Every year, thousands of UK patients ask their NHS dentist about dental implants — and most are told the same thing: implants are not available on the NHS for routine tooth loss. This guide explains exactly when NHS implants are available, what criteria apply, what they actually cost on the NHS, and what your realistic alternatives are.
Are Dental Implants Available on the NHS?
The short answer is: rarely. NHS dental implants are provided only when there is a clear clinical need that cannot be met by conventional dentures or bridges. NICE guidelines and NHS commissioning policies restrict implants to:
- Cancer treatment: Patients who have undergone jaw resection or radiotherapy that prevents normal denture-bearing
- Trauma: Severe facial injury resulting in bone loss or multiple missing teeth where implant-retained prosthetics are clinically necessary
- Craniofacial conditions: Hypodontia (congenitally missing teeth), cleft palate, or ectodermal dysplasia with multiple missing teeth
- Significant medical need: Patients with severe gag reflex, neurological conditions, or psychological need where conventional dentures are genuinely contraindicated and documented
Not covered: Routine tooth loss (decay, gum disease, old age), cosmetic reasons, general preference over dentures or bridges, or patient convenience.
NHS Dental Implant Cost (When Available)
| Treatment | NHS Charge | Band | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Complex treatment (implants) | £306.80 | Band 3 | 2024/25 charge — all treatment in course |
| Hospital-based treatment (NHSE referral) | Free | — | Only if referred for clinical indication; hospital sets charge |
| Exempt patients (under 18, pregnant, income-related) | Free | — | If qualifying criteria met |
The NHS Band 3 charge (£306.80 in 2024/25) covers all treatment in a course of care. If you qualify for NHS implants, you pay the Band 3 charge regardless of how many implants are placed or what additional procedures (bone grafts, sinus lifts) are required. This is only relevant if you have been accepted for NHS treatment on clinical grounds.
How to Apply for NHS Dental Implants
- Ask your NHS dentist for a referral. Your dentist must assess whether your case meets NHS implant criteria. They will document the clinical justification.
- Referral to a specialist or hospital dental unit. NHS implant treatment is usually provided by Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery (OMFS) departments at NHS hospitals or by specialist dental centres commissioned by NHS England.
- Assessment appointment. You will be assessed by a specialist who will confirm eligibility. This can take 6–18+ months depending on your area.
- Treatment planning and implant placement. If accepted, treatment proceeds at NHS cost.
NHS Dental Implant Waiting Times
Waiting times for NHS specialist dental services vary dramatically by area. In some London trusts, waits for an initial OMFS assessment can exceed 24 months. In some areas, NHS commissioning of routine implant treatment has effectively been halted pending new guidelines. If your case is genuinely clinically eligible, your dentist can escalate via an urgent referral pathway, but routine cases face long waits.
What If I Don’t Qualify — What Are My Options?
| Option | Cost (per tooth) | Wait Time | Pros |
|---|---|---|---|
| Private UK implant | £2,000–3,000 | 1–4 weeks | GDC regulated, local aftercare |
| Turkey implant | £500–900 | Book within weeks | 70% saving, premium brands available |
| Hungary / Poland implant | £700–1,200 | Book within weeks | EU regulated, shorter travel |
| NHS bridge (if eligible) | £306.80 (Band 3) | Varies | Lowest cost, NHS funded |
| NHS partial denture | £65.20–306.80 | Weeks | Lowest cost, removable |
Frequently Asked Questions — NHS Dental Implants
How much do dental implants cost on the NHS?
NHS dental implants cost £306.80 (Band 3 charge, 2024/25) when provided under NHS treatment — but they are only available in exceptional clinical circumstances. Most patients do not qualify. For eligible patients treated in hospital OMFS departments, there may be no patient charge at all. Private implants in the UK cost £2,000–3,000; in Turkey £500–900; in Hungary/Poland £700–1,200.
Can you get dental implants on the NHS for free?
Yes — if you are exempt from NHS dental charges (under 18, pregnant, receiving certain benefits, or on a low income with an HC1 certificate) AND you qualify clinically for NHS implants, your treatment will be free. However, qualifying clinically is the harder barrier: NHS implants are only available for cancer reconstruction, severe trauma, congenital conditions, or cases where conventional dentures are genuinely contraindicated.
How long is the NHS waiting list for dental implants?
NHS specialist dental waiting times vary enormously by area. Initial OMFS assessment waits range from 6 months in some areas to 24+ months in others. Treatment following assessment adds further time. For most patients who do not have a clear clinical indication, the realistic path is private treatment — either in the UK or abroad.
What is the cheapest way to get dental implants in the UK?
The cheapest legitimate options for dental implants from the UK are: (1) dental schools — universities offering treatment at heavily reduced rates (£600–1,500 per implant) with students supervised by qualified clinicians; (2) dental tourism to Turkey (£500–900 per implant) or Hungary/Poland (£700–1,200) including flights and hotel; (3) private UK clinics in lower-cost areas (outside London). Dental tourism typically saves £3,000–10,000 on a full-mouth case.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are dental implants ever free on the NHS?
Dental implants are not free on the NHS. Even when approved, they fall under Band 3 charges at £319.10 (2026 rate). Free treatment only applies to patients exempt from NHS charges (under 18, pregnant, on certain benefits). Implants are rarely approved at all and only for specific medical conditions.
Can I get dental implants on the NHS for missing teeth?
Only if the teeth were lost due to cancer treatment, severe trauma, or a congenital defect. Missing teeth caused by decay or gum disease do not qualify for NHS implants regardless of how many teeth are missing.
How much does a dental implant cost privately in the UK in 2026?
A single dental implant costs £1,500–£3,000 privately in the UK in 2026. All-on-4 full arch treatment costs £8,000–£14,000 per jaw. London practices typically charge at the higher end.
Is it safe to get dental implants in Turkey instead of the UK?
Yes, when you choose an accredited clinic. Reputable Turkish implant centres hold JCI accreditation, use European implant brands (Straumann, Nobel, Osstem), and employ postgraduate-trained dentists. Risks are avoidable by checking accreditation, confirming implant brands in writing, and reading verified UK patient reviews.