Get a realistic 2026 estimate for wisdom teeth removal based on extraction difficulty, number of teeth, and anesthesia type — then connect with oral surgeons near you for an accurate quote.
Procedure Type
Number of Teeth
teeth
Anesthesia
Location
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Get an instant estimate—add your ZIP for local pricing
Disclaimer: This calculator provides cost estimates for informational purposes only. It is not medical or dental advice, diagnosis, or treatment recommendation. Actual procedure costs vary by provider, location, insurance coverage, complications, and individual medical factors. Consult a licensed healthcare provider for medical guidance. Insurance coverage and out-of-pocket costs should be verified directly with your insurer and the provider before scheduling any procedure. This estimate does not include prescription medications, follow-up care, complications, or related ancillary services unless explicitly stated. No outcome, safety, or success rate is implied or guaranteed.
Did You Know?
Wisdom teeth removal costs $300–$3,100 for all four in 2026 under local anesthesia: simple extractions run $75–$250 per tooth, surgical $225–$600, soft-tissue impactions $250–$700, and bony impactions $350–$1,100. IV sedation adds $350–$600; general anesthesia adds up to $1,500 more.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q
How much does wisdom teeth removal cost in 2026?
Most US patients pay $300 to $3,100 to have all four wisdom teeth removed in 2026 under local anesthesia, depending on how impacted the teeth are. Per-tooth costs range from $75 to $250 for simple extractions up to $350 to $1,100 for bony impactions. IV sedation adds $350 to $600; general anesthesia adds $600 to $1,500.
Simple extraction (fully erupted): $75–$250 per tooth
Surgical extraction (bone exposure needed): $225–$600 per tooth
Soft-tissue impaction: $250–$700 per tooth
Bony impaction (buried in jaw bone): $350–$1,100 per tooth
IV sedation add-on: $350–$600 for the full procedure
General anesthesia add-on: $600–$1,500
Extraction Type
Per Tooth
4 Teeth (Local)
4 Teeth + IV Sedation
Simple
$75–$250
$300–$1,000
$650–$1,600
Surgical
$225–$600
$900–$2,400
$1,250–$3,000
Soft-tissue impaction
$250–$700
$1,000–$2,800
$1,350–$3,400
Bony impaction
$350–$1,100
$1,400–$4,400
$1,750–$5,000
Q
What is the difference between simple, surgical, and impacted wisdom tooth extraction?
A simple extraction removes a fully erupted tooth with forceps and no incision, costing $75 to $250 per tooth. Surgical extraction requires an incision and possibly bone removal for a visible but harder-to-reach tooth, running $225 to $600. Impacted teeth are trapped beneath gum (soft-tissue, $250 to $700) or jaw bone (bony impaction, $350 to $1,100).
Simple: fully erupted, forceps only, least expensive at $75–$250
Surgical: needs incision or minor bone exposure at $225–$600
Soft-tissue impaction: crown covered by gum tissue at $250–$700
Bony impaction: partially or fully buried in jawbone at $350–$1,100
Panoramic X-ray determines which type you have before the procedure
Type
What It Means
Typical Per-Tooth Cost
Simple
Erupted, forceps only
$75–$250
Surgical
Incision, some bone work
$225–$600
Soft-tissue impaction
Under gum, above bone
$250–$700
Bony impaction
Buried in jaw bone
$350–$1,100
Q
How much does anesthesia add to wisdom teeth removal cost?
Local anesthesia is included in the base extraction fee and adds no separate charge. IV sedation (conscious sedation) adds $350 to $600 for the full procedure, not per tooth. General anesthesia at a hospital or surgery center adds $600 to $1,500. For a patient removing four wisdom teeth under IV sedation, the total is typically $1,250 to $5,000 depending on impaction level.
Local anesthesia: $0 extra — included in extraction fee
IV sedation (conscious sedation): $350–$600 flat for the procedure
General anesthesia: $600–$1,500 (usually hospital-based)
Nitrous oxide (laughing gas): $75–$150 per visit at some practices
Always ask whether sedation is bundled or billed separately
Q
Does dental insurance cover wisdom teeth removal?
Most dental insurance plans cover wisdom teeth removal under the oral surgery benefit, typically paying 50 to 80 percent of the allowed amount after the deductible and up to the annual maximum. Dental plan annual maximums commonly run $1,000 to $2,000, which means a high-cost bony-impaction case can exhaust the benefit and still leave $1,000 or more out of pocket. Medical insurance may also apply if removal is medically necessary due to infection or structural crowding.
Dental insurance typical coverage: 50– 80% of allowed amount
Common annual maximum: $1,000–$2,000 per plan year
Deductible reduces the covered amount before the percentage kicks in
Medical insurance may cover removal if medically necessary
Get a predetermination or pre-authorization before scheduling to know exact coverage
In-network oral surgeon lowers the allowed-amount baseline
Q
Is it cheaper to remove all four wisdom teeth at once?
Yes, in almost every case. Combining all four wisdom teeth into a single procedure means paying the anesthesia fee once instead of two or three times, one facility fee, and often a discount on the total surgeon fee. A single-session removal also means one recovery period, one round of prescriptions, and one missed workday instead of multiples. Oral surgeons routinely recommend removing all four at once when they are all problematic or likely to become problematic.
One anesthesia/sedation fee for all four teeth vs paying it 2–3 times
One facility fee vs multiple visit fees
Single recovery period — one missed week of work or school
Many surgeons apply a per-case discount for multi-tooth extractions
Exceptions: only one tooth symptomatic and others fully erupted — then staged is fine
Q
What is the cheapest way to get wisdom teeth removed?
The most reliable ways to lower wisdom teeth removal costs are using your dental insurance to its annual maximum in the same calendar year, selecting an in-network oral surgeon, removing all four at once, and choosing IV sedation over general anesthesia when clinically appropriate. Dental school clinics, federally qualified health centers (FQHCs), and dental discount plans (Careington, Aetna Dental Access) can cut uninsured costs 20 to 60 percent versus private-practice rates.
Use dental insurance in-network before the plan year resets
Dental school clinics: 40–60% below private-practice rates, supervised by licensed faculty
Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs): income-scaled fees for uninsured patients
Dental discount plans (not insurance): 10–60% off list price for a low annual membership fee
CareCredit or Proceed Finance: 0% promotional financing for 6–24 months at many practices
Remove all four at once to pay facility and anesthesia fees only once
Example Calculations
14 bony impactions, local anesthesia
Inputs
Extraction typeBony impaction (partially/fully buried in jaw)
Number of teeth4
AnesthesiaLocal anesthesia only
Result
Typical procedure cost$1,400 – $4,400
Per-tooth rate applied$350 – $1,100
With IV sedation added$1,750 – $5,000
Four bony-impacted wisdom teeth at $350–$1,100 per tooth under local anesthesia totals $1,400–$4,400. This is the most common and costly scenario. Adding IV sedation pushes the range to $1,750–$5,000.
24 surgical extractions, IV sedation
Inputs
Extraction typeSurgical (erupted, bone exposure needed)
Number of teeth4
AnesthesiaIV sedation (conscious sedation)
Result
Typical procedure cost$1,080 – $2,880
Per-tooth base (local)$900 – $2,400
IV sedation uplift (20%)+$180 – $480
Four surgical extractions at $225–$600 per tooth totals $900–$2,400 under local anesthesia. Applying the IV sedation multiplier (1.2) yields $1,080–$2,880 — a common scenario for anxious patients or multiple erupted-but-surgical teeth.
31 simple extraction, local anesthesia
Inputs
Extraction typeSimple extraction (fully erupted)
Number of teeth1
AnesthesiaLocal anesthesia only
Result
Typical procedure cost$75 – $250
Consultation/X-ray (may be separate)$50 – $150
A single fully erupted wisdom tooth removed with forceps under local anesthesia runs $75–$250 — the simplest and least expensive case. Note that a panoramic X-ray and consultation may be billed separately at $50–$150.
Formulas Used
Wisdom teeth removal total cost
Total = Per-tooth rate × Number of teeth × Anesthesia multiplier
Multiply the per-tooth extraction cost by the number of teeth removed, then apply the anesthesia multiplier (1.0 for local, 1.2 for IV sedation, 1.45 for general). The per-tooth rate is set by the extraction difficulty: simple $75–$250, surgical $225–$600, soft-tissue impaction $250–$700, bony impaction $350–$1,100.
Where:
Per-tooth rate= Determined by extraction difficulty: simple through bony impaction
Number of teeth= 1 to 4; most patients remove all four at once
Out of pocket = Max(0, Total − (Annual maximum − Deductible)) + (Total × Coinsurance %)
After meeting the deductible, insurance pays its coinsurance percentage up to the annual maximum. Anything above the annual maximum becomes your cost. For example, an $1,800 procedure with a $100 deductible, $1,500 annual max, and 50% coinsurance: plan covers $700, patient owes $1,100.
Where:
Annual maximum= Plan-specific cap, commonly $1,000–$2,000 per year
Deductible= Amount paid before insurance kicks in, typically $50–$150 per year
Coinsurance %= Patient share after deductible, commonly 20–50% for oral surgery
Accredited dental school clinics perform oral surgery supervised by licensed faculty, typically at 40 to 60 percent below private-practice rates. On a $2,500 private-practice bill the dental school equivalent runs roughly $1,000 to $1,500, with longer appointment times and possible multi-visit sequences.
Where:
Private-practice rate= Your local market rate for the extraction type and tooth count
Discount %= Typically 40–60% at accredited US dental schools
Wisdom Teeth Removal Costs in 2026: What You Actually Pay by Extraction Type and Anesthesia
1
What Wisdom Teeth Removal Costs in 2026
The figures in this guide are informational estimates based on 2026 US dental market data. As the disclaimer above notes, actual costs vary by provider, location, insurance coverage, and individual clinical factors — consult a licensed oral surgeon or dentist for a binding quote before scheduling. That said, having a realistic cost range in hand before your consultation puts you in a far stronger position to evaluate quotes, ask the right questions, and plan your budget.
Removing all four wisdom teeth in the United States in 2026 costs most uninsured patients $300 to $3,100 under local anesthesia. The wide range reflects the single biggest cost driver: how impacted your wisdom teeth are. A simple extraction of a fully erupted wisdom tooth runs $75 to $250 per tooth, while a fully bony-impacted tooth buried deep in the jawbone runs $350 to $1,100 per tooth. Most people have a mix of impaction levels, and the final bill is the sum of each tooth's extraction cost plus any anesthesia add-on. Geographic location stacks on top — oral surgeons in New York City or San Francisco charge 30 to 40 percent more than the national average, while smaller cities and rural areas tend to run 10 to 20 percent below it.
Anesthesia significantly changes the total. Local anesthesia (numbing injections only) is included in the base extraction fee and adds no separate charge. IV sedation — where you remain conscious but deeply relaxed and often amnesic for the procedure — adds a flat $350 to $600 for the entire procedure regardless of how many teeth are removed. General anesthesia, which requires a hospital or accredited surgery center, adds $600 to $1,500. For most straightforward four-tooth removals, IV sedation is the most cost-effective way to manage anxiety and discomfort; general anesthesia is typically reserved for complex anatomy, severe needle phobia, or patients with medical conditions requiring full anesthesia monitoring.
Ask for an all-inclusive quote that specifies the surgeon fee, facility or operatory fee, anesthesia, and any post-operative medications before comparing practices. Prices quoted by phone often omit the facility fee or anesthesia, which can add $300 to $1,500 to the number you heard.
2
Simple vs Surgical vs Impacted Extractions: What Determines the Price
Your dentist or oral surgeon will take a panoramic X-ray — sometimes called a panorex — to classify each wisdom tooth before the procedure. The X-ray shows whether the tooth has fully broken through the gumline, how deep into the jaw bone it sits, and which direction it is angled. These factors together determine the extraction type and the corresponding fee. A tooth does not have to be causing pain to be classified as impacted; many impacted wisdom teeth are asymptomatic until they damage an adjacent second molar or become infected.
Simple extractions are the least complex and least expensive scenario: the tooth is fully erupted above the gumline and can be loosened and removed with an elevator and forceps in a few minutes under local anesthesia. Surgical extractions involve a tooth that is either partially erupted or positioned in a way that requires the surgeon to make a gum incision and sometimes remove a small amount of bone to access and section the tooth before removing it in pieces. These cases take longer and require more skill, driving the higher $225 to $600 per-tooth rate. Soft-tissue impacted teeth are fully below the gumline but not yet into the bone — they require a flap to be cut and raised, landing at $250 to $700. Bony impactions, where the tooth is embedded partially or completely in the jawbone, demand the most bone removal and are priced accordingly at $350 to $1,100 per tooth.
Many patients assume that because one tooth caused symptoms, all four must be equally difficult. In reality it is common for a patient to have, say, two bony impactions and two simple erupted teeth, producing a cost somewhere in the middle rather than at the high end. The calculator above sums per-tooth rates for each tooth count at one difficulty level; for a mixed case, add each tooth's individual estimate manually. A thorough consultation with a panoramic X-ray is the only way to know which category each of your four wisdom teeth falls into.
Waiting to remove symptomatic wisdom teeth rarely saves money and often raises costs. An infected or abscessed tooth requires antibiotic treatment before surgery, turning a straightforward extraction into a two-appointment process with added medication costs.
Degree of impaction: erupted vs gum-covered vs bone-covered
Root shape: fused single root vs multiple curved roots that resist extraction
Bone density: denser bone in older adults increases surgical difficulty
Proximity to inferior alveolar nerve: extra care near the nerve adds surgeon time and complexity
Position of adjacent second molar: less working space means more cutting
3
Anesthesia Options and Their Impact on Your Total Bill
Anesthesia is the most misunderstood cost line in wisdom teeth removal. Patients often ask whether they “need” sedation and assume local anesthesia means they will feel pain. In reality, local anesthesia completely blocks pain when properly administered — you may feel pressure and movement, but not sharp pain. The question is not pain management but comfort and anxiety management. For a patient having one or two simple extractions who is comfortable in a dental chair, local anesthesia is entirely adequate and adds nothing to the bill. For four impacted wisdom teeth, a 90-minute procedure, or a patient with significant dental anxiety, IV sedation or general anesthesia is worth the additional cost.
IV sedation — also called conscious sedation or twilight sedation — is administered through an IV line by a licensed oral and maxillofacial surgeon or anesthesiologist and is the most popular upgrade for wisdom tooth procedures. Most patients have no memory of the procedure afterward. The charge is a flat procedural fee of $350 to $600 rather than a per-tooth rate, which means its relative cost falls as you add more teeth: on a four-tooth removal the IV sedation adds 15 to 40 percent; on a single-tooth removal it can nearly double the bill. IV sedation is performed in the oral surgeon’s office and requires a driver but no hospital admission.
General anesthesia, where you are fully unconscious under the care of a board-certified anesthesiologist or CRNA, is typically reserved for cases at a hospital or accredited ambulatory surgery center: pediatric patients too young to cooperate, patients with severe needle phobia or medical conditions requiring cardiac monitoring, or complex surgical cases with significant bleeding or airway risk. The added cost of $600 to $1,500 reflects the anesthesiologist’s fee plus the facility fee for the operating room. Medical insurance (not dental insurance) may cover general anesthesia costs when a physician documents medical necessity.
Anesthesia options and added costs for wisdom teeth removal, 2026.
Anesthesia Type
Added Cost
Recovery
Best For
Local only
$0
Drive yourself home
Cooperative adults, simple cases
Nitrous oxide
$75–$150
Clear in ~5 min, may drive
Mild anxiety, simple cases
IV sedation
$350–$600
Need a driver, rest same day
Anxious patients, 4-tooth removal
General anesthesia
$600–$1,500
Hospital recovery, need a driver
Complex cases, pediatric, medical conditions
Always confirm that IV sedation or general anesthesia is administered by a licensed provider with appropriate credentials — an oral and maxillofacial surgeon or board-certified anesthesiologist. Some dental offices offer "office sedation" using lower doses of oral anxiolytic medications, which is not the same as IV sedation and costs significantly less ($75–$200) but provides a different level of sedation.
4
Dentist vs Oral Surgeon vs Hospital: Who Should Remove Your Wisdom Teeth
General dentists are trained and licensed to perform simple and some surgical extractions, including wisdom teeth that are fully erupted and accessible. For patients with straightforward cases — all four teeth erupted, good bone access, no significant impaction — a general dentist typically charges 15 to 30 percent less than an oral surgeon for the same extraction. The key risk with a general dentist for complex cases is that if unexpected complications arise during the procedure, the dentist may not have the training or equipment to manage them safely and may need to refer mid-procedure.
An oral and maxillofacial surgeon (OMS) is a dentist who completed an additional four to six years of hospital-based surgical residency training specifically in head, face, and jaw surgery. Oral surgeons are the specialists for any impacted wisdom tooth, for patients requesting IV sedation or general anesthesia, for cases near the inferior alveolar nerve, and for patients with significant medical histories. Their fees run 20 to 40 percent above general dentist rates for the same extraction type, but that premium buys substantially more training in managing the scenarios that make wisdom tooth removal difficult. For bony impactions in particular, an oral surgeon is the appropriate provider in virtually all cases.
Hospital-based or ambulatory surgery center removal is the most expensive option, adding a facility fee of $500 to $2,000 on top of the surgeon and anesthesiologist fees, but it is necessary for a small percentage of patients: those under general anesthesia who require full operating-room monitoring, pediatric patients under 12, patients with severe clotting disorders or heart conditions, or cases involving anticipated major complications. Medical insurance often covers the facility and anesthesiologist fees when the procedure is medically necessary, so patients in this category should submit to medical insurance first and dental insurance second to maximize combined reimbursement.
Provider type comparison for wisdom teeth removal, 2026 US estimates.
Provider
Can Handle
Typical Total (4 Teeth)
Best For
General dentist
Simple, some surgical
$500–$2,000
Erupted teeth, budget-conscious
Oral surgeon (OMS)
All types including bony impaction
$1,000–$4,500
Impacted teeth, IV sedation, complex cases
Hospital / ASC
All types, general anesthesia
$2,500–$8,000+
Pediatric, medical conditions, severe anxiety
Verify that your oral surgeon holds OMS board certification (ABOMS) and that the office is inspected and licensed to administer IV sedation in your state. Most states maintain public license lookup portals where you can confirm an oral surgeon’s credentials and any disciplinary history before booking.
5
Insurance, Out-of-Pocket Costs, and Ways to Lower Your Bill
Dental insurance typically covers wisdom teeth removal under the oral surgery benefit at 50 to 80 percent of the allowed amount after the deductible — but the annual maximum cap is the number that catches most patients off guard. Plans with a $1,500 annual maximum will pay their share only up to $1,500 across all dental claims in a plan year. For four bony impactions totaling $3,500, a plan paying 50 percent after a $150 deductible would cover $675, leaving $2,825 out of pocket — far more than patients expect when they hear "insurance covers 50 percent." The key is checking your remaining annual maximum before the procedure and, if possible, scheduling to split the procedure across two calendar years to double the benefit.
Medical insurance is a frequently overlooked secondary payer. If wisdom teeth are being removed because of a dental infection, damage to adjacent teeth, or a structural problem affecting the jaw or bite, a physician-documented medical necessity claim may qualify the procedure under your health insurance policy’s oral surgery or specialty surgery benefit. Medical insurance annual deductibles and out-of-pocket maximums are typically higher than dental, but out-of-pocket maximums cap your total annual exposure once met. Patients with dual coverage (dental through employer and medical through employer or spouse) should submit to both and let each pay its share, which can eliminate out-of-pocket costs entirely in favorable cases.
For uninsured patients or those who have exhausted their dental benefits, four cost-reduction options stand out. Accredited dental school clinics provide oral surgery supervised by licensed faculty at 40 to 60 percent below private-practice rates; the trade-off is longer appointment times and occasional multi-visit scheduling. Federally Qualified Health Centers offer income-scaled fees and are spread across most US counties. Dental discount plans such as Careington 500, Aetna Dental Access, or Cigna Dental Savings provide 10 to 60 percent off list prices for an annual membership fee of $80 to $200. Finally, most oral surgery practices offer CareCredit or similar patient financing for 0 percent promotional periods of 6 to 24 months, spreading a $2,000 bill into $85 monthly payments at no interest if paid in full by the end of the promotional period.
Delaying removal due to cost is understandable, but an infected or abscessed wisdom tooth can escalate to a dental emergency, hospital visit, or IV antibiotic course that costs far more than a scheduled extraction. If cost is a barrier, explore dental school or FQHC options before abandoning treatment.
1
Check your remaining annual maximum
Call your dental insurance and ask how much of your current-year maximum remains. If you are near the end of the year and have used most of it, consider whether pushing the procedure to January to reset the maximum saves money.
2
Request a predetermination
Before scheduling, ask your dentist or oral surgeon to submit a predetermination (not pre-authorization) to your insurer. The insurer will confirm the allowed amount and what it will pay, eliminating billing surprises after the procedure.
3
Check medical insurance separately
If your removal is medically necessary (infection, structural damage, nerve compression), ask your oral surgeon’s billing team to submit a claim under your medical insurance using CDT-to-CPT crosswalk codes.
4
Compare in-network oral surgeons
In-network providers have negotiated allowed amounts below the sticker price, which lowers the amount both you and the insurer pay. The insurance portal’s find-a-provider tool lists in-network oral surgeons in your area.
5
Ask about payment plans
Most oral surgery practices offer in-house payment plans or accept CareCredit. Apply before the consultation so financing is approved when you decide to proceed.
6
Consider dental school or FQHC
If cost is the primary barrier, accredited dental school clinics and Federally Qualified Health Centers provide high-quality care at significantly reduced rates for patients willing to accept longer wait times.
6
When to Consult a Licensed Provider
The cost estimates in this calculator are informational tools to help you budget and prepare for a conversation with a dental professional — they are not a substitute for clinical evaluation. Wisdom teeth removal is a surgical procedure, and the only way to know the exact extraction type, appropriate anesthesia, expected recovery, and actual cost for your specific case is to consult a licensed dentist or oral surgeon who can examine your mouth and review your X-rays in person.
Schedule a consultation promptly if you are experiencing any of the following: pain, pressure, or swelling at the back of your jaw or gum; swollen lymph nodes in the neck or jaw area; difficulty opening your mouth fully (trismus); an unpleasant taste or smell near the back teeth; or a visible gap in your gum that traps food repeatedly. These symptoms can indicate infection, pericoronitis (inflammation of the gum flap over a partially erupted tooth), or damage to the adjacent second molar — all of which worsen without treatment and increase procedural complexity and cost.
Even without symptoms, the American Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons (AAOMS) recommends an evaluation of wisdom teeth in the late teenage years, when roots are not yet fully formed, the bone is less dense, and recovery is typically faster. At your consultation, the oral surgeon will review a panoramic X-ray, classify each tooth, explain the recommended procedure and anesthesia, quote the full all-inclusive fee, and answer questions about recovery, risk, and insurance. Bring your current dental insurance card and, if applicable, your medical insurance card to the consultation so the billing team can verify coverage and issue a predetermination before you commit to scheduling. The cost estimator above gives you a reasonable benchmark to evaluate whether the quote you receive is within the typical market range for your situation.
This calculator is provided for informational and educational purposes only. Results are estimates and should not be considered professional financial, medical, legal, or other advice. Always consult a qualified professional before making important decisions. UseCalcPro is not responsible for any actions taken based on calculator results.