Dental implants, San Marco edition: the itemized quote your spreadsheet will like.
San Marco is a bad audience for vague pricing. Between the Baptist Medical Center campus down Hendricks Avenue and the professional crowd around the Square, this neighborhood reads explanation-of-benefits statements for sport and knows precisely what a bundled quote can hide. So here is an implant with nothing folded in: $1,950 to place it, $650 for the custom abutment, $1,450 for the ceramic crown — $4,050. If a bone graft is needed, that's $450, and you'll see it as its own line before you agree to anything.
The clinic opens in September 2026 in the Ponte Vedra–Nocatee corridor. From San Marco that's a reverse commute — south on I-95 to 9B while the morning traffic fights its way in the opposite direction. Implant treatment needs three to four visits across three to five months; all but the surgery are short and walk-in, which matters when your calendar is measured in billable increments.
The planning visit is the one worth seeing to believe: a 3D scan, the dentist reading it with you on the wall screen, and an itemized written total — about 31 minutes, one trip, no 'we'll call you with an estimate.' Founding 500 members lock $29 a month for life and get the street address before anyone else does.
Why this works from here
- A reverse commute from the Square and the lions fountain: I-95 south to 9B, against the inbound crush
- Three-line implant pricing that stands up to a Baptist-corridor readership's scrutiny
- Planning in ~31 minutes flat — scan, on-screen review, written total, back in the car
Questions, answered plainly
I work at Baptist and my dental benefits are decent. Is cash pricing still relevant to me?
Run both numbers — that's the whole point of publishing ours. Many plans class implants as elective, cover a percentage of some stages, and cap out at $1,000–$1,500 a year, which one implant exhausts quickly. Bring the plan summary to your planning visit; if insurance genuinely wins for your case, we'll tell you so.
Can I do the planning scan on a lunch break from San Marco?
Honestly? Tight. The visit itself is about 31 minutes, but the drive adds up in the middle of a workday. The early edge works better — we open at 7am every day — or a weekend morning, when the run down I-95 to 9B takes a fraction of the time.
Will you tell me if I don't actually need an implant?
Yes, and it happens more than the implant industry likes to admit. Sometimes a root canal and crown save the original tooth for less. The scan and exam produce a diagnosis, not a package pitch — and both paths come with published prices, so the comparison is yours to make on real numbers.
What's the total, and what controls it?
$4,050 for the complete tooth — placement, custom abutment, ceramic crown — or $3,240 at member rates. The variables are few and disclosed early: the $250 planning scan, a $450 graft if bone is thin, an extraction if the failing tooth is still in, a $650 temporary if the gap shows. Everything lands in a signed written total before treatment starts.
What's the timeline for someone coming from San Marco?
Three to four visits over three to five months, of which only the surgery needs a real block. Plan on: one 31-minute planning trip, the scheduled placement, minutes-long walk-in checks while it heals, and one visit to seat the crown. We open September 2026; the Founding 500 waitlist is the current front door.
Dental implants in nearby neighborhoods
More services in San Marco
Worth reading
Come in when it works for you.
We open September 2026 in the Ponte Vedra–Nocatee corridor. Founding members lock $29/month for life — cleanings, exams, X-rays, and a whitening touch-up with every visit.