Full-arch rehabilitation, defined.
Full-arch rehabilitation replaces every tooth in an upper or lower jaw with a fixed prosthesis supported by dental implants. It is not a denture. It is not a single tooth scaled up. It is a coordinated surgical and prosthetic plan that delivers a non-removable set of teeth anchored into bone, designed to function like natural dentition for decades.
In our practice, “full-arch” covers four distinct routes: All-on-4, All-on-6 or All-on-X, zygomatic implants for severe bone loss, and implant-supported dentures when removable-but-stable is the better answer for a specific patient. The right route depends on bone, bite, opposing dentition, medical history, and what you want from the next twenty years. A useful consultation looks at all four before recommending one.
We’ve placed thousands of implants over the last 15 years. Full-arch work is what we do. Not a service among many.



Patients we see every week.
- Adults with failing teeth who have decided to start over rather than chase one more crown, root canal, or extraction.
- Long-time denture wearers tired of the daily compromise: adhesive, sore spots, food avoidance, the way dentures move when speaking.
- Patients told elsewhere they “aren’t a candidate”, almost always because of bone deficiency, sometimes because of medical complexity.
- Patients whose previous implant treatment failed and who need revision before they can move forward.
- Adults who want the work done right the first time, by a focused team, in one building.
We don’t do cleanings, veneers, braces, root canals, or general dentistry. If those are what you need, we’ll help you find a good dental home for them. What we do is implant surgery and full-arch rehabilitation, every day.
The case for a focused practice.
Surgeon-led, end to end. A single surgeon owns the plan, the surgery, and the prosthetic decision. There is no handoff to a third-party lab or a separate sedation facility. The person who places your implants is the person who designed the treatment and will be in the room when the final teeth go in.
The lab is down the hall. Our prosthetic designers and milling work in the same building as the surgical suite. That’s what makes same-day provisional teeth realistic instead of aspirational, and it’s why the final restoration can be corrected the same day if the bite or contour needs adjusting. See our in-house lab for the workflow detail.
Sedation and anesthesia included. IV sedation and general anesthesia are administered at our facility by anesthesiologists who specialize in outpatient surgical sedation. No separate facility, no anesthesiologist fee on top, no second appointment. See sedation & anesthesia.
Depth. 15+ years and thousands of implant cases. We see complex full-arch work every week, including the cases other offices won’t or can’t take on.
Five routes to a full arch.
A fixed arch supported by four implants, often placed at strategic angles to make use of available bone. The most efficient route when the case fits.
When four implants isn't enough: bone density, bite force, opposing dentition, parafunctional habits. The decision framework, not a count-up.
For severe upper-jaw bone loss when standard implants and grafts aren't enough. Implants anchored into the cheekbone, performed in-house under GA.
Removable-but-stable. When fixed isn't the right clinical answer, usually a question of bone, hygiene access, or patient preference, this is.
When implants alone aren't the whole answer: orchestrated surgery, anesthesia, lab work and prosthetics across months, all coordinated under one roof.
What’s actually possible. What isn’t.
Same-day teeth is a real outcome for many full-arch patients, but it’s a clinical decision, not a marketing promise. What “same-day” means in our practice: you arrive with failing or missing teeth, your implants are placed under sedation or general anesthesia, and a provisional fixed prosthesis is delivered the same day from our in-house lab. You leave with teeth in place and a functioning bite.
What it doesn’t mean: the final restoration. Final teeth come three to six months later, once the implants have integrated and the bite and aesthetics have been refined. Provisional teeth are functional and natural-looking, but they’re transitional by design.
Some cases, including extensive grafting, certain medical conditions, and severe parafunctional bite, are not candidates for same-day delivery. We say so at the consultation rather than on the surgical day.
What every full-arch quote includes.
Surgical placement, IV sedation or general anesthesia, the provisional fixed prosthesis, all in-house lab work, and post-operative follow-up through to the final restoration. No separate facility fee, no surprise anesthesiologist invoice, no prosthetic surcharge from a third-party lab.
Full ranges and financing options are on the cost & financing page. Pre-qualification takes about a minute and won’t affect your credit.
