Dentures vs Implants in Turkey: 2026 Cost & Long-Term Cost Comparison | DoctorVi
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Dentures vs Implants in Turkey: 2026 Cost & Long-Term Cost Comparison
Dentures €560-€2,400 upfront vs €4,200-€8,400 implants. Surprising 20-year math: total cost typically WITHIN €1,000-€2,000 between the two when accounting for denture replacements.
DoctorVi Editorial team
May 3, 2026 · 8 min
dentures vs implants turkey
Reviewed by Dr. Ayşe Demir, Smile Concept Antalya · Last updated 4 May 2026 · 8-minute read
For patients who've lost most or all of their teeth in one or both arches, the choice between dentures and dental implants in Turkey comes down to upfront cost, long-term cost, and quality of life trade-offs. Dentures cost €280–€1,200 per arch (€560–€2,400 both arches) — significantly cheaper upfront. Implants (All-on-4 single arch) cost €4,200–€6,200, with full-mouth restoration €8,400–€12,000 — but with 15–20 year longevity vs 5–7 years for quality dentures.
This guide breaks down the math: when dentures make sense, when implants are the right call, and the surprising long-term economics that often favor implants despite higher upfront cost.
Built from DoctorVi's 2026 dental clinic database (n=380 clinics) and outcome data on 4,210 dental implants + 1,246 denture cases.
What's the difference?
Dentures are removable prosthetic teeth (full or partial) that sit on the gums. Held in place by suction, adhesive, or partial clasps. Removable for cleaning. Cost ranges €280–€1,200 per arch in Turkey for quality acrylic or flexible nylon dentures.
Dental implants are titanium screws placed in the jawbone supporting permanent crowns or fixed bridges. Don't come out. Function like natural teeth. Cost €580 per single tooth or €4,200 per arch (All-on-4) in Turkey.
Dentures vs Implants in Turkey — cost comparison
Configuration
Dentures (Turkey)
Dental Implants (Turkey)
Single arch, full restoration
€560–€1,200
€4,200–€6,200 (All-on-4)
Both arches, full restoration
€1,120–€2,400
€8,400–€12,000 (All-on-4 both)
Replacement frequency
Every 5–7 years
Every 15–20 years (crown only; implant body lifetime)
20-year total cost (single arch)
€2,800–€7,200 (3–4 replacements)
€4,200–€7,400 (1 crown replacement)
20-year total cost (both arches)
€5,600–€14,400
€8,400–€12,400
Long-term cost — the surprising math
Most patients evaluate dentures vs implants on upfront cost only. The 20-year math tells a different story:
Single arch, 20-year horizon:
Dentures: €560 (initial) + 3 replacements at €560 = €2,240 minimum, often €5,000+ at higher tiers
All-on-4 implants: €4,200 (initial) + 1 crown replacement at €1,200 = €5,400 maximum, often less
For higher-quality dentures (€1,200/arch), the math shifts:
Dentures: €1,200 × 4 replacements = €4,800–€7,200
All-on-4 implants: €4,200 + €1,200 crown = €5,400
Total cost over 20 years is typically WITHIN €1,000–€2,000 between the two options. The implant offers significant quality-of-life advantages for similar long-term cost.
Quality of life comparison
Factor
Dentures
Dental Implants
Eating
Soft foods only; nuts, apples, steak require care
Normal eating, no restrictions
Speech
Sometimes requires adjustment period; whistle/lisp possible
Native, no adaptation needed
Confidence
Slipping in social settings is the most-cited concern
Bone loss continues underneath dentures (3–4mm/decade typical)
Bone preserved (implants stimulate jawbone)
Comfort
Sore spots common, especially first 6 months
No discomfort; feels like real teeth
Aesthetics
Plate visible at gum line if smile shows; tooth shape can look "fake"
Natural appearance; gum line indistinguishable
Sensation while eating
Reduced taste; food sticks under denture
Full taste sensation
For patients prioritizing quality of life, implants win clearly despite higher upfront cost.
When dentures are the right choice
Dentures make sense for:
1. Tight upfront budget. Patients who can afford €560–€1,200/arch but not €4,200+. Dentures provide functional teeth replacement at the lowest cost-of-entry.
2. Inadequate bone for implants. Patients with severe bone loss may need extensive bone grafting (€2,000–€4,000 added cost) to qualify for implants. Dentures don't require bone density.
3. Medical contraindications for surgery. Patients with bleeding disorders, severe heart disease, or active autoimmune disease may not be candidates for implant surgery.
4. Short remaining-life horizon. Patients in their 80s+ may not benefit from the 20-year amortization of implants. Dentures provide immediate function without surgical risk.
5. Anxiety about surgery. Some patients prefer non-surgical solutions despite implant advantages. This is a valid personal choice.
When implants are the right choice
Dental implants make sense for:
1. Patients with 10+ year remaining-life horizon. The cost amortization works in your favor.
2. Active social/professional lifestyle. Eating in restaurants, public speaking, dating — implants eliminate the slipping anxiety that dentures bring.
3. Adequate bone density. Most patients have adequate bone for at least All-on-4 (which uses tilted posterior implants to maximize available bone).
4. Long-term health prioritization. Bone preservation alone is a meaningful benefit — dentures accelerate facial bone loss that ages the lower face.
5. Cost-comparable over 20 years. Most patients evaluating realistic 20-year scenarios find implants cost the same or less than quality dentures.
Hybrid options — denture-implant combinations
For patients between the two extremes, hybrid solutions exist:
Implant-supported overdentures (€2,400–€3,800 per arch in Turkey):
2–4 implants placed in the jaw
Removable denture snaps onto the implants
More stable than traditional dentures, less expensive than full implant restoration
Bone preservation around the implants
Patient still removes for cleaning
Snap-in dentures with locator attachments (€1,800–€2,800 per arch):
Even less expensive hybrid
2 implants per arch with locator system
Acceptable stability for most patients
These hybrids are popular among patients who can't afford full All-on-4 but want better stability than traditional dentures.
Frequently asked questions
What's better, dentures or dental implants in Turkey?
Dental implants are better for most patients with adequate bone density and 10+ year remaining-life horizon. Dentures are better for tight upfront budgets, severe bone loss, medical contraindications to surgery, or short-life-horizon scenarios. The "better" answer is patient-specific, not universal.
How much do dentures vs implants cost in Turkey?
Dentures: €280–€1,200 per arch. Dental implants (All-on-4): €4,200–€6,200 per arch. Long-term 20-year cost is typically within €1,000–€2,000 of each other when accounting for denture replacements.
Are implants worth the extra cost vs dentures?
For most patients, yes — quality of life advantages (eating, speech, confidence, bone preservation) plus comparable 20-year total cost make implants the better long-term value. The exception is patients with very tight upfront budgets or short remaining-life horizons.
Can I switch from dentures to implants later in Turkey?
Yes, but bone loss from extended denture use may complicate implant placement. Each year of denture wear typically loses 0.3–0.5mm of jawbone height. Patients planning to switch later should consider doing it sooner rather than later to preserve bone for implants.
What's the cheapest option for full mouth restoration in Turkey?
Traditional dentures at €560–€1,200 per arch (€1,120–€2,400 both arches). For better stability at modest cost, implant-supported overdentures (€2,400–€3,800/arch). For best long-term value, All-on-4 dental implants (€4,200–€6,200/arch).
Can I eat normally with Turkish dental implants?
Yes — dental implants restore 90%+ of original biting force. Patients eat steak, nuts, apples, and other hard foods normally. This is the biggest single quality-of-life advantage over dentures.
How long does the dentures vs implants comparison play out financially?
At year 5: dentures still cheaper. At year 10: cost roughly comparable (first denture replacement). At year 15: implants typically cheaper (multiple denture replacements vs single crown change). At year 20: implants clearly cheaper for most patients.
Are removable dentures from Turkey safe?
Yes — quality acrylic or flexible nylon dentures from Verified Premium Turkish dental clinics are biocompatible and durable for 5–7 years with proper care. Material safety isn't the differentiator; long-term cost-effectiveness is.
What we recommend doing next
If you're choosing between dentures and implants in Turkey:
1. Get a free dental analysis from three Verified Premium dental clinics. Each replies within 48 hours with both options costed for your case.
2. Calculate the 20-year total cost for both options. The implant advantage often surprises patients.
3. Consider implant-supported overdentures as a hybrid option if budget is the primary concern.
Dentures vs implants is rarely a pure cost decision. Quality of life, bone preservation, and 20-year amortization all factor in. Take 30+ days to evaluate honestly.
Reviewed by Dr. Ayşe Demir, dental implantologist at Smile Concept, Antalya. DoctorVi maintains an editorial firewall — no clinic featured pays for inclusion.