2026 Forecast Verified

All-on-4 Dental Implants Cost in New Hampshire (2026)

Moderately higher pricing · Regional price parity: 105.5 · NH

New Hampshire Average
$23,210
▲ +5.5% above national
Typical Range
$15,825 – $31,650
National avg: $22,000
Editorial view of New Hampshire
Regional Pricing Confidence
92% Confidence Index
The New Hampshire Market

What Drives Pricing Here

Three factors explain most of why all-on-4 dental implants costs what it does in New Hampshire.

Regional Price Parity

New Hampshire's cost-of-living index sits at 105.5 — above the national benchmark (100). This directly scales facility and staffing overhead, which flow through to every procedure price.

Specialist Availability

Limited local facility options in New Hampshire can reduce price competition. Consider quotes from neighboring states if the travel is feasible.

Vs. National Benchmark

At +5.5% above the national average ($22,000), New Hampshire sits in premium territory. Likely drivers: high demand, metro concentration, or tier-one facility networks.

State Context

All-on-4 Dental Implants in New Hampshire: What to Know

All-on-4 dental implants are widely available across New Hampshire in cities like Concord, Nashua, Manchester, and Portsmouth. Many practices, such as NHOMS, offer no-obligation consultations, including exams and digital X-rays, to confirm your total cost. While New Hampshire Smiles, the state's Medicaid program, covers adults 21 and over with a $1,500 annual limit (excluding preventive services), it primarily covers removable dentures for qualifying individuals, not All-on-4.

For potential savings, patients near Exeter often travel approximately 30 minutes to North Andover, Massachusetts, for full mouth restorations. Additionally, Lamprey Health Care partners with Solvere Health Mobile Dental Clinics in Raymond and Nashua, offering services under the NH Smiles program. Verify current pricing directly with providers.

Itemized Breakdown

Estimated Cost Breakdown in New Hampshire

At 5.5% above average, all-on-4 dental implants in New Hampshire costs a bit more. Here's the breakdown by component.

Implant Materials

Medical device costs

$5,685 - $10,561

Most significant cost

Surgeon/Dentist Fee

$5,685 - $10,561

Facility Fee

OR time and hospital staffing

$2,437 - $4,526

Anesthesia

Anesthesiologist or CRNA fee

$1,300 - $2,414

Imaging & Lab

Imaging and lab bundle

$1,137 - $2,112

Total Estimated Cost

New Hampshire all-in range

$15,825 – $31,650

Financing Options

Many New Hampshire clinics partner with CareCredit or Alphaeon. A typical 24-month, 0% APR term on $23,210 looks like:

$967/mo
Est. 24 months · 0% APR promo
  • Soft credit check — no hard pull
  • Instant approval decisions
  • HSA/FSA eligible for qualifying cases

Prices reflect regional cost-of-living adjustments. How we calculate these numbers →

Ranges adjusted for New Hampshire's regional price parity (105.5). See the national percentage breakdown →

Regional Comparison

All-on-4 Dental Implants Cost in Nearby States

Neighboring states offer a range of all-on-4 dental implants pricing. New Hampshire falls in the middle of the pack.

Common Questions

Expert Answers for New Hampshire Patients

Local regulations, insurance nuance, and surgical standards specific to New Hampshire.

Compare New Hampshire with any other state

See national pricing, all 50 state comparisons, and detailed cost factors in the main all-on-4 dental implants cost guide.

View full all-on-4 dental implants guide
What should I expect to pay for all-on-4 dental implants in New Hampshire?
In New Hampshire, all-on-4 dental implants runs about $23,210 on average. Most patients pay between $15,825 and $31,650, with the final price shaped by your choice of surgeon, facility type, and procedure complexity.
Does insurance cover all-on-4 dental implants?
Some insurance plans cover all-on-4 dental implants, but only when there's a documented medical reason. Cosmetic cases are almost never covered. If you're in New Hampshire, get a pre-authorization determination before committing to a provider.
How long is recovery after all-on-4 dental implants?
The recovery timeline for all-on-4 dental implants is 7 to 180 days. Here's the general pattern: days 1-7 involve significant rest, days 7-180 are a gradual return to activity. New Hampshire patients should also budget for post-op care costs — follow-up visits, pain management, and any required imaging or lab work.
What payment options exist for all-on-4 dental implants in New Hampshire?
Most New Hampshire surgeons work with financing companies that offer monthly payment plans. CareCredit and Prosper are the most common. You might also ask about cash-pay pricing — some providers knock 10-20% off the $23,210 sticker price when you pay upfront.
Is it worth traveling to another state for all-on-4 dental implants?
Maine runs $374 cheaper for all-on-4 dental implants than New Hampshire. For patients near the state line, that 2% difference can justify the trip. Ask your New Hampshire surgeon if they coordinate with out-of-state providers for post-op monitoring.
Does New Hampshire Medicaid cover all-on-4 dental implants?
Medicaid in New Hampshire can cover all-on-4 dental implants when there's a documented medical need. The key is pre-authorization — your physician will need to submit clinical justification to your managed care organization before the procedure is approved.
Can I pay for all-on-4 dental implants with pre-tax health savings?
Absolutely. all-on-4 dental implants with a medical justification is a qualifying HSA/FSA expense. At New Hampshire pricing, paying $23,210 with pre-tax money effectively drops your real cost by your marginal tax rate. Ask your provider for a detailed invoice that separates each line item for your HSA administrator.
Data Sources & References

How we calculate all-on-4 dental implants costs in New Hampshire

Cost estimates combine procedure-specific pricing data with regional cost-of-living and provider-supply adjustments. Primary sources:

  • Hospital pricing transparency files — CMS-required machine-readable data published by hospitals under the CMS Hospital Price Transparency rule (effective January 2021). Provides actual negotiated rates between hospitals and insurers.
  • HCUP (Healthcare Cost & Utilization Project)AHRQ's HCUP databases provide nationally-representative procedure cost data by state, payer, and patient demographics.
  • Bureau of Labor Statistics — Healthcare Practitioner Occupational WagesBLS OEWS data on surgeon, anesthesiologist, and surgical staff wages by state, used to model regional labor-cost differences in procedure pricing.
  • BEA Regional Price Parities (RPP)U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis state-level price-level indices, used to adjust national procedure averages for New Hampshire's cost-of-living relative to the national mean.
  • FAIR Health Consumer Cost Lookup — the FAIR Health database aggregates billed and allowed amounts from over 36 billion claim records, providing a check on procedure-cost ranges by ZIP code.
  • Medicare Provider Utilization & Payment DataCMS public-use files on Medicare-allowed amounts and submitted charges by HCPCS/CPT code and state, used as a baseline for procedure-cost ranges.

Estimates are illustrative and reflect typical pricing ranges; actual costs depend on insurance coverage, surgical complexity, anesthesia type, hospital vs. ambulatory setting, and individual patient factors. Always confirm pricing directly with providers and your insurance carrier. See our methodology page for full calculation details.

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