Limited time implant offer in Sarasota, FL

Single-tooth implant offer planned by an implant-focused team.

If one or more individual teeth are missing or failing, this self-pay offer helps qualifying patients understand the implant, abutment, crown, timing, and cost before committing to treatment.

Limited implant offer

$3,800

Single-tooth implant package for qualifying cases.

This limited offer is built for patients who need one or more individual missing teeth replaced and want each implant, custom abutment, and crown planned clearly from the start.

$1,500Implant placement
$2,300Custom abutment and crown
$300 creditExam and CBCT credited toward qualifying treatment

The implant exam with CBCT is $300. If you move forward with qualifying single-tooth implant treatment, that $300 is credited toward the package, leaving a $3,500 treatment balance after the exam credit. Total paid for the exam plus qualifying package remains $3,800.

This is a self-pay offer without insurance. It cannot be combined with dental insurance coverage. If you use insurance, we must follow your insurance guidelines and contracted fee schedule, which may be higher or may apply differently.

A practical starting point

Implants are not one-size-fits-all. The right plan depends on the tooth, bone, bite, and budget.

Some patients need one implant crown. Others are comparing a bridge, partial denture, full denture, or implant-supported denture. The goal is to slow the decision down just enough that the next step feels clear, not rushed.

3D planning when needed Imaging helps us understand bone support, tooth position, and the safest sequence.
Clear alternatives We compare implants with bridges, partials, dentures, or staged treatment when appropriate.
Cost clarity We review insurance, financing, and timing before treatment begins.
Long-term support The restoration should fit your bite, smile, hygiene routine, and maintenance needs.

Photos that explain the process

See the implant, the planning, and the types of results patients ask about.

Dental implant model showing implant, abutment, and crown
Implant, abutment, and crown planning
Dentist reviewing CBCT imaging for implant planning
CBCT imaging for safer planning
Dental implant component illustration
Implant component detail
Implant-supported denture example
Implant-supported denture options

When implants may help

Start with the situation that sounds closest to yours.

Single missing tooth

One tooth is gone or cannot be saved

An implant crown can replace a missing tooth without using the neighboring teeth as bridge supports, when the bone and bite are healthy enough.

Several missing teeth

You need more chewing support

Depending on the space, implants may support separate crowns, a fixed bridge, or a removable option with better stability.

Denture support

A denture moves when you talk or chew

Implant-retained denture options may help improve confidence, chewing comfort, and daily stability for the right patient.

Emergency planning

A tooth broke or infection changed the plan

If a tooth is painful, cracked, or infected, we first address comfort and safety, then discuss replacement options after the tooth is stable or removed.

How implant treatment is planned

A clear sequence helps patients feel less overwhelmed.

Dental implant treatment is usually a staged process. We explain what can happen here, what may need coordination with a specialist, how long each step may take, and what you can expect before the final tooth is restored.

1Exam and imaging

We check the tooth, bite, gums, bone support, medical history, and whether 3D imaging is needed.

2Plan the replacement

We compare implant crowns, bridges, dentures, partials, timing, and budget before treatment begins.

3Prepare the site

If the tooth needs removal or the bone needs support, we explain the safest sequence and healing time.

4Restore and maintain

The final restoration should look natural, chew comfortably, and stay maintainable long term.

Compare your options

Implants are one solution, not the only solution.

We want patients to understand the tradeoffs before choosing. These are common starting points we discuss at Z Family Dental.

Cost and timing

The price depends on more than the implant itself.

Dental implant cost can change based on the number of teeth, whether a tooth needs extraction, bone support, the final crown or denture design, insurance benefits, and whether treatment is staged. The limited $3,800 package gives qualifying single-tooth patients a clear starting point, then we explain any add-ons before treatment begins.

Questions patients ask

Dental implant questions we can help you sort through

Am I a candidate for dental implants?

Many patients are candidates, but the answer depends on bone support, gum health, medical history, bite forces, smoking status, and the space being restored. An exam and imaging help us give a more specific answer.

Can an implant replace one missing tooth?

Yes, a single implant crown is often considered when one tooth is missing and the neighboring teeth do not need to be used for a bridge. We still compare all options so the choice makes sense for your mouth.

Can implants help loose dentures?

For some patients, implants can help retain or stabilize a denture. The number of implants, denture design, bone support, and maintenance needs all affect the final recommendation.

How long does dental implant treatment take?

Timing varies. Some cases are straightforward, while others need extraction healing, bone grafting, or staged treatment. We explain the expected timeline before you start so there are fewer surprises.

Are dental implants covered by insurance?

Coverage depends on your plan. Some policies may help with parts of treatment, while others exclude implants. Our team can review benefits and discuss financing options before treatment begins.

Should I choose an implant or a bridge?

It depends on the neighboring teeth, bite, bone, cost, timeline, and long-term maintenance. If the teeth beside the gap are healthy, an implant may avoid preparing them for a bridge, but a bridge can still be a strong option in the right situation.

Ready to compare implant options without pressure?

Tell us what is missing, loose, painful, or bothering you. We will help you understand whether an implant, bridge, denture, partial, or another step makes the most sense.

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