentially complex follow-up.
What's the difference between a dentist, an orthodontist and a periodontist?
Dentist (5-year degree): general care, fillings, cleanings, basic extractions, simple cosmetic work. Orthodontist (additional 3 years specialist training): braces, Invisalign, jaw alignment, complex bites. Periodontist (additional 3 years): gum disease treatment, gum grafting, dental implant placement. Endodontist (additional 3 years): complex root canals, retreatment. Oral surgeon (additional 4-6 years): complex extractions, jaw surgery, implants. Specialists charge 50-100% more than general dentists for their area.
How often should I see a dentist?
Standard recommendation: every 6 months for a check-up and clean. People with healthy teeth and gums can sometimes extend to 12-month visits. People with gum disease, diabetes, smokers, or cosmetic dental work should visit every 3-4 months. Children should start dental visits by age 1 (or when first tooth appears). Pregnancy increases gum disease risk — book a clean in the second trimester. Always see a dentist within 24 hours for trauma, severe pain, or facial swelling.