Dentures Cost Comparison: Quality vs Budget Sets

Conventional dentures and implant-supported overdentures aren't the same product — here's the real comparison.

Bottom line up front: Conventional dentures cost far less than implant-supported overdentures in both markets — but the comfort and function difference is significant enough that it's a real decision, not just a budget one.
TypeUnited StatesColombiaComfort/function
Conventional full dentures$1,800–$5,000$500–$1,200Can shift; requires adhesive
Implant-supported overdenture$15,000–$30,000$4,500–$8,000Stable, no adhesive needed

All figures below are typical 2026 ranges compiled from published clinic pricing across the industry — not audited data. Get a current, itemized quote before budgeting against these numbers.

Why the price gap between the two types is so large

Implant-supported overdentures require surgical implant placement (typically 2–4 implants per arch) as the foundation, in addition to the denture itself — that surgical component is what drives the much higher cost, in both markets.

Which one is the "false economy" risk

For patients who struggle with conventional denture stability, jumping straight to conventional dentures purely to save money can mean a second, larger expense later if it doesn't work functionally. This is worth an honest conversation with your provider — see colombiadentist.co for Colombia-specific denture and implant providers — about your specific bone density and functional needs before choosing based on price alone.

The Takeaway

Budget constraints are real, but this is a case where the cheaper option and the right long-term choice aren't automatically the same thing — get a specific recommendation for your case, not just a price list.