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I need a dental bridge
A three-unit bridge — one false tooth anchored to crowns on the two teeth either side.
The three prices nobody explains to you
What a dentist actually accepts $2,398 The allowed amount — payment in full, in-network.
⚠️ This is a composed figure, and we're telling you. No source publishes this as a single bundled price — it's several separate procedures. This is our arithmetic summing published components, not someone else's published bundle.
Source: Colorado All-Payer Claims Database (CIVHC) — dental analysis, commercial claims (CY2024) — the only US source publishing dental allowed amounts from actual commercial claims.
COMPOSED FIGURE: one pontic plus two retainer crowns. No source publishes a bridge as a single bundled price, so this is our arithmetic. We'd rather show the working than invent a bundle.
What you'd actually pay
Your plan pays —
You pay —
Remember: dental plans have no out-of-pocket maximum. Medical insurance
protects you from catastrophe. Dental insurance caps what the insurer pays, not what you pay.
An estimate, not a quote. Prices are Colorado commercial claims — the only state that publishes
this. Colorado's data misses roughly half of covered lives (self-insured employers don't report). Coinsurance
tiers (100% preventive / 80% basic / 50% major) are an industry convention, not a measured average —
nobody publishes what share of plans actually use them. Not dental or financial advice.
Our methodology →