Dental Bone Graft Cost in Illinois (2026)
Close to the national average · RPP 101.2 · IL
What Drives Pricing Here
Three factors explain most of why dental bone graft costs what it does in Illinois.
Regional Price Parity
Illinois's cost-of-living index sits at 101.2 — near 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 Illinois can reduce price competition. Consider quotes from neighboring states if the travel is feasible.
Vs. National Benchmark
Illinois tracks within 1.2% of the national average ($1,500) — a typical mid-market pricing environment with wide provider variance.
Dental Bone Graft in Illinois: What to Know
Considering a dental bone graft in Illinois? Chicago procedures typically cover standard and complex autografts. Socket preservation after extraction, for example, can prevent more extensive grafting later. For individuals under 21, Illinois Medicaid generally covers medically necessary bone grafting. Adults may also find coverage if deemed medically necessary, such as for dental implants or addressing infection-related bone loss. The University of Illinois Chicago College of Dentistry provides comprehensive services, including bone grafts and sinus lifts, with specialists in Periodontics and Prosthodontics.
To manage costs, explore teaching clinics like Midwestern University's Dental Institute in Downers Grove, which offers significantly reduced fees. Federally Qualified Health Centers like Pillars Community Health in the Chicago suburbs welcome all patients, regardless of insurance. Additionally, the Chicago Dental Society Foundation Clinic provides care to low-income residents in DuPage, Cook, and Lake counties. Verify current pricing directly with providers.
Estimated Cost Breakdown in Illinois
Pricing for dental bone graft in Illinois is roughly in line with the rest of the country. Here's the breakdown.
Implant Materials
Medical device costs
Most significant cost
Surgeon/Dentist Fee
Facility Fee
OR time and hospital staffing
Anesthesia
Anesthesiologist or CRNA fee
Imaging & Lab
Imaging and lab bundle
Total Estimated Cost
Illinois all-in range
Financing Options
Many Illinois clinics partner with CareCredit or Alphaeon. A typical 24-month, 0% APR term on $1,518 looks like:
- 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 Illinois's regional price parity (101.2). See the national percentage breakdown →
Dental Bone Graft Cost in Nearby States
While Illinois's dental bone graft costs are in line with the US average, neighboring states happen to run lower. Here's the comparison.
Expert Answers for Illinois Patients
Local regulations, insurance nuance, and surgical standards specific to Illinois.
Compare Illinois with any other state
See national pricing, all 50 state comparisons, and detailed cost factors in the main dental bone graft cost guide.
View full dental bone graft guideWhat is the average price of dental bone graft in Illinois?
Can I use insurance for dental bone graft in Illinois?
When can I return to work after dental bone graft?
Can I save by getting dental bone graft in a neighboring state?
Does Illinois Medicaid cover dental bone graft?
What's typically included in the dental bone graft price?
What's the work absence for dental bone graft recovery?
How we calculate dental bone graft costs in Illinois
Cost estimates combine procedure-specific pricing data with regional cost-of-living and provider-supply adjustments. Primary sources:
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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.
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HCUP (Healthcare Cost & Utilization Project) — AHRQ's HCUP databases provide nationally-representative procedure cost data by state, payer, and patient demographics.
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Bureau of Labor Statistics — Healthcare Practitioner Occupational Wages — BLS OEWS data on surgeon, anesthesiologist, and surgical staff wages by state, used to model regional labor-cost differences in procedure pricing.
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BEA Regional Price Parities (RPP) — U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis state-level price-level indices, used to adjust national procedure averages for Illinois's cost-of-living relative to the national mean.
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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.
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Medicare Provider Utilization & Payment Data — CMS 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.